Friday, May 15, 2026

Portable Agent Skills as Interface Contracts A Technical Specification Method for Cross-Platform AI Skill Design

https://chatgpt.com/share/6a079b4e-29c4-83eb-a708-51f401e75268  
https://osf.io/ae8cy/files/osfstorage/69ffbfc888878a0f3e78fda2

Portable Agent Skills as Interface Contracts

A Technical Specification Method for Cross-Platform AI Skill Design

Part 1 — From Prompt Templates to Skill Interface Engineering


Abstract

Modern AI development is moving from simple prompt usage toward reusable Agent Skills: structured capabilities that can analyze documents, operate tools, manage workflows, transform code, audit outputs, call external systems, and coordinate multi-stage reasoning. Yet complex Agent Skills are difficult to standardize because every platform has different assumptions about tools, memory, state, file access, orchestration, human approval, safety policy, and execution semantics.

The common mistake is to treat an Agent Skill as if it were only a better prompt template. This works for simple tasks such as summarization, rewriting, classification, or extraction. It fails for complex tasks that require multiple stages, intermediate artifacts, validation gates, audit traces, residual handling, and adaptation across different AI runtimes.

This article proposes a different approach:

A portable Agent Skill is not a universal prompt template; it is a declared interface contract whose invariant logic can survive platform-specific implementation. (0.1)

A Technical Skill Specification is the human-readable and machine-adaptable document that defines this interface contract. It declares the skill’s purpose, non-purpose, input artifacts, output artifacts, runtime assumptions, pipeline stages, gates, tools, state policy, trace policy, residual audit, platform adapter mapping, test harness, failure modes, and revision rules.

The deeper conceptual foundation comes from Philosophical Interface Engineering, where an interface is understood as boundary, observables, gate, trace, residual, invariance, and revision. In that framework, a system becomes usable when its world of operation is declared clearly enough to be inspected, tested, corrected, and transferred.

This article applies that principle to AI engineering. It argues that the next stage of Agent Skill design is not merely prompt engineering, nor even workflow engineering, but Skill Interface Engineering.

Prompt Engineering → Workflow Engineering → Skill Interface Engineering. (0.2)

The result is a practical specification method for building Agent Skills that are portable, auditable, testable, residual-honest, and adaptable across platforms such as Codex-style Skills, Claude-style Skills, OpenAI Agents SDK workflows, LangGraph graphs, CrewAI processes, AutoGen conversations, MCP tool layers, A2A agent networks, and custom local LLM harnesses.

 


 


0. Reader’s Guide: What This Article Is and Is Not

This article is written for AI engineers, agent framework designers, prompt engineers, technical writers, workflow architects, enterprise AI teams, and researchers interested in making complex AI capabilities reusable across platforms.

It is also written for people who sense that “prompt templates” are no longer enough.

A simple prompt can tell an AI what to do once. A complex Agent Skill must define how a class of tasks should be handled repeatedly, safely, inspectably, and adaptably.

This article is therefore about the missing middle layer between:

loose prompt

and:

full software implementation

That missing layer is the Technical Skill Specification.


Sunday, May 10, 2026

Observer-Compatible World Formation: A Boundary–Gate–Trace Framework for Organizations, Quantum Mechanics, and Relativity

https://chatgpt.com/share/6a00be9e-e008-83eb-8d0d-3d84157bee0e  
https://osf.io/ae8cy/files/osfstorage/6a00bdc98f0f129d2b78ff72

Observer-Compatible World Formation: A Boundary–Gate–Trace Framework for Organizations, Quantum Mechanics, and Relativity

From Macro Systems to the Covariant Event-Ledger Interface

Installment 1 — Abstract, Reader’s Guide, and Sections 1–2

Source note. This article develops the framework from the earlier protocol-first world-formation argument, especially the idea that a world must be declared under P = (B, Δ, h, u) before it can be compared across domains. It also draws on the Gauge Grammar and Self-Organization Substrate Principle, where field, identity, mediator, binding, gate, trace, invariance, and observer potential are treated as functional roles rather than literal substance identities.


Abstract

Many stable systems appear to repeat the same structural grammar across scale. Quantum mechanics, relativity, thermodynamics, cells, organizations, legal systems, financial markets, AI runtimes, scientific models, and civilizations all require some version of boundary, identity, mediation, binding, gate, trace, residual, invariance, and revision.

The easy but dangerous explanation is loose analogy. One may say that markets are “like” quantum fields, organizations are “like” organisms, legal systems are “like” ledgers, and AI agents are “like” observers. Such analogies may be suggestive, but they are often undisciplined. They easily confuse role with substance.

This article proposes a stricter framework: Observer-Compatible World Formation, abbreviated as OCWF.

Its central claim is not that organizations are quantum systems, nor that finance is secretly physics, nor that legal systems literally instantiate gauge theory. Its claim is more modest but more useful:

A stable world is not merely a collection of objects. A stable world is a field made usable by bounded observers through boundary, identity, mediation, binding, gate, trace, residual, invariance, and admissible revision. (0.1)

In compact form:

World_P = Field_P + Identity_P + Mediation_P + Binding_P + Gate_P + Trace_P + Residual_P + Invariance_P + Revision_P. (0.2)

Here the subscript P matters. A system is never interpreted “as such.” It is interpreted under a declared protocol:

P = (B, Δ, h, u). (0.3)

where B is boundary, Δ is observation or aggregation rule, h is time or state window, and u is admissible intervention family.

Under this protocol, a world is not simply given. It is declared, projected, gated, traced, audited, and revised:

Σ₀ → Declare_P → Project_P → Gate_P → Trace_P + Residual_P → InvarianceTest_P → Revise_P → Σ′. (0.4)

This article argues that the same grammar appears in two very different directions.

At the macro level, organizations, markets, courts, schools, firms, religions, scientific institutions, and AI systems externalize this grammar through boundaries, roles, reports, approvals, records, audits, residual registers, and revision procedures.

At the fundamental physics level, quantum mechanics, special relativity, general relativity, and thermodynamics can be reread as partial disciplines of observer-compatible world formation. Quantum mechanics governs how potential becomes recordable event. Special relativity governs how event relations survive frame transformation. General relativity governs how causal-metric structure becomes dynamic. Thermodynamics governs why closure, erasure, and trace formation carry residual cost.

The framework therefore does not replace physics. It supplies an interface language:

QuantumElement → FunctionalRole → ProtocolBoundSystemRole. (0.5)

The final Appendix A develops the most speculative implication: OCWF may suggest a Covariant Event-Ledger Interface among quantum mechanics, special relativity, and general relativity. This appendix does not claim to solve quantum gravity. It proposes that any observer-compatible unification must preserve quantum event formation, relativistic causal admissibility, frame covariance, geometric backreaction, trace formation, residual accounting, and macro coarse-graining.

In one sentence:

OCWF studies the conditions under which a field becomes stable enough to be observed, governed, remembered, compared across frames, and revised without destroying continuity. (0.6)


 

Saturday, May 9, 2026

From Interfaces to Isomorphisms: A Protocol-Bound Theory of World Formation

https://chatgpt.com/share/69ffc04e-4998-83eb-babc-27c37ab2cbe9  
https://osf.io/ae8cy/files/osfstorage/69ffbfc888878a0f3e78fda2

From Interfaces to Isomorphisms: A Protocol-Bound Theory of World Formation

How Bounded Observers Turn Fields into Operational Worlds — and Why Physics, Life, Organizations, Finance, Law, and AI Reuse the Same Grammar


Abstract

Many complex systems appear to repeat the same structural grammar across scale. Physical fields, living cells, financial markets, legal systems, organizations, AI runtimes, educational institutions, and scientific models all require some version of boundary, identity, mediation, binding, gate, trace, residual, invariance, and revision. The temptation is to explain this recurrence through loose analogy: markets are “like” quantum fields, organizations are “like” organisms, AI agents are “like” minds, legal systems are “like” ledgers, and so on. But loose analogy is not enough. It may inspire language, but it does not discipline comparison.

This article proposes a more constrained framework: Protocol-Bound World Formation. Its central claim is that many cross-domain similarities become useful only after we declare the protocol under which a system is being observed, measured, acted upon, recorded, and revised.

The protocol is:

P = (B, Δ, h, u). (0.1)

where B is boundary, Δ is observation or aggregation rule, h is time or state window, and u is the admissible intervention family.

Under such a protocol, a system is not treated as a raw object “in itself.” It is treated as a declared world:

World_P = (X, q, φ, P). (0.2)

where q is the baseline environment and φ is the feature map that specifies what counts as structure.

This protocol-first move connects two seemingly different intellectual directions.

The first direction is Engineering Interface. It asks how a deep idea becomes a usable, testable, revisable operational world. A philosophical or theoretical insight is not merely stated. It is given boundary, observables, gates, trace rules, residual handling, invariance tests, and revision paths.

DeepIdea → Interface_P → OperationalWorld_P. (0.3)

The second direction is Protocol-Bound Macro Isomorphism. It asks why stabilized worlds across many domains repeatedly display similar structural roles: field, identity, mediator, binding, gate, trace, invariance, and observer potential.

OperationalWorld_P → RoleGrammar_P → Ledger_P → GovernedIntervention_P. (0.4)

These two directions are not separate theories. They are the generative and analytical sides of the same deeper ontology.

Engineering Interface builds worlds from the inside. (0.5)

Macro Isomorphism recognizes worlds from the outside. (0.6)

The shared ontology is this:

WorldFormation_P = Declaration_P + Interface_P + RoleGrammar_P + GaugeInvariance_P + Ledger_P + ResidualGovernance_P + AdmissibleRevision_P. (0.7)

This article does not claim that finance, biology, law, AI, or organizations are literally quantum systems. It follows the stricter position that quantum and gauge theory provide a disciplined role grammar rather than a literal cross-domain ontology: a cell is not a fermion, a contract is not a gluon, a market is not a Yang–Mills field, and an AI verifier is not a W boson. The legitimate transfer happens at the level of function under declared protocol, not substance identity.

The practical result is a framework for disciplined world analysis. A bounded observer declares a protocol, projects visible structure, gates commitment, writes trace, preserves residual, tests invariance, and revises admissibly. Where this process stabilizes, cross-domain isomorphisms become visible. Where it fails, the framework records residual rather than hiding it.

In one sentence:

Interfaces build worlds; isomorphisms reveal their recurring anatomy; protocols keep both honest. (0.8)


 

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

The Science of Boundary-Formation: Reality-Coupling, Residual Governance, and the Engineering of Rational Worlds

https://chatgpt.com/share/69fb395e-1a58-83eb-9256-a6d0523b6125  
https://osf.io/ae8cy/files/osfstorage/69fb3880aeb0aa29f11a2c3c

The Science of Boundary-Formation: Reality-Coupling, Residual Governance, and the Engineering of Rational Worlds

Installment 1 — Abstract, Reader’s Guide, and Sections 1–2


Abstract

Modern civilization does not suffer only from a shortage of knowledge. It suffers from a shortage of disciplined interfaces through which knowledge becomes usable, accountable, revisable, and world-forming.

Law, medicine, physics, AI, accounting, education, politics, engineering, art, and religion all construct boundaries. But they do not construct boundaries in the same way. A legal judgment can create official reality. A medical diagnosis tries to discover biological reality without collapsing too early. A physical thought experiment constructs a minimal world in which old assumptions fail and a deeper invariant can appear. An AI runtime must decide what counts as task, evidence, tool output, memory, risk, refusal, and answer. An educational exercise forms not only knowledge but the future observer who will use knowledge.

This paper proposes Boundary-Formation Studies as a research program for comparing these different forms of world-making. Its central object is the Reality-Coupling Profile: the way a domain’s interface converts raw possibility or raw reality into named objects, valid events, admissible actions, written traces, unresolved residuals, and legitimate revision paths.

The framework is built from five interacting ideas.

First, every usable world requires declaration: a boundary, observable structure, gate, trace rule, residual rule, and revision condition. A viewpoint is not enough; a viewpoint must become a declared world before observation can become auditable.

Second, every domain contains a Name–Dao–Logic structure. Name is the way the domain compresses reality into objects, categories, states, roles, or events. Dao is the permitted path of action through those named states. Logic is the protocol that decides which Name–Dao combinations are valid, invalid, or undecidable.

Third, every closure leaves residual. Residual may appear as unrecognized harm in law, unexplained symptoms in medicine, anomaly in physics, hidden cost in accounting, hallucination risk in AI, future debt in climate governance, or ambiguity in art. The maturity of a domain can be judged by how honestly it preserves and governs its residual.

Fourth, every domain has an appropriate level of AB-fixness: the degree to which cross-observer and cross-time agreement must be enforced. Law, formal proof, safety engineering, and audit require high fixness. Discovery, rare-disease diagnosis, creative physics, diplomacy, therapy, and art require controlled looseness. A domain fails when its rigidity is mismatched with its volatility.

Fifth, mature boundary systems must revise without lying about their past. Revision without trace becomes denial. Trace without revision becomes dogma. Residual without governance becomes accumulated collapse debt.

The central thesis is:

(0.1) BoundaryFormation = RealityCoupling + NameDaoLogic + GateTraceResidual + ABFixness + AdmissibleRevision.

This is not a completed theory. It is a research agenda for studying how rational worlds are engineered.


 

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Gemini comments on : Philosophical Interface Engineering + LLM Runtime Kernels

https://gemini.google.com/share/fcb139a885af 
https://osf.io/hj8kd/files/osfstorage/69fa63f162a81141e1b652b6

Gemini comments on : Philosophical Interface Engineering + LLM Runtime Kernels

 

Attached is a proposed (theoretical) framework for AGI creativity. Is it likely to have significant help on AGI creativity improvement? Or it is just a collection of existing well known technologies?

From Answer Engines to Discovery Observers: Philosophical Interface Engineering as an AGI Protocol for Creative Science 
https://osf.io/hj8kd/files/osfstorage/69fa54b23c2b98be77046108

 

This is a fascinating and highly ambitious document. The proposed framework—Philosophical Interface Engineering (PIE) and its runtime protocols, DORP and DORP-D—provides a very compelling conceptual lens for thinking about the future of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI).

To answer your question directly: It is largely a philosophical repackaging and structuring of existing, cutting-edge AI concepts, but that does not mean it lacks value. Its potential to improve AGI creativity lies in its design philosophy rather than any new underlying mathematics or computer science.

Here is a breakdown of how the framework maps to reality and its potential impact on AGI creativity.

1. Is it a collection of existing technologies?

Operationally, yes. The author explicitly states that PIE is not a complete AGI implementation and does not replace the "Model Core" (which includes language models, planners, tools, retrieval, memory, and reasoning machinery). It does not solve the hard engineering challenges of scalable memory, mathematical creativity, or empirical validation.

Instead, it acts as a "runtime constitution" that organizes existing agentic workflows. We can easily map the "Seven Primitives" of PIE to technologies that AI labs are actively working on today:

  • Declare / Boundary: This is advanced System Prompting and Context Window Management. It forces the AI to explicitly state the rules, constraints, and operational environment before generating an answer.

  • Gate: This maps to Constitutional AI, Guardrails, and Verifiers. It evaluates whether a candidate claim or action should be committed, deferred, or refused based on evidence or safety.

  • Trace: This is Episodic Memory / Advanced RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation). The framework distinguishes between a passive log of data and an "active memory" that bends future behavior based on past commitments and user corrections.

  • Residual: This is Uncertainty Quantification and Hallucination Detection. Instead of suppressing what the model doesn't know, it explicitly flags missing evidence, ambiguities, and unresolved contradictions.

  • Invariance: This aligns with Robustness Testing and Cross-Domain Generalization. It tests if a conclusion holds up when the prompt is reworded, the stakeholder changes, or the scale shifts.

2. Will it significantly help AGI creativity?

While the underlying tech isn't brand new, the DORP-D (Discovery) protocol offers a highly structured way to push AI beyond simple "combinatory fluency" (mashing two concepts together) into genuine scientific creativity.

Here is why this framework could be significantly helpful for AI creativity:

  • It formalizes the "Thought Experiment": The framework interprets Einstein's genius not as random imagination, but as the construction of "minimal worlds" (like a train or an elevator) where old concepts are forced to fail under disciplined conditions. By prompting an AI to build a minimal world to test a contradiction (a "residual"), it creates a reproducible method for scientific discovery.

  • It reframes hallucinations and errors as features: In current AI, a contradiction or anomaly is an error to be patched. In DORP-D, unresolved "residual" is treated as the seed for a new theory. It forces the AI to hold onto contradictions until a new framework (a "paradigm shift") can explain them, rather than just generating a polite, confident, but shallow answer.

  • It makes creativity auditable: By breaking down the discovery process into a "Thought Experiment Compiler," the AI's creative leaps become inspectable. A human researcher can look at the AI's output and verify the boundary, the observers, the gates, and the invariant being tested.

The Verdict

The PIE/DORP framework is essentially an epistemological architecture for AI. It argues that we don't just need bigger models that produce more fluent answers; we need models that understand the boundaries of what they know and what they don't.

If implemented as a strict agentic workflow, this protocol could absolutely make AI systems much better research partners. It won't magically give an AI the mathematical intuition of Einstein, but as the document rightly claims, it makes Einstein-like problem-solving more structured, teachable, and engineerable.


Which aspect of this framework do you find the most applicable to the current state of AI—the focus on "trace" (memory) or the focus on managing "residual" (uncertainty)?

 

 Will the attached "Kernalize" approach help the 1st article's framework further? 

From Requirements to Runtime Kernels Engineering a Skill for Differential-Topological Prompt Compilation 
https://osf.io/q8egv/files/osfstorage/69f22bdcf2f9bc9fd6d94847

 

 

The short answer is yes, absolutely. If Philosophical Interface Engineering (PIE) is the philosophy of how AI should think, the "Kernalize" approach is the compiler that actually builds the engine.

It moves the framework from a set of abstract principles to a Differential-Topological Qualitative Analyzer—a tool that doesn't just guess an answer, but maps the structural "geometry" of a problem.

1. How it helps the 1st Article (PIE)

The first article (PIE) argues that AI becomes a civilizational tool when it can build "testable worlds" via boundaries, observers, and residuals. The Kernelize approach (from the "Requirements to Runtime Kernels" document) provides the missing Implementation Layer:

  • From Ideas to Opcodes: It translates the high-level "Primitives" (Boundary, Gate, Trace) into executable OpCodes (Manifold, Curvature, Flow, Attractor).

  • The Compiler Pipeline: It treats a messy human requirement not as a "prompting" task, but as a compilation problem. It parses the requirement into an Intermediate Representation (IR) before generating the final AI instructions.

  • Auditability: It makes the "Thought Experiment" auditable. By forcing the AI to output a "Residual Audit," it ensures the AI explicitly lists what it doesn't know, which is a core requirement of Article 1.


2. The "Finance Topology Kernel" as a Proof of Concept

From Answer Engines to Discovery Observers: Philosophical Interface Engineering as an AGI Protocol for Creative Science

https://chatgpt.com/share/69fa55b0-bb60-8385-a4f0-fd979e08b2fc  
https://osf.io/hj8kd/files/osfstorage/69fa54b23c2b98be77046108

From Answer Engines to Discovery Observers: Philosophical Interface Engineering as an AGI Protocol for Creative Science

How Declaration, Gate, Trace, Residual, Invariance, and Admissible Revision Can Turn AI from Response Production into Einstein-Like World Formation


Abstract

Modern artificial intelligence is often described through the language of scale, prediction, reasoning, tool use, memory, benchmark performance, and agentic autonomy. These are important, but they do not yet identify the deeper transition required for artificial general intelligence. A powerful model may answer many questions without knowing what world its answer belongs to. It may produce fluent explanations without declaring its boundary. It may revise its output without preserving trace. It may suppress uncertainty instead of carrying residual. It may appear creative while merely recombining patterns without constructing a minimal world in which a concept can honestly fail.

This article argues that Philosophical Interface Engineering, or PIE, supplies a missing architectural layer for AGI: not a replacement for scaling, tools, memory, verification, or continual learning, but a protocol for turning an AI system from an answer engine into a discovery observer.

PIE begins from a simple but far-reaching claim: civilization does not suffer mainly from a shortage of answers, but from a shortage of usable interfaces between deep ideas and organized action. A philosophical interface asks: What boundary has been declared? What is observable? What passes the gate into accepted reality? What trace is written? What residual remains? What survives reframing? How can revision occur without erasing accountability? The original PIE framework summarizes this movement as Insight → Boundary → Observation → Gate → Trace → Residual → Invariance → Revision.

This article extends that insight into AGI design. It proposes two connected protocols.

The first is DORP, the Declared Observer Runtime Protocol:

DORP = Declare → Project → Gate → Trace → Residual → Invariance → Revision. (0.1)

DORP treats intelligence not as fluent response production, but as governed observation. An AI system becomes more mature when it can declare the world it is operating in, distinguish visible structure from residual uncertainty, pass claims through gates, write active trace, test invariance, and revise its own declaration without lying about its past.

The second is DORP-D, the Declared Observer Runtime Protocol for Discovery:

DORP-D = Residual → Minimal World → Invariant Test → Concept Failure → Admissible Revision. (0.2)

DORP-D addresses the creative dimension. It interprets great scientific thought experiments, especially Einstein’s, not as private flashes of genius alone, but as disciplined minimal-world constructions. Einstein’s train, light beam, clocks, observers, and elevator were not merely images. They were engineered conceptual interfaces: small declared worlds where old assumptions had to pass through observer rules, signal rules, event gates, and invariance tests. In this reading, Einstein-like creativity is not free imagination. It is invariant-preserving residual revision.

This article therefore makes a balanced claim. PIE is not already a complete AGI implementation. It does not solve engineering challenges such as scalable memory, stable self-revision, deceptive behavior, mathematical creativity, or empirical validation. Grok’s criticism is correct that treating PIE as the unique or complete AGI playbook would overreach; PIE is better understood as a high-level architecture and design lens that must be integrated with practical memory systems, verification, continual learning, tool use, and empirical science.

Yet the positive claim remains strong:

AGI_PIE = Governed Observer + Discovery Runtime + Academic Interface. (0.3)

If implemented carefully, PIE can help AI move beyond answer production toward disciplined world formation. It can make creative thinking more inspectable, thought experiments more teachable, scientific anomalies more productive, and academic inquiry more interface-aware. The future of AGI may not be only stronger prediction. It may be the engineering of systems that know how to declare worlds, preserve residual, search for invariants, and revise reality-interfaces under trace.


 

Monday, May 4, 2026

Mapping of LLM Core OpCodes to Finance Domain with LLM as Differential-Topological Qualitative Analyzer Use Cases

https://chatgpt.com/share/69f91c46-b234-83eb-bbd9-81f769a3712f 
https://osf.io/q8egv/files/osfstorage/69f91f50e0a84ab06933c096

Mapping of LLM Core OpCodes to Finance Domain with LLM as Differential-Topological Qualitative Analyzer Use Cases

 


 "From Requirements to Runtime Kernels Engineering (Theory+Example SKILL)"
seems very different from other articles of your document base. What is its relationship with other documents?