Omega Protocol

Omega-A (Alignment)

Download PDF →

What it inspects

Omega-A inspects decision-boundary alignment: mandate, authority signals, decision substitution, value injection, and control preservation. It identifies where decisions are made, who has authority, and how boundaries are maintained.

When to use

Use Omega-A when you need to identify hidden assumptions or dependencies. It's particularly useful for:

  • Uncovering implicit premises in arguments or claims
  • Identifying dependencies in system designs
  • Examining prerequisites for decisions or strategies

Structure

Omega-A structures assumption inspection into:

  1. Explicit assumptions: Premises that are stated but may be unexamined
  2. Implicit assumptions: Premises that are unstated but necessary
  3. Dependencies: Conditions that must hold for the assumption to be valid
  4. Uncertainty: Where assumptions are uncertain or unverifiable

Micro-example

Claim: "This regulation will reduce emissions by 50%"

Explicit assumptions: Regulation is enforceable; compliance is measurable.

Implicit assumptions: No substitution effects; baseline is accurate; economic impact is acceptable.

Dependencies: Regulatory capacity exists; measurement systems are in place.

Uncertainty: Whether 50% reduction is achievable; whether enforcement is sufficient.

Where it applies

Omega-A applies wherever assumptions need to be surfaced: policy analysis, system design, strategic planning, and research evaluation. It helps identify what must be true for claims or decisions to hold.