How to Explore the SCIE Dossier¶
If the homepage tells you what the SCIE Dossier is, this page is about how to move through it.
The site is layered on purpose. It starts with framing and audit rules, moves through the evidence reports, then into deduction, reconstruction, and appendices. Different readers should start in different places, because not every page is trying to do the same job.
The easiest mistake is to flatten the whole site into one question too early. This page exists to help you avoid that and read each layer for the job it is meant to do.
How The Site Is Organized¶
Home / Reader Lens¶
The homepage is the front door. It tells you what kind of site this is and what evaluation posture to bring to it.
Executive Preface¶
The preface is the compressed overview. Read it if you want the broad structure of the argument before getting into details.
Audit Framework¶
This is the rules page. It defines the competing models, the four hard constraints, and the basic scoring logic used across the dossier.
Mini Reports¶
The 15 mini reports are the evidence layer. They do not all do the same job. Some put local pressure on Model A. Some make a local mechanism reading more legible. Some start to point toward architecture. What matters is that they can be compared and then brought together.
Deduction¶
The deduction section asks what survives when you look across the reports together. This is where the dossier tries to move from many local burdens to one recurring mechanism signature.
Reconstruction¶
The reconstruction matters because it carries the dossier beyond "these constraints do not close under Model A" and into the question of what kind of physical architecture would be required instead.
This is where the site presents SCIE, short for Spatially-Constrained Interferometric Event, as its current system-level reconstruction path: a geometry-governed, field-coupled architecture meant to explain bounded localization, selective coupling, and rapid phase-state conversion.
That does not mean every implementation detail is already fully closed. It means the dossier is trying to turn the surviving constraint stack into a physical model rather than stopping at criticism.
Appendices¶
The appendices are where the deeper technical backup lives. That is where the site tightens geometry, bridge physics, morphology, periodicity, and rebuttal.
LLM Guide¶
This is the more explicit protocol page for automated tools and first-pass structured analysis.
Where To Start¶
Different readers should start in different places.
If You Want The Quickest Orientation¶
Start with:
That is the fastest route to what the dossier is claiming and how it wants to be judged.
If you are approaching the dossier as a technical reviewer, the Analyst Brief is the better starting point.
The Strongest-First Reading Path¶
Read in this order:
This route is useful if you want to test the dossier on its highest-pressure discriminators before doing a full crawl.
If You Are Reading Skeptically¶
Do not begin with the question, "Is every part of the reconstruction already proven?"
Begin earlier:
- Does the dossier actually show local burdens that Model A fails?
- Do those burdens converge into a recurring signature, or are they just a pile of disconnected anomalies?
- If they do converge, what kind of replacement architecture would then be required?
That order matters. Otherwise the reconstruction gets dragged in too early and the audit layer never really gets a fair reading.