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| Format: | Recurso digital |
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Zenodo
2026
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19486900 |
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Table of Contents:
- <p><strong>Double Detour Under Stored-Anchor Custody: Richardson Subspace Sign-Carry And Moire Contact: Nested Tz And Strong-to-Weak-to-Weaker Return</strong>. This article defines a new double-detour grammar for sign-bearing runs under stored-anchor custody. The public row remains the strong sign anchor, the internal row becomes a first detour that carries sign without public authority, and a second narrower source loop branches from that carried interior as a lawful but weaker detour rather than as a rival public author. The paper makes Richardson Subspace as sign carrier without sign authority one of its central architectural claims, places a moire-like patterned medium inside that carried interior as a lawful sign-carrying and sign-reshaping object, and identifies moire contact as the boundary where carried sign is received, worked, weakened, and returned. It then explains Strong, Strong-to-Weak, and Strong-to-Weaker as a custody-distance ladder rather than a disappearance-of-sign story, and states nested <span><span>Tz</span><span><span><span><span><span><span><span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span> explicitly so that the internal row and the source loop each have their own timeout discipline without creating a new public terminal family. The source remains deliberately narrow and is used only as an example of what may occupy the second detour after the house order of operation has already been fixed. This article is foundational because it secures a portable place for a second detour, keeps sign-carry and sign-authority distinct, and turns what would otherwise remain a vague interior mystery into a replayable layered runtime structure.</p>