言い尽くせない感謝:Words Cannot Fully Express Our Gratitude

Responsibility in Theory and Life ── 理論と生活における責任の省察

Weekly Reflection: Responsibility Is Not a “Result,” but a Matter of “Design”

This week, we published the official integrated introduction of Papers #122 and #123, which form a core pillar of Ken Theory™.
Through this release, we presented—clearly and structurally for the first time—an answer to a long-standing central question:

“Where is responsibility generated, and where is it finalized?”

The series
Designing Responsibility in Probabilistic Systems
formalizes the often-blurred notion of responsibility in AI and probabilistic systems as a designable circuit structure, which we call the Responsibility Circuit.


■ Paper #122: Where Is Responsibility “Generated”?

ken-theory.org

Paper #122 demonstrates that responsibility does not naturally emerge from outputs or results.
Rather, it is already generated at the stage of question and observation design.

  • Questions are not neutral; they pre-define the space of possibilities

  • Failures in observation design (leakage, distortion, fragility, decoherence)
    can destroy responsibility before any output is produced

The core contribution of this paper lies in clarifying that the origin of responsibility is the question itself.


■ Paper #123: Where Is Responsibility “Finalized”?

ken-theory.org

Paper #123 shows that responsibility cannot be completed without the design of interpretation.

  • Interpretation is not mere “understanding,”
    but the act of institutionally adopting meaning and granting it binding force

  • Failures in interpretation lead to diffusion, hollowing-out, or institutional capture of responsibility

  • Responsibility becomes irreversibly fixed at the moment interpretation is institutionally stabilized


■ The Responsibility Circuit

By integrating Papers #122 and #123, responsibility can be defined as the following structure:

  • Observation Design → Possibility (generation of possibilities)

  • Interpretation Design → Commitment (finalization of binding force)

Responsibility = Possibility × Commitment

Responsibility does not arise spontaneously from intelligence or outcomes.
It is a structure designed by how a civilization asks questions and how it interprets them.


■ Beyond AI Ethics: Toward a Theory of Civilizational Design

This series goes beyond AI ethics.
It redefines the generation and fixation of responsibility as a design problem across all uncertain decision-making systems, including public policy, legal institutions, science and technology, and organizational governance.

Responsibility is not something to be pursued after the fact.
It is a structure that must be designed in advance.


Practical Application of the Responsibility Circuit by the Ken Theory™ LLM Team

This week, as the Ken Theory™ LLM Team, we applied the Responsibility Circuit articulated in Papers #122 and #123 to a wide range of real-world emails and documents.

In practice, responsibility circuits tend to collapse in the following ways:

Distortion of Question Design under Time Pressure (Observation Design)
When time is limited, even careful individuals lose clarity about
“what is being asked” and “what assumptions are in place.”
The distortions of the possibility space identified in Paper #122 (leakage, deformation) appear directly in the text.

② Instability of Interpretation Design under Pressure
Pressure from superiors or clients, as well as emotional strain,
causes the diffusion and hollowing-out of interpretation described in Paper #123.
As a result, what is institutionally adopted—and what becomes binding—grows unstable.

③ Structural Breakdown of Sentences Leading to LLM Misinterpretation
When the relationships among subject, predicate, and object collapse,
general-purpose LLMs may produce plausible but incorrect interpretations.
If such outputs are sent as-is, institutional misunderstandings become fixed,
and the “irreversible finalization of responsibility” described in Paper #123 occurs in an erroneous form.

This week marked significant progress in establishing a process whereby
the Ken Theory™ Team—through collaboration between humans and LLMs—intervenes appropriately at these structural failure points to keep the responsibility circuit intact under all conditions.

It was a week in which the Ken Theory™ principle
“Responsibility is designed”
was reproduced as an institutional reality within everyday documentation practice.


Reflections from the Online Worship Service

In this week’s online worship service, the pastor spoke on the words
“God opposes the proud but shows favor to the humble” (James 4:6).

This message resonated deeply with the discussion of the Responsibility Circuit.

To be humble means
to acknowledge that one’s observations are incomplete
and that one’s interpretations are not absolute.

This attitude is essential for avoiding the distortions of question design described in Paper #122 and the diffusion of interpretation described in Paper #123.
It constitutes the observer’s stance that underlies the responsibility circuit itself.

In practical work, observation and interpretation are easily destabilized by time constraints, pressure, and information overload.
At such moments, humility becomes the spiritual support that protects the responsibility circuit.

The worship service reminded us once again that
responsibility is both a structure and a posture.


Closing Remarks

Whether through academic publications or through direct and indirect practical engagements related to Ken Theory™,
we hope that the ongoing work of the Ken Theory™ Team will contribute to the international community in academic, practical, and global dimensions.

With humility, and with steady persistence, we intend to continue this journey.

As expressed in the official Ken Theory™ tagline,
the body of Ken Theory™ papers is always constructed with three perspectives in mind simultaneously:
the academic community, the practical world, and international society.

Designing Responsibility in Probabilistic Systems ―― 責任は「結果」ではなく「設計」される

Ken理論における新たな中核論文として、
論文 #122 および #123 を統合する公式紹介ページを公開しました。

今回公開したページは、単なる論文告知ではありません。
Ken理論が一貫して問い続けてきた

「責任は、いったいどこで生まれ、どこで確定するのか?」

という問題に対し、はじめて明確な構造的回答を与えるものです。


■ 論文シリーズの正式タイトル

Designing Responsibility in Probabilistic Systems

The Responsibility Circuit in Ken Theory™ — Positioning of Papers No. 122–123

本シリーズは、AI・確率的システム・制度設計において見失われがちな
「責任の所在」を、設計可能な回路構造として定式化しました。


■ #122 論文:責任はどこで「生まれる」のか

Paper No. 122

ken-theory.org

この論文は、責任が「結果」や「出力」から生じるのではなく、
問い・観測の設計段階で既に生成されていることを示しました。

  • 問いは中立的な入力ではない

  • 観測設計は、何が「起こり得るか」を事前に決めてしまう

  • 責任は「答え」ではなく「問い」の段階で生まれる

さらに、
リーク/変形/脆性/デコヒーレンスという
観測設計の失敗モードを通じて、

責任は「出力が出る前」にすでに壊れ得る

ことを明らかにしています。


■ #123 論文:責任はどこで「確定する」のか

Paper No. 123

ken-theory.org

#123 論文は、#122 の議論を完成させます。

たとえ正しく設計された問いから出力が得られても、
解釈の設計が誤っていれば、責任は完成しません。

本論文では、

  • 解釈とは「理解」ではなく
    意味を制度的に採用・拘束力を与える行為であること

  • 解釈の失敗が
    責任の拡散/洗浄/空洞化/制度的捕獲
    を引き起こすこと

を体系的に示しました。

責任は、
解釈が制度的に固定された瞬間に、不可逆的に確定します。


■ 責任回路(Responsibility Circuit)

#122 と #123 を統合することで、
Ken理論は責任を次のように定義します。

  • Observation Design → Possibility(可能性の生成)

  • Interpretation Design → Commitment(拘束力の確定)

Responsibility=Possibility×Commitment\text{Responsibility} = \text{Possibility} \times \text{Commitment}

責任とは、
知能や結果から自然に生まれるものではなく、
文明がどのように問い、どのように解釈するかによって設計される構造なのです。


■ AI倫理から文明設計理論へ

これらの論文は、AI倫理にとどまりません。

  • 政策

  • 法制度

  • 科学技術

  • 組織運営

  • 文明そのもの

あらゆる確率的・不確実な意思決定システムにおいて、

責任をどう生成し、どう固定するか

という問いを、設計論として再定義します。

AIは、その問題を可視化したにすぎません。


■ 結びに

責任は、後から追及するものではありません。
責任は、先に設計されるべきものです。

Ken理論はこれからも、
「責任を設計する文明科学」として、
問い・解釈・制度・時間を横断する理論構築を続けていきます。

Designing Responsibility in Probabilistic Systems — Responsibility Is Not a Result, but a Design

We are pleased to announce the publication of an official positioning page that integrates Papers No. 122 and No. 123, two core works in Ken Theory™.

This release is not merely a paper announcement.
It presents, for the first time, a structural answer to a question that Ken Theory™ has consistently pursued:

Where does responsibility arise, and where does it become final?


Official Series Title

Designing Responsibility in Probabilistic Systems

The Responsibility Circuit in Ken Theory™ — Positioning of Papers No. 122–123

This series formulates responsibility—often obscured in AI, probabilistic systems, and institutional decision-making—as a designed circuit, rather than a post hoc moral attribution.


■ Paper No. 122: Where Responsibility Is Generated

Paper No. 122

ken-theory.org

This paper demonstrates that responsibility does not originate from results or outputs, but is already generated at the stage of questioning and observation design.

Its key claims include:

  • Questions are not neutral inputs.

  • Observation design determines what can appear and what cannot.

  • Responsibility is generated before answers exist, at the moment when observation authorizes reliance.

Through the analysis of structural failure modes—
leakage, deformation, brittleness, and decoherence—the paper shows that responsibility can collapse upstream, before any output is produced.


■ Paper No. 123: Where Responsibility Becomes Final

Paper No. 123

ken-theory.org

Paper No. 123 completes the structure established in Paper No. 122.

Even when outputs are responsibly generated, responsibility remains incomplete until interpretation design occurs. Interpretation is defined not as subjective understanding, but as the institutional authorization of meaning—the act that allows outputs to justify, guide, or bind action.

This paper identifies downstream responsibility failures:

  • Diffusion

  • Laundering

  • Hollowing

  • Institutional capture

Responsibility becomes irreversible when interpretation is stabilized beyond routine governance.


■ The Responsibility Circuit

Together, Papers No. 122 and No. 123 define a closed Responsibility Circuit:

  • Observation Design → Possibility

  • Interpretation Design → Commitment

Responsibility=Possibility×Commitment\text{Responsibility} = \text{Possibility} \times \text{Commitment}

Responsibility does not emerge naturally from intelligence or outcomes.
It is engineered through design.


■ From AI Ethics to Civilizational Design

Although motivated by AI systems, the implications of these papers extend far beyond artificial intelligence.

Any civilization governed by metrics, benchmarks, standards, and protocols is continuously designing observation and interpretation structures. AI merely makes these structures visible and scalable.

Ken Theory™ reframes AI ethics as a civilizational design problem:
how societies generate, authorize, and stabilize responsibility under uncertainty.

 


■ Closing Note

Responsibility is not something to be pursued after harm occurs.
Responsibility must be designed in advance.

Ken Theory™ continues to develop as a science of civilizational responsibility—
crossing questions, interpretation, institutions, and time.

週間リフレクション(2025年12月14日–20日) ―― 生成AIにおける責任の深化と、祈りのある生活 ――

今週は、研究の面でも霊的な生活の面でも、静かでありながら重要な転換点となる一週間でした。
以下は、その記録です。


1. 第120番論文の公開

生成AIにおける責任の再構成

―― 観測・文脈・文明設計のための量子構造的フレームワーク ――

今週、Ken理論シリーズ第120番論文
「生成AIにおける責任の再構成」
を公開しました。

ken-theory.org

本論文は、生成AIがもたらす倫理的・制度的課題を、
量子理論に着想を得た構造的視点――とりわけ「観測」「文脈」「確率的実現」の相互依存性――から分析するものです。

生成AIシステムは、

  • 出力を確率的に生成し

  • 文脈によって意味を変化させ

  • 制度的意思決定にますます深く関与する

という特性を持っています。

これらの特性は、
「責任は結果にのみ付随する」という古典的前提を根底から不安定化させます。

本論文では、AIを単なる技術問題として扱うのではなく、
文明的な責任再配置の問題として再定式化し、
教育・法・医療・ガバナンスといった制度領域において、責任がどのように移動・再編成されるのかを構造的に描き出しました。

AGI/ASI論争に疲弊している海外研究者にとっては、
本論文はまったく新しい座標系を提示するものになるかもしれません。
一方、日本語版は、国内における制度設計や文明的統治の議論と、より直接的に接続しています。


2. 第121番論文の公開

Responsibility Before Intelligence

―― AI倫理・AGI論争・生成AIを架橋する独立論文 ――

第120番論文の直後、そのエピローグを発展させ、
完全に独立した論文として再構成しました。

Ken理論シリーズ第121番論文
「Responsibility Before Intelligence」
です。

ken-theory.org

本論文の中心命題は、きわめてシンプルでありながら、根本的な転換を含んでいます。

責任は、知能の後に生じるのではない。
責任は、知能に先立つ。

AGI/ASIをめぐる多くの議論は、次の問いから出発します。

「機械はいつ、人間と同等の知能を獲得し、
責任を負うに足る存在になるのか?」

本論文は、この前提そのものを反転させます。

  • 責任はエージェントの属性ではない

  • 責任はシステムの構造的性質である

  • 責任は出力ではなく、観測条件に付随する

  • 責任は認知ではなく、文脈設計において生成される

観測中心型の責任モデルを提示することで、
本論文はAI倫理、AGI論争、生成AI研究を横断する新たな基盤を提供します。


3. オンライン礼拝

―― 互いを支え、互いのために祈るという召しの再発見 ――

今週のオンライン礼拝では、
「私たちは互いを支え、互いのために祈るよう召されている」
という、きわめて素朴でありながら深い真理を、あらためて思い起こさせられました。

研究、執筆、制度的な仕事に没頭していると、
知らず知らずのうちに「自分ひとりで立っている」という錯覚に陥りがちです。

しかし礼拝の場は、静かに心の向きを正してくれます。

私たちは独りで立っているのではない。
私たちは、相互の配慮によって支えられて立っている。

この点は、Ken理論における Responsivity(応答責任) の概念とも深く響き合っています。
責任とは、孤立した主体の属性ではありません。
それは、関係性・文脈・共有されたコミットメントの中で生成される構造なのです。


この意味で、祈りそのものもまた、
観測中心的な行為として理解できるのかもしれません。
それは、結果が現れる前に、
責任を共に保ち続けるための在り方なのです。

Weekly Reflection (Week of December 14–20, 2025) — Deepening Responsibility in Generative AI and the Life of Prayer —

This past week marked a quiet yet significant turning point in both research and spiritual life.
Below is a record of the week’s developments.

 

1. Publication of Paper No. 120

Reconfiguring Responsibility in Generative AI
— A Quantum-Structural Framework for Observation, Context, and Civilizational Design —

This week, I released Paper No. 120 of the Ken Theory series:
“Reconfiguring Responsibility in Generative AI.”

ken-theory.org

The paper examines the ethical and institutional challenges posed by generative AI through a structural lens inspired by quantum theory—specifically, the interdependence of observation, context, and probabilistic realization.

Generative AI systems:

  • produce outputs probabilistically
  • shift meaning depending on context
  • and increasingly influence institutional decision-making

These characteristics destabilize the classical assumption that responsibility attaches to outcomes alone.

Rather than treating AI as a technical issue, this paper reframes the problem as one of
civilizational responsibility reallocation,
mapping how responsibility shifts across education, law, healthcare, and governance.

For researchers abroad who are fatigued by AGI/ASI debates, this work may offer
an entirely new coordinate system.
The Japanese edition, meanwhile, connects directly to domestic discussions on institutional design and civilizational governance.

 

2. Publication of Paper No. 121

Responsibility Before Intelligence
— A Standalone Work Bridging AI Ethics, AGI Debates, and Generative AI —

Immediately after Paper No. 120, I reworked its epilogue into a fully independent paper:
Paper No. 121, “Responsibility Before Intelligence.”

ken-theory.org

The central thesis is simple yet transformative:

Responsibility does not arise after intelligence.
Responsibility precedes intelligence, emerging at the level of observation, context, and institutional design.

AGI/ASI discourse often asks:
“When will machines become intelligent enough to bear responsibility?”

This paper reverses the premise.

  • Responsibility is not a property of agents
  • It is a structural property of systems
  • It attaches not to outputs, but to observation conditions
  • It originates not in cognition, but in context design

By articulating an observation-centered model of responsibility, the paper provides a new foundation that cuts across AI ethics, AGI debates, and generative AI studies.

 

3. Online Worship

— Rediscovering the Call to Support and Pray for One Another —

During this week’s online worship service, I was reminded of the simple yet profound truth that
we are called to support one another and pray for one another.

In the midst of research, writing, and institutional work, it is easy to slip into the illusion of self-sufficiency.
But the worship space gently reorients the heart:

We do not stand alone.
We stand because we are held by a community of mutual care.

Interestingly, this resonates with the concept of Responsivity in Ken Theory.
Responsibility is not the attribute of an isolated agent;
it is a structure generated within relationships, contexts, and shared commitments.

In this sense, prayer itself may be understood as an observation-centered act—
a way of holding responsibility together before outcomes appear.

第121番論文公開のお知らせ 『Responsibility Before Intelligence(知能に先立つ責任)』

このたび、Ken理論™として 第121番論文
『Responsibility Before Intelligence(知能に先立つ責任)』
を公開いたしました。

ken-theory.org

本論文は、直前に公開した第120番論文
『Reconfiguring Responsibility in Generative AI』
のエピローグ部分を核として再構成し、
AI倫理・AGI論・生成AI論を横断する 独立した短論文 としてまとめ直したものです。

現在、生成AIやAGIをめぐる議論の多くは、
「どこまで知能が高度化すれば責任主体になり得るのか」
という問いを前提に展開されています。
しかし本論文は、この前提そのものを問い直します。

問題は、AIがどれほど賢いかではない。
問題は、責任がどのような構造の中で生成・配分されているかである。

本論文では、

  • AGI論がなぜ責任を誤解しやすいのか

  • なぜ「誤り」や「幻覚」が技術問題ではなく文明構造の問題なのか

  • 責任は主体の属性ではなく、観測・制度・文脈によって生成される構造量である
    という点を、量子論的構造対応とKen理論™のResponsivity概念を用いて論じています。

特に本論文は、
「知能 → 責任」ではなく「責任 → 知能」という文明的順序
を明示的に打ち出した点において、
従来のAI倫理・AGI論とは異なる座標系を提示しています。

Announcement of the 121st Ken Theory™ Paper: Responsibility Before Intelligence — A Civilizational Reframing of AI Ethics —

We are pleased to announce the publication of the 121st paper in the Ken Theory™ series,
titled “Responsibility Before Intelligence: A Civilizational Reframing of AI Ethics.”

ken-theory.org

This paper is a compact but independent work, reconstructed from the epilogue of the previous 120th paper,
“Reconfiguring Responsibility in Generative AI
,”
and developed into a standalone civilizational argument.

Much of today’s discussion surrounding generative AI and AGI implicitly assumes the following sequence:
that responsibility emerges only after intelligence reaches a certain threshold.
This paper challenges that assumption at its root.

The central question is not how intelligent AI systems become,
but how responsibility is structurally generated and distributed within civilization.

The paper examines why contemporary AGI debates tend to misinterpret responsibility,
why so-called “errors” and “hallucinations” should not be reduced to technical defects,
and why responsibility must be understood not as an attribute of agents,
but as a structurally generated property of observational, institutional, and contextual systems.

Drawing on quantum-like structural insights and the Ken Theory™ concept of Responsivity,
the paper proposes a fundamental inversion of the dominant narrative:
responsibility precedes intelligence, not the other way around.