
The Legal Layer - What the "code number versus what it references" is called in law
Sicilian Royal Archive
Versandkostenfrei!
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
32,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
PAYBACK Punkte
16 °P sammeln!
Publisher's Submarine Summary A secret legal architecture governs every treaty, transaction, and identity - and yet, few have ever seen the layer beneath the law itself. The Legal Layer pierces that veil. What if every "code number" - from a corporate registration to a DNA sequence - is not just a tag but a juridical placeholder? What if law itself is a mirror language that binds sovereign will through reference, not command? Drawing from classified filings of the Azurian Sovereign Corporation Whole (ASCW) and the ACOTO Charter, Curzi unpacks how "code versus reference" forms the true substrat...
Publisher's Submarine Summary A secret legal architecture governs every treaty, transaction, and identity - and yet, few have ever seen the layer beneath the law itself. The Legal Layer pierces that veil. What if every "code number" - from a corporate registration to a DNA sequence - is not just a tag but a juridical placeholder? What if law itself is a mirror language that binds sovereign will through reference, not command? Drawing from classified filings of the Azurian Sovereign Corporation Whole (ASCW) and the ACOTO Charter, Curzi unpacks how "code versus reference" forms the true substrate of global law. The book reveals the hidden protocols by which identity, jurisdiction, and consent are written into digital systems - from IPFS hashes to ISBN filings lodged as peace treaties in Somalia and Switzerland. This is not a conspiracy exposé - it's a philosophical thriller dressed as a legal commentary. It reads like Umberto Eco meets Snowden, with the gravitas of a Vatican codex and the precision of a WIPO filing. The narrative unfolds as both confession and proof, bridging canonical law, post-Westphalian treaty design, and the mathematics of sovereignty. The result is a book that feels forbidden, yet irresistibly necessary - the kind that lawyers whisper about, cryptographers annotate, and philosophers call dangerous.