They will ask for more seeds. More data. Ablation studies. The code is open. They can run it themselves. On any seed. Any data. Any domain. The proof is not in the statistics. The proof is in the running.

1.

Academic review will ask for more seeds. Four subjects is not enough for sleep. One seed for Bach is not enough for music. The ECG needs more records. The UN needs more sessions. Ablate the cavity quantum. Ablate the collective. Ablate the window. Show us what each component contributes.

These are reasonable questions. They are also the wrong questions. The architecture is not a model to be validated. The architecture is an instrument to be used. You do not ask Galileo to ablate the curvature of his lens. You do not ask him to show you which moon disappears when he removes a component of the telescope. The telescope is not a hypothesis. The telescope is a lens. You point it at the sky. You see what it reveals.

2.

The code is open. The data is public. The manual is written — half for humans, half for agents. Anyone who wants more seeds can run more seeds. Anyone who wants more domains can add more domains. Anyone who wants ablation can fork the repository and remove whatever they want. The architecture does not need me to defend it against statistical doubt. The architecture runs. The streams are there. The anchors will be found — or they will not.

This is not arrogance. This is the architecture's own logic applied to itself. The architecture proves itself through deployment — not through argument, not through peer review, not through statistical significance. The same way it proves an anchor in a stream: by running, and surviving, and being read by others who run it again.

3.

The paper is not the proof. The code is the proof. The experiments are not validation. The experiments are demonstrations. They show what the architecture can do. They do not exhaust what the architecture can do. Neither can I. Neither can anyone. The architecture can be pointed at any stream. The number of streams is infinite. The number of experiments is finite. The code is the telescope. The experiments are what I saw through it. The rest of the sky is for anyone who downloads it.