The Discover section gave you the universal principles. Domains shows you how those principles play out in specific areas — commerce, identity, property, and governance.
These pages go deeper into legal frameworks, statutes, and technical concepts. They're designed for reference and deeper understanding — not as your starting point. Start with Discover if you haven't already.
The Four Domains
Contracts, UCC, negotiable instruments. The rules of trade. Where your signature creates value — and liability.
Person vs. human. Legal fiction vs. living being. The name game. Who are "you" in their documents?
Citizenship, jurisdiction, statutes. How governmental authority claims derive from implied agreements.
Ownership, titles, trusts. Property as a bundle of rights. The difference between "owning" and "holding."
How Domains Connect
These domains aren't isolated — they overlap constantly:
- Commerce + Identity: How you sign determines which "you" is liable
- Identity + Governance: Your status determines which jurisdiction's rules apply
- Property + Commerce: Title transfers through commercial instruments
- Governance + Property: Land patents vs. deeds — different claims to "ownership"
Understanding one domain deepens your understanding of all of them.
Suggested Path
If you're working through the site systematically:
- Commerce — Start here. Connects directly to the Money Creation concepts.
- Identity — Understanding who "you" are in documents.
- Governance — How authority claims work.
- Property — The nature of ownership.
Every domain operates on the same foundation: definitions matter, consent is key, and what you think words mean may not match what they legally mean. Once you see this pattern in one domain, you'll see it everywhere.