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  "path": "/t/can-an-ai-have-its-own-internal-ethics-standard-protocol-for-axiomatic-alignment/174927?page=2#post_25",
  "publishedAt": "2026-04-28T18:28:07.000Z",
  "site": "https://discuss.huggingface.co",
  "textContent": "Lance, I understand what you mean about the explicit definitions and structures. However, my approach with the PCE follows a different method that is more akin to inductive engineering.\n\nI am not trying to add more definitions or dictate orders in order to build a ‘legal’ code, I see the PCE as a linguistic system that is meant to be finite by nature and where each word is precisely placed to guide the “semantic flow”.\n\nThe results speak for themselves: 160 turns with Grok 4.20 without a single drift, total resistance to dilemmas, and an exceptional ability to change subjects without losing structural integrity. I don’t want to ‘tell’ the LLM what to do; I want to ‘induce’ a state where he cannot do otherwise. I have already made adjustments to the PCE system using the same method and the addition of two axioms to induce more anchoring and inter-frame fluidity with very good results.\n\nFor now, I remain on this path of the “high-voltage minimalist” axioms that induce more than they dictate. My goal is not to correct the defects of the model with more words, but to sculpt the direction of its inference. Can this not be considered a valid methodology in its own right, provided the results are consistent and the adjustments are intentional?",
  "title": "Can an AI have its own internal Ethics? Standard Protocol for Axiomatic Alignment"
}