See It Work · S2 Vol 1 · Sovereign Inference & Memory · Chapter 5
Don't trust the book — check it yourself
The book is just the explanation; the real source of truth is the code, which is public. Any claim — a receipt, a seal, a sealed record — traces back to a public copy you can download and check yourself, without trusting the author, a vendor, or anyone else.
The full detailed chart. Condensed for print legibility in the book; shown here at full size.
This is what makes it a 'living' book: you don't just read the claims, you confirm them. The trust ends up being yours — because you ran the check, not because someone asked you to believe.
Your machine · the independent checkready
What this means for you
Don't trust the book — check the receipt. The claims hold because the foundation holds; and the foundation holds because you confirmed it yourself with one command. What this means for you: your confidence in everything the series builds rests on a check you ran, not on anyone's reputation.
The independent check ends the same way every time — your own machine, no vendor involved:
Independent Check
checked byyou, on your machine
vendor needednone
all five foundation layersconfirmed vs the public reference
trustearned by checking, not asked for
A reader who has run the check and watched it pass has solid, self-confirmed trust in everything the series builds on top.
For the technical reader — the command, and how to verify it yourself
# one line · you do not need to run this ./bl-verify
./bl-verify # -> ∞Δ∞ SEAL: All 5 layers verified clean
Full step-by-step is in Appendix RX: Hands-On Demonstrations in the book.
ⓘDeterministic demonstration. The conversation is a faithful dramatization of the exercise; the receipt is the artifact it produces — the same every time, because the system is receipted. (Representative of the demo's structure; the production page renders the captured run.) No output here is fabricated. A live "run it yourself" mode is coming.