Translate the Five-Step Method Into Natural Violin Behavior
The app is governed by: Capture; Why; Why-Not; Commit; Timestamp.
Capture
- Capture → What did you hear, feel, or notice?
- Why → Why does this matter now?
- Why-Not → What makes the first explanation incomplete?
- Commit → What is the smallest next experiment or handoff?
- Timestamp → When should this be reviewed again?
The app is governed by:
- Capture;
- Why;
- Why-Not;
- Commit;
- Timestamp.
But users do not need to recite the formal labels in every interaction.
Why
This decision matters because translate the Five-Step Method Into Natural Violin Behavior constrains the product toward continuity, evidence, and human judgment rather than broad AI helpfulness.
Why-Not
The rejected path would make translate the Five-Step Method Into Natural Violin Behavior too easy to treat as an implementation detail instead of a public boundary. The ADR preserves the tradeoff explicitly so later product work cannot silently widen authority.
Commit
Decision: The app is governed by:
- Capture;
- Why;
- Why-Not;
- Commit;
- Timestamp.
But users do not need to recite the formal labels in every interaction.
The decision becomes a constraint on future product behavior and public positioning.
Confidence: Medium-high for public architecture; implementation details remain private and subject to launch evidence.
Timestamp
2026-07-17