FM-R-005 — Forced Forgiveness

Archive registry entry

FM-R-005 — Forced Forgiveness

Forced forgiveness occurs when emotional closure, reconciliation, unity, or forgiveness is demanded as a substitute for repair.

draftid: FM-R-005version: 0.1.0updated: 2026-05-31
Archive Progress

This section can be read now; registry depth and cross-references are still being strengthened.

Foundation
Online

The section has a stable overview route and basic reader context.

Technical Layer
Online

A deeper technical overview is available.

Registry
Current

357 registry entries are available.

Cross-links
Curating

Related concepts are being connected conservatively for accuracy.

1. Definition

Forced forgiveness occurs when emotional closure, reconciliation, unity, or forgiveness is demanded as a substitute for repair.

This definition describes the structural pattern, not the moral quality of the actors involved.


2. Core Pattern

TBD. Expand the initiating pressure, misclassification or bypass, variable degradation, debt accumulation, and stabilization pattern during editorial review.


3. Failure Signature

Typical signature:

forgiveness pressure↑
repair incomplete
BΣ violation
H unchanged
victim burden↑

4. Primary U-Layer Origin

  • U4, U6: Source registry origin layer.

5. Typical Development Sequence

TBD. Add the development sequence during editorial review.


6. Diagnostic Markers

TBD. Add diagnostic markers only when supported by source material or later canon updates.


TBD. Add gate links during editorial review.


TBD. Add operator links during editorial review.


TBD. Add law and invariant links during editorial review.


10. Common False Positives

TBD. Add false positives during editorial review.


11. Common False Repairs

TBD. Add false repairs during editorial review.


12. Restoration Direction

  • remove forgiveness requirement
  • restore boundary and sovereignty
  • require material repair
  • protect affected-party autonomy

  • Restoration: Source registry related module.
  • JGL: Source registry related module.
  • CMS: Source registry related module.
  • Security: Source registry related module.

14. Relationship to Parent / Child Modes

Production treatment: Standalone Entry

Aliases, parent modes, and child modes should be finalized during editorial review.


15. Minimal Entry Version

Definition: Forced forgiveness occurs when emotional closure, reconciliation, unity, or forgiveness is demanded as a substitute for repair.

Signature:

forgiveness pressure↑
repair incomplete
BΣ violation
H unchanged
victim burden↑

Restoration direction: - remove forgiveness requirement

  • restore boundary and sovereignty
  • require material repair
  • protect affected-party autonomy

16. Machine-Readable Summary

failure_mode:
  id: "FM-R-005"
  name: "Forced Forgiveness"
  family: "False Repair"
  production_treatment: "Standalone Entry"
  primary_failure: "Forced forgiveness occurs when emotional closure, reconciliation, unity, or forgiveness is demanded as a substitute for repair."
  source: "FM-REGISTRY-PLAN.md"

17. Quality Control Checklist

TBD. Complete the template quality-control checklist before marking this entry ready.


18. Source Status

This scaffold was generated from FM-REGISTRY-PLAN.md. Matching excerpts from content/archive/failure-modes/registry/index.md were included when available. Sections marked TBD should be expanded only from source material, related canon pages, or later editorial review.

19. Source Excerpt

FM-R-005 — Forced Forgiveness

Definition:

Forced forgiveness occurs when emotional closure, reconciliation, unity, or forgiveness is demanded as a substitute for repair.

Typical signature:

forgiveness pressure↑
repair incomplete
BΣ violation
H unchanged
victim burden↑

Primary variables:

BΣ, H, R, µᵢ, Au

Common origin layers:

U4, U6

Related modules:

Restoration · JGL · CMS · Security

Restoration direction:

  • remove forgiveness requirement
  • restore boundary and sovereignty
  • require material repair
  • protect affected-party autonomy