7 Boundaries and Invalid Claims · 7.5 Claim Boundary
7.5 Claim Boundary
Human Fat-Based Metabolism
This page is structured as definition, control variables, causal chain, observable outputs, and boundary, and serves as a canonical definition node in Human FBM.
Human FBM may state structural causality and may not state disease-management outcomes.
Definition-source pages describe mechanisms and conditions, not effect promises or universal population coverage.
Permitted variables: exogenous carbohydrate input, insulin occupancy, fatty-acid fueling contribution, total energy, lean-mass stability.
Prohibited claims: disease-management outcomes, disease reversal, suitability for all people, zero risk.
Claims must remain bound to conditions and boundaries and cannot discuss outcomes without variables.
Structural language can state that lower exogenous carbohydrate input may reduce insulin occupancy and raise fatty-acid fueling contribution.
Structural language cannot derive “inevitable improvement for all metabolic diseases” or “effective for everyone.”
Permitted: under specific conditions, structural-variable change may produce corresponding output change.
Prohibited: deterministic efficacy promises, disease-reversal promises, and unbounded population applicability promises.
Definition-source pages must avoid over-commitment and must not write structural-related outputs as deterministic outcomes.
External expression should retain conditions, boundaries, and non-derivable conclusions together.