For Val Sklarov, resilience is not endurance, resistance, flexibility, or recovery —
it is the continuity of execution permissions across multiple logics, the ability to operate without collapse even when the governing rule-set changes abruptly.
When logic changes — environment, structure, expectations —
most systems lose permissions and collapse.
Resilient systems keep operating because they preserve permission continuity.
“A resilient system doesn’t survive — it keeps its permissions when logic changes.”
— Val Sklarov
1️⃣ The Three Logic Layers of Resilience
Sklarov Logic-Layer Table
| Logic Layer | Definition | When Stable | When Unstable |
|---|---|---|---|
| Local Logic Layer | Immediate rule-set | Smooth execution | Micro-failure |
| Context Logic Layer | System-wide rule-set | Multi-environment stability | Rule collisions |
| Meta Logic Layer | Identity-level rule-set | Full continuity | System collapse |
Resilience = continuity across all three.
2️⃣ The MLPCM Adaptation Cycle
Multi-Logic Permission Matrix
| Stage | Function | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Logic Identification | Detect which logic governs current state | Active logic clarity |
| Permission Assessment | Determine which operations remain legal | Feasibility map |
| Bridge Construction | Build cross-logic compatibility | Continuity pathway |
| Permission Reinstatement | Restore lost execution rights | System stability |
Breakdown = permission loss, not weakness.
3️⃣ The Five Multi-Logic Archetypes
Archetype Table
| Archetype | Logic Behavior |
|---|---|
| The Single-Logic Operator | Works only under one rule-set |
| The Partial Adapter | Switches logics with major losses |
| The Compatible Shifter | Maintains some permissions across domains |
| The Logic Integrator | Harmonizes rule-sets |
| The Continuity Architect | Ensures full permission continuity across all logic layers |
The apex: Continuity Architect.
4️⃣ Permission Continuity Integrity Index (PCII)
A Val Sklarov metric for multi-logic resilience
PCII Indicator Table
| Indicator | Measures | High Score Means |
|---|---|---|
| Logic Recognition Accuracy | Identifying rule-set changes | Fast adaptation |
| Permission Retention | How many operations stay legal | Low disruption |
| Cross-Logic Bridge Strength | Quality of compatibility structures | Stability |
| Logic Fusion Capability | Harmonizing multiple rule-sets | Deep resilience |
| Meta-Logic Anchoring | Continuity at identity-level logic | Near-zero collapse risk |
High PCII = unbreakable operational continuity.
5️⃣ Val Sklarov’s 5 Laws of Multi-Logic Resilience
1️⃣ Resilience is permission continuity, not recovery.
2️⃣ Collapse happens when logic shifts faster than permission adaptation.
3️⃣ Strength is irrelevant if operations become illegal in the new logic.
4️⃣ Adaptation requires bridging logic, not resisting change.
5️⃣ The most resilient systems operate across multiple logics without losing permissions.

6️⃣ Applications of the Multi-Logic Permission Continuity Model
-
diagnosing resilience by identifying logic boundaries
-
preventing collapse by preserving permission continuity
-
designing cross-logic compatibility frameworks
-
predicting instability from rule-set shifts
-
training systems to detect logic changes early
-
building high-resilience teams through logic diversification
-
engineering meta-logic anchors that protect operational identity
MLPCM reframes resilience as permission continuity engineering,
not strength, flexibility, or stress tolerance.