Aletheic Ethics: Toward a Normative Model of Truth as Disclosure

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Abstract

Traditional ethical theories operate under the assumption that truth is stable, knowable, and actionable. This paper proposes a shift: an ethics not of correctness, but of cognitive disclosure. Drawing on the concept of Aletheia—truth as unconcealment—it introduces aletheic ethics as a normative model grounded in frame-awareness, reflexive responsibility, and epistemic curvature. Ethical acts are reframed as gestures of structural invitation: they are good not because they conform to rules or outcomes, but because they allow the cognitive frame behind the act to become accessible to others. The paper outlines four principles—translucency, resonance, reflexivity, and curvature—and applies them across dialogue, pedagogy, AI, and conflict. It closes by arguing that morality in the age of frame-friction must be architectural. Truth does not arrive; it is allowed.

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