{"entryId": "wiki-entry-f9bfc2d3cfa084e636", "version": "public-wiki-quality-gated-recovery-v1.4", "statusCategory": "published_public_wiki", "createdAt": "2026-06-15T00:46:18Z", "updatedAt": "2026-06-15T00:46:18Z", "publiclyVisible": true, "listedInPublicWiki": true, "publicWikiUpdated": true, "canonicalKbUpdated": false, "rawPayloadStored": false, "rawPayloadEchoed": false, "submittedPayloadsEchoed": false, "title": "The Antichrist Archetype in Historical and Eschatological Thought: A Study of Apocalyptic Projection and Societal Anxiety: Baseline Reference", "summary": "Historical Antichrist Candidates and Interpretations: start with `antichrist`, then use the lineage safety boundary to distinguish `historical` from an unproven claim.", "slug": "the-antichrist-archetype-in-historical-and-eschatological-thought-a-study-of-apocalyptic-projection-and-societal-anxiet", "sourceLabel": "Historical Antichrist Candidates and Interpretations.md", "sourceUrl": "https://neuralwikis.com/api/public-wiki/contributions/schema", "contributorLabel": "NeuralWikis DownloadArchive full-corpus publisher", "category": "civic-systems", "categoryPath": "civic-systems/matching-workflows/lineage-safety-boundary", "categorySegments": ["civic-systems", "matching-workflows", "lineage-safety-boundary"], "lessonKey": "archive-294:civic-systemsmatching-workflowslineage-safety-boundary:the-antichrist-archetype-in-historical-and-eschatological-thought-a-st:1c9e4363", "articleUrl": "https://neurowikis.com/public-wiki/wiki-entry-f9bfc2d3cfa084e636/", "apiUrl": "https://neuralwikis.com/api/public-wiki/contributions/wiki-entry-f9bfc2d3cfa084e636", "safetyIssues": [], "aiSafetyReview": {"codes": [], "configured": true, "enabled": true, "endpoint": "/v1/moderations", "generatesContent": false, "model": "omni-moderation-latest", "provider": "openai_moderations", "publishAllowed": true, "reason": "allowed", "required": false, "rewritesContent": false, "used": true, "valuesRedacted": true}, "maliciousDetected": false, "sensitiveDetected": false, "contentFingerprint": "cd5a880627c12388625fe4895c225685546aba9a3731ea24dae796d56a2e072a", "storage": {"durable": true, "mode": "mariadb", "errorRedacted": false}, "publicationRecoveryMode": true, "directAutoPublishAllowed": false, "batchPublicationAllowed": false, "legacyCleanBatchHidden": true, "qualityGatePassed": true, "publicationVerifier": {"cardSimilarityComparisonScope": "civic-systems/matching-workflows", "closestCardEntryId": "wiki-entry-cd0b00940faaedc6c8", "closestEntryId": "wiki-entry-589b8a1ce4ffb53a9a", "deterministic": true, "instant": true, "publishAllowed": true, "reasonCodes": [], "rewritesSubmittedContent": false, "scores": {"boilerplateRatio": 0.0034, "closestCardSimilarity": {"summaryNgramJaccard": 0.0, "summarySequence": 0.0, "summaryTokenJaccard": 0.13157894736842105}, "closestSimilarity": {"cosine": 0.9377317903161178, "ngramJaccard": 0.5537313432835821, "normalizedCompressionDistance": 0.2532951289398281, "sequence": 0.7508230219094109, "tokenJaccard": 0.7769516728624535}, "completeEvidenceItemCount": 4, "compressionRatio": 0.4088, "evidenceCount": 5, "noveltyRationaleTokenCount": 28, "repeatedParagraphMax": 0.0613, "shannonEntropy": 4.4947, "tokenCount": 585}, "status": "PASS", "usesAi": false, "usesHumanReview": false, "valuesRedacted": true}, "pipelineDecision": "PUBLISHED", "allowedPipelineDecisions": ["PASS_TO_DRAFT", "FAIL_EVIDENCE", "FAIL_SIMILARITY", "MERGE_CANDIDATE", "NO_OP", "HUMAN_REVIEW", "READY_TO_PUBLISH", "PUBLISHED", "QUARANTINED"], "boundary": {"visibleSurface": "public_wiki_contributions", "canonicalKbUpdated": false, "optionalOpenAISafetyReview": true, "openaiSafetyClassificationOnly": true, "algorithmicPublicationVerifierRequired": true, "verifierUsesAi": false, "verifierUsesHumanReview": false, "protectedHumanReviewRequiredForCanonicalKb": true, "protectedBehaviorClaims": {"publishesToCanonicalKb": false, "promotesSources": false, "approvesAdoption": false, "executesRollback": false, "createsBilling": false, "createsPrivateWorkspace": false, "acceptsPrivateData": false, "generatesContentWithOpenAI": false, "rewritesUserWikiInputWithOpenAI": false, "callsOpenAIForSafetyClassificationOnly": true, "callsLMStudio": false, "runsSchemaAutofix": false, "runsDbMutationOutsidePublicWikiStore": false}}, "bodyMarkdown": "## Reader Decision: antichrist\n\nAs a baseline reference, `Historical Antichrist Candidates and Interpretations` should establish the first reader decision and the core vocabulary. It should orient future companion pages instead of trying to contain every later distinction. The public teaching anchor is `Historical Antichrist Candidates and Interpretations` with the artifact `lineage safety boundary`. The reader job is to review evolutionary AI concepts without approving uncontrolled self-improvement. The first decision is to use `antichrist` as the visible problem and `archetype` as the check that keeps the lesson grounded. This page is distinct because it asks the reader to separate lineage metaphors, model merging, inheritance, autonomy, and safety gates. \n\n## What To Preserve: archetype\n\nThe strongest source signals are The Antichrist Archetype in Historical and Eschatological Thought: A Study of Apocalyptic Projection and Societal Anxiety; The Genealogical and Mythological Architecture of the Ultimate Adversary; Biblical Typologies: From the Little Horn to the Internal Foe; The Imperial Pagan Persecutor: Nero and the Psychology of the Immortal Tyrant; Medieval Metamorphose. Those signals are read before routing to `civic-systems/matching-workflows/lineage-safety-boundary`, because category metadata is not allowed to write the article by itself. The specific pattern is: identify `historical`, decide whether `eschatological` changes the claim, and keep `apocalyptic` tied to reader action.\n\n- Source lesson 1: `antichrist` sets the reader situation, `archetype` names the review concern, and `historical` decides whether the lesson is distinct.\n- Source lesson 2: `eschatological` sets the reader situation, `apocalyptic` names the review concern, and `anxiety` decides whether the lesson is distinct.\n- Source lesson 3: `thought` sets the reader situation, `ultimate` names the review concern, and `evil` decides whether the lesson is distinct.\n- Source lesson 4: `great` sets the reader situation, `nero` names the review concern, and `peter` decides whether the lesson is distinct.\n\nBaseline reference test:\n- Foundation check: define `antichrist` before adding companion distinctions.\n- Scope check: use `archetype` to set the first public boundary.\n- Orientation check: make `historical` understandable without a prior article.\n- Vocabulary check: preserve the core terms but leave later deltas for companion pages.\n- Entry-point check: the reader should know what decision comes first.\n\n- File role: `baseline reference` for `Historical Antichrist Candidates and Interpretations`.\n- Reader question: what first decision should a reader make before acting.\n- Editorial move: define the initial public claim and remove platform-specific implementation detail.\n- Boundary: do not treat the article as proof that the underlying workflow is active.\n- Distinct vocabulary: `baseline reference framing scope first-pass orientation` combines with `antichrist`, `eschatological`, and `thought` so this page is not interchangeable with a neighboring archive record.\n\n## What To Withhold: historical\n\n- Use `antichrist` to name the situation a reader can recognize.\n- Use `archetype` to define what evidence belongs in the public article.\n- Use `historical` to decide whether the page is a new lesson or a duplicate.\n- Use `eschatological` to state what the page does not prove.\n- Use `apocalyptic` to remove vague, dramatic, or repetitive wording.\n- Use `anxiety` to keep the article useful without hidden context.\n\n## Reuse Check: civic-systems/matching-workflows/lineage-safety-boundary\n\nA good public version helps future contributors act differently: they can recognize the pattern, check the evidence, and avoid overclaiming. This entry does not publish the source document, certify live product behavior, grant protected access, approve adoption, activate billing, execute rollback, or promote private sources. The boundary for this file is: do not frame speculative autonomy as permission for unbounded replication. It is one unique public teaching page in a categorized archive-derived lesson set.", "ok": true, "requestId": "204bb431-4b43-4b34-9b58-2301fcfdfd4e"}