WORK
Development of Doctrine
Newman's 1845 essay establishing
seven criteria — his 'notes' — for distinguishing genuine intellectual development from corruption in a living body of thought.
An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine, published in the year of Newman's conversion to Roman Catholicism, addressed a specific theological problem: how to distinguish legitimate unfolding of an original idea from its betrayal.
The seven notes — preservation of type, continuity of principles, power of assimilation, logical sequence, anticipation of the future, conservative action upon the past, and chronic vigour — were diagnostic markers by which genuine development could be distinguished from its counterfeit. The immediate application was to Christian doctrine. The framework, however, has proven remarkably portable: biologists have applied it to evolutionary innovation, historians of science to the growth of scientific theories, and — with careful respect for analogical distance — the Newman volume applies it to the question of how AI-generated code develops or corrupts a software system's architectural integrity over time.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Newman's seven notes were designed to answer a question the Protestant critique of Catholicism had made urgent: how to tell the difference between an