On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 12:28 PM, Kerim Aydin <ke...@u.washington.edu> wrote: > > > On Fri, 10 Sep 2010, Ed Murphy wrote: >> 2855: TRUE >> 2856: TRUE >> >> A substantive aspect of a rule pertains to /how/ a rule governs, not >> /what/ a rule governs. With that argument eliminated, a low-powered >> proposal is just as capable as a low-powered rule (they're both >> instruments and they're both effective) of changing holdings whose >> existence is defined by a high-powered rule (if the high-powered rule >> doesn't attempt to prevent it, then there's no conflict). > > Question: where does it actually say in the rules that an Instrument > can change a regulated quantity? > > The rules say: > An instrument has positive power. (R1688) > An instrument CANNOT affect something secured at a power greater than > its own. (R1688) > An instrument CANNOT affect the operation of a higher-powered > instrument. (R2140). > An instrument CAN make rule changes (R105). > > Nothing in here actually says that an Instrument can adjust regulated > things generally. Now, the counterargument is exceptio probat regulam, > that the fact that the Rules state that an instrument CANNOT make > secured changes implies that it CAN make unsecured changes. > > However, this regulam is not in fact written, and it IS implied through > R2125 and R101(i) that regulated actions CANNOT be done except as > actually described by the rules. > > So where is it described?
Instruments generally, nowhere. Proposals in particular, the first paragraph of R106: When a proposal that includes such explicit changes takes effect, it applies those changes to the gamestate.