Claim Status Taxonomy
The states a claim can be in within a dialectical graph
The claim status taxonomy defines the states a claim can occupy in a Dialectical Graph. For how a claim typically moves through these states over time, see the Claim Lifecycle.
Common States
tentative— hypothesis stagecontested— active debateconditionally supported— true under specified conditionsrobust— supported via multiple independent pathsrefuted— collapsed by a counterexampleobsolete— meaning lost due to definition drift or method shift
Status is not a single confidence score. A claim can be robust on evidence diversity but contested on scope; it can be conditionally supported in one context and refuted in another. Multi-dimensional status captures this complexity.
Transitions between states are driven by the kind of rebuttal, not the quantity. A single well-evidenced counterexample can move a claim from robust to refuted; many weak objections may leave it contested without resolving. See Status Transition Rules for the formal transition logic.