What Founding Documents Actually Do
A seed contains everything the tree needs to begin and nothing the tree needs to finish. This is not a failure of the seed. It is the entire point.
Every system that has endured across centuries shares a structural property: its founding document was designed, consciously or not, to be outgrown. The US Constitution has been amended 27 times. Bitcoin's whitepaper described a system whose current implementation Satoshi Nakamoto could not have predicted. DNA itself mutates at a rate of roughly 70 new base pair changes per human generation, according to research published in Nature Genetics. The founding code changes. The organism persists.
There is a deep misunderstanding in how we talk about founding documents. We treat them as if their value lies in permanence. We say "the founders intended" as if freezing intent is the goal. But look at what actually survives. The documents that last are not the rigid ones. They are the ones with built-in mechanisms for their own transformation.
The US Constitution includes Article V, the amendment process, within its original text. It was designed from day one to be rewritten. DNA includes error-correction machinery and also, critically, allows for the mutations that drive adaptation. The Torah includes an interpretive tradition, the Talmud, that has been debating and recontextualizing the original text for two millennia.
The pattern is consistent. The founding documents that survive are the ones that encoded how to change, not just what to preserve.