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Finally came up with a good idea about why the engineers of the Keyscape would've failed to complete the absolute proof of the codex for the machine.
Here's the idea: an ecograph is the metrograph, not of an infinite series of infinities, but of an agent correlated with the aleph-metrographs. Now, Apollyon (the antiset) has an ecograph, the antigraph. Now Armirex, for example, thought there was enough disjunction between Apollyon and the Form of Evil that they didn't sufficiently share the antigraph between them, but anyway, the fact is that the seal on the Final Power (the Destroyer-city's disinheritance) depended on a gap in the interpretation of the antigraph's interaction with other ecographs. That is, there is a unique simple topological interface between the antigraph and any other ecograph, so that the "destruction" of the victim structure assumes a particular geometric form, and no other.
But the Host of Ripheus made an honest mistake, maybe the most honest in history ("A mistake such as only the Messiah can make," as the Esauists say). They acknowledged, through and through, the priority of the concept of good over evil, and so did not look as closely at their concept of evil as they could have, and assumed what they thought they needed to satisfy the parameters of the Keyscape (which is an isotypic graph or isograph), which proved not enough: the door to the Anomalies, that is. (At least, this is an aspect of the problem, the "error" in the codex.)
