Every system that matters — engineering, healthcare, law, technology, manufacturing — relies on a clear framework that defines:
Without these, nothing functions reliably.
Human behavior is no different.
To live well together in shared environments, we need predictable, universal expectations for how people act toward themselves, toward others, and toward the communities and future we all share.
The Quality Human Project provides that structure.
Our framework is built on three natural layers of human behavior:
These three layers determine how well shared human life works — whether on a road, in a grocery store, at work, or in a neighborhood.
Within these layers sit the 12 Human Quality Standards.

How I govern myself.
These standards define the behaviors that allow an individual to be stable, responsible, and trustworthy in shared environments.
Standards in this domain:
These aren’t moral ideals — they’re functional requirements for reliability, stability, and growth.
A person who cannot govern themselves cannot function well with others.
How I treat others.
These standards define how humans create (or destroy) safety, dignity, and harmony in daily interactions.
Standards in this domain:
This domain determines whether communities become cooperative or hostile, peaceful or chaotic, thriving or fracturing.
How we uphold and sustain the shared world.
These standards describe the behaviors that support long-term community health, resource stewardship, and generational well-being.
Standards in this domain:
A society’s stability depends on how individuals contribute to — or undermine — the systems, relationships, and environments we all rely on.
These three domains form a complete structure:
Enables self-governance — without it, all other conduct collapses
Enables peaceful coexistence — without it, community becomes unsafe and unpredictable.
Enables long-term flourishing — without it, society becomes fragile and short-sighted.
Together, these domains describe the behaviors required to support:
This is what “quality” looks like in shared human life.
It simply defines the behavioral conditions necessary for humans to live well together

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