Then came a quiet revolution from Geneva, Switzerland. Its name was . The Old Way: The Silent Assumption Imagine a French aerospace company in 1985. An engineer drafts a simple shaft for a landing gear actuator. He specifies a diameter of ( 50 \pm 0.1 ) mm. He does not specify straightness, roundness, or parallelism. Why would he? The old default said: If no geometric tolerance is given, the size tolerance controls form . This was the Taylor Principle (or Envelope Requirement). The perfect virtual cylinder of the maximum material condition (MMC) would automatically limit how bent or oval the shaft could be.

But the real victory came in global supply chains. After ISO 8015 was widely adopted (revised in 2011 as ISO 8015:2011, and eventually absorbed into the GPS master standard ISO 14638), a drawing from Japan could be read identically in Brazil, Germany, or South Africa. The standard eliminated the "translation errors" that had cost billions in scrap.

ISO 8015 declared that the Principle of Independency was dead. In its place, it established the —wait, no, the names are tricky. Let's clarify: