Volume 4 The Law (Constitution) of Curt Doolittle’s Natural Law is dense, but cl

Volume 4 The Law (Constitution) of Curt Doolittle’s Natural Law is dense, but clear in purpose: to finalize the Natural Law project by applying its measurement, logic, and evolutionary computation to legal reform through a constitutional framework. It focuses on:

Decidability in Law: Legal reforms grounded in Natural Law’s requirement for decidability—truth, reciprocity, and infallibility without discretion.

Constitutional Reformation: Filling six to eight conceptual and procedural holes left by the U.S. Constitution (e.g., concurrency, commonality, legitimacy, rights and obligations).

Formalization of Sovereignty: Sovereignty of Natural Law → Constitution → People → Court → State—designed to make abuse of power structurally impossible.

Enumerated Reforms: Institutional solutions including:
Restructuring military-industrial policy for total war readiness.
Devolution of social policy to federated polities (city-states, states, regions).
Eliminating credentialism in favor of demonstrated competency.
Establishing testable legitimacy and liability in lawmaking.

Insurance of Truth and Reciprocity: Extending legal accountability to all public speech and legislative actions, ending the loopholes exploited by managerial elites and ideological actors.

Immutable Foundations: Treating Natural Law, the Constitution derived from it, and the government it structures as immutable scientific institutions, while leaving policies as mutable.


Source date (UTC): 2025-04-22 17:35:58 UTC

Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/1914734940681592832

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