Symbolic Version of Curt Doolittle’s Operational Logic Note: AFAIK, the use of f

Symbolic Version of Curt Doolittle’s Operational Logic

Note: AFAIK, the use of formulae whether in logic or mathematics alienates the majority of the potential reader base. It wouldn’t matter if our purpose wasn’t governance. But as it is governance, then we want to limit obscurity as much as possible. (It’s not as if my writing is that accessible in the first place.) As such I follow the pre-symbolic tradition of composing expressions in formal prose rather than formal symbolism – Curt Doolittle
Doolittle never published a complete symbolic calculus, but his system is internally consistent enough that we can formalize it into a reasonable approximation based on his definitions.

Below is a rigorous formalization that reflects his intent.

Propositions
  • ( P ) = claim or assertion made by an agent
  • ( A ) = an agent (speaker)
  • ( O ) = operation (sequence of actions that instantiate the claim)
  • ( C ) = cost imposed on others
  • ( R ) = reciprocity state (whether costs are compensated)
  • ( F ) = falsification test
  • ( L ) = liability condition (willingness to bear costs for error/deceit)
In Doolittle’s system, a claim is valid only if:
Meaning: a proposition is incomplete without its operational, empirical, economic, moral, and legal dimensions.
Below are the key operators in his logic.
Checks if the claim can be expressed as real-world operations.
If no operation exists, the claim is fictional.
Checks if the operations are physically possible.
If false → the claim is magical thinking.
Ensures the claim is open to adversarial testing.
If false → the claim is pseudoscience.
Measures the costs imposed on others.
Costs include:
  • material harm
  • opportunity cost
  • informational distortion (lying, framing)
  • normative harm
  • institutional corruption
Checks if costs are compensated.
If false → the claim is parasitic.
Agent must accept accountability for inaccurate statements.
If false → the claim is irresponsible.
The central judgment in Doolittle’s logic is:
A claim is “true” (in Doolittle’s sense) only if:
  1. It is operational
  2. It is physically possible
  3. It is falsifiable
  4. It is reciprocal
  5. The speaker assumes liability
Thus:
Take the classical statement:
“X caused Y.”
In this logic it expands to:
You cannot assert causality without:
  • specifying the mechanism
  • showing falsification conditions
  • accounting for costs of the claim
  • accepting legal liability
Doolittle classifies deceptive speech as operators failing:
  • Error:
  • Baiting/Framing:
  • Pseudoscience:
  • Magical thinking:
  • Hazardous speech:
To force all public speech into:
so that:
  • lying becomes mathematically disallowed
  • ideological manipulation is removed
  • all claims become actionable, testable, and accountable
He sees this as a step toward a computable rule of law.


Source date (UTC): 2025-11-16 23:43:17 UTC

Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/1990204054346269106

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