Form: Mini Essay

  • You will only be such a scholar if it interests you, and if the approval of othe

    You will only be such a scholar if it interests you, and if the approval of others means something to you, and your creativity is limited to patiently serving others. There are many interests competing for your attention, some of us want to control our applied creativity, and some of us couldn’t care less what others think, or delay gratification serving others academic ambitions. To make matters worse some of us develop the ‘fully suite’ earlier or later than others. Some of us just pursue what we want (especially in my generation: Gates, Jobs, Ellison) rather than seek approval necessary for academic performance.
    Only after you are quite skilled do you realize that anything that can be tested is of limited innovative value.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-03-01 23:41:20 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2028254288146026658

  • THE MORAL RADIUS There is some basic rule I haven’t articulated that’s along the

    THE MORAL RADIUS
    There is some basic rule I haven’t articulated that’s along the lines of the geographic scale of morality you can afford is the geographic scale of morality you can afford – meaning if you’re strong you can seek cooperation at scale or predation at scale. If you’re within the cooperative envelope (trade is possible) then the choice is both yours and your opponent’s. If they’re weaker it’s yours. If they’re stronger it’s theirs. The European problem is assuming that the world conducts war on the same terms europeans do with one another. They don’t. (See Keegan and Van Creveld).
    Europeans are as naive in the belief their cultural biases are normal for humans when they are the opposite. Every culture believes its biases are normal or good for human beings … but that’s false.
    Every culture other than europe failed by 800AD despite the agrarian revolution. And europe only succeeded because it restored Classical Thought and reconstructed greco-roman law around the north sea beginning in about 1000ad, as the muslims who preserved those works fled the rise of fundamentalism and it’s mandate of supernatural ignorance.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-25 16:37:47 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2026698148161495188

  • (Thoughts) “Dying a little Inside.” I follow the intersexual conflict, just like

    (Thoughts)
    “Dying a little Inside.”

    I follow the intersexual conflict, just like I follow ideological, institutional, political, and international conflict.

    Fundamentally my work in decidability is a subconscious desire to end ignorance, error, delusion, bias, deceit and fraud so that we can cooperate on truthful reciprocal terms. Because I don’t like conflict. Especially dishonest conflict. I’m only good at it because I hate it, and that’s the only way to overcome it.

    I was just listening to a chat. My takeaway was that something died inside with every tragedy I experienced. Divorce, Illness, the immorality of the financial sector, the injustices done to my people by activism’s utopian abuse of the empirical common law. My own government coming after me when it was to blame, and my government coming after me more so when I sought to correct it – what Shakespeare meant with:

    — “For Who Would Bear The Proud Man’s Contumely (insult), the Pangs of Despised Love (Divorce), the Laws Delay (Courts), the Insolence of Office (Government), the Spurns that Patient Merit (tolerance) of The Unworthy (immoral) Takes. … who would these fardels (bundle of burdens) bear … ?” —

    All true. He closes with:

    “Conscience does make cowards of us all”.

    But this isn’t quite true. For some of us, we may die a little inside with every injustice and hurt. But some of us are not whittled away to resignation but spurred further to reverse the injustices – at any effort and at any cost.

    If maturity consists in our love of nature, life, and mankind, and our optimism and tolerance dying a bit at a time, then perhaps we have set about producing the wrong conditions of maturity.

    I have learned perhaps too much in my life, and spent the past years seeking solutions to the mounting crisis – but I’m no different from others who in similar phases of their civilizations have sought to capture practiced wisdom lost in an attempt to restore it – only to have it help the next iteration of civilization.

    The lesson of this century is one I have no promise of correction nor hope of retention: the female intuition is as destructive to the polity when unleashed as the male is destructive to the society when unleashed. Male violence has no place in the family and society and female irresponsibility and sedition no place in economics and politics.

    I prefer my women on a pedestal. But they have destroyed the illusion men have used to sculpt it. And I do not see a positive solution other than open recognition and embodiment in law.

    A little bit more dying inside.

    Cheers
    CD


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-24 20:42:48 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2026397421211897890

  • Founding Beliefs Were Not Universal (a) Man’s nature is not fixed but utilitaria

    Founding Beliefs Were Not Universal
    (a) Man’s nature is not fixed but utilitarian and adaptive and follows incentives – what is rational and advantageous varies by circumstance (b) reason accelerates adaptation and more so negotiation of adaptive cooperation at increasing scales (c) Man’s abilities, education, and experience are unequal – making incentives vary. (d) Man’s behavior then is not universal (a holdover from Christian universalism – not from European aristocratic tradition) but particular to the individual, to the sex, class, group, polity, and civilization that creates the portfolio of incentives man adapts to. (e) The founders were not bound by shared beliefs but shared problems and they represented a distribution usually described as Hamiltonian and Hobbes vs Jeffersonian and Locke, but is more varied on that spectrum.
    The cause of their generation’s myopia was the ratio of aristocracy (martial, governing) and nobility (clerical, administrative) proper, to the “lesser aristocracy” (Elites) that founded the country, to the emergent middle class due to expansion of trade during the age of sail, to the agrarian majority whether northern (small scale) family farmers or southern ‘industrial’ (large scale) plantation farmers. As class sizes change the realities and incentives of classes adapt – usually distributing influence (power) to alter outcomes across classes.
    Amplify their divisions by the fact that the continent was settled by four different fundamentalist groups from four different regions of Britain. This meant that the constitution had to be largely secular due to English (England, Wales, Scotland) tradition on the one hand and in order to mediate differences between sectarian justifications on the other. It was not just a matter of enlightenment prose but incentives. It’s also why the constitution was written in both English and German – because of the large number of Germans in the population.
    I’m not really trying to overthrow any argument here other than the presumption of a shared mind and set of beliefs, rather than shared interest given the incentives of the time, and the rather natural outcome of legal prose that sought to mediate differences between the parties founding the federation.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-23 16:30:59 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2025971661485531642

  • MY HERO. I count Scalia as the equivalent of Hayek, Jefferson, Blackstone, and A

    MY HERO.
    I count Scalia as the equivalent of Hayek, Jefferson, Blackstone, and Aristotle in forming my understanding of the ‘holes’ in the law – holes that are simply unstated principles. Principles I have sought to enumerate in order to fix those holes in the law.

    MORE
    However the key players in history are less visible but each is important in his own way:

    English common law → constitutional constraint (England)

    Henry de Bracton — early systemization of common law into a coherent rule-structure (“what the law is” as something knowable rather than priestly).

    Sir John Fortescue — articulates the distinction between dominium regale and dominium politicum et regale (a monarchy constrained by law), i.e., the move from will → rule.

    Sir Edward Coke — operationalizes limits on Crown discretion; anchors “common law” as a constraint-producing machine rather than a mere custom list.

    Sir Matthew Hale — explains the evolutionary character of common law (why it can adapt without dissolving into discretion).

    Lord Mansfield — commercial law integration (a necessary bridge from agrarian custom → scalable trade, credit, and contract adjudication).

    A.V. Dicey — later but clarifies “rule of law” and constitutional conventions (useful as a diagnostic of where discretion re-enters by euphemism).

    Natural rights / constitutional design inputs (transmission into the USA)

    John Locke — supplies the operative grammar for rights, consent, and limits on power that the Founders convert into written constraint.

    Montesquieu — separation of powers as an anti-discretion mechanism (institutional design, not moral aspiration).

    Algernon Sidney — a concrete republican transmission line into Anglo-American resistance theory.

    American “write-down” and early operationalization (USA)

    James Madison — institutional architecture: faction, incentives, and constraint design (the mechanism arguments).

    Alexander Hamilton — executive energy + fiscal/administrative statecraft (how law survives contact with governance).

    John Marshall — judicial review and constitutional supremacy become enforceable rather than poetic.

    Joseph Story — systematizes constitutional/common-law understanding for American adjudication and legal education.

    James Wilson — founding-era jurisprudence linking natural law language to American constitutional structure.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-16 19:22:14 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2023478042337964368

  • Exposition At its core, this is about how societies manage the trade-offs betwee

    Exposition
    At its core, this is about how societies manage the trade-offs between fostering large-scale cooperation and protecting against exploitation. Western systems, according to this view, create “trust discounts” that make interactions cheaper and faster, boosting efficiency and innovation—but at the risk of making social capital easier to erode. In contrast, many non-Western systems maintain higher barriers to trust, which slows growth but better insulates against parasites. I’ll expand on this step by step, drawing out the key mechanisms, implications, and real-world parallels.

    1. The Western Model: Trust Discounts as a Double-Edged Sword

    Core Mechanism: In high-trust Western societies (rooted in traditions like common law, Protestant work ethic, and civic institutions), there’s an embedded assumption of reciprocal constraint—the idea that people will generally not impose costs on others without mutual benefit or accountability. This creates “dividends on trust,” where distributed responsibility reduces the need for constant vigilance or vetting in everyday interactions.
    – Think of it economically: Transaction costs (time, effort, and resources spent on deals, contracts, or relationships) are discounted because the baseline expectation is cooperation. For example, you can walk into a store, buy something on credit, or form a business partnership with minimal upfront scrutiny, assuming the other party will uphold their end.
    – This “widened latitude for risk-taking” accelerates cooperation beyond family or tribal lines, enabling massive scaling—think industrial revolutions, global trade networks, or open-source innovation ecosystems like Silicon Valley.

    The Downside: Cheapening Social Capital and Enabling Freeriding

    – These discounts inadvertently lower the barriers for defectors (people or groups who exploit without contributing). When trust is cheap to access, it’s easier for freeriders to “privatize the commons”—benefiting from shared resources (like public infrastructure, welfare systems, or cultural norms) while imposing unreciprocated costs.

    – ContraFabianist highlights how this reduces the “costs of baiting into hazard”: In a high-trust environment, scammers, corrupt actors, or ideological subversives face lower entry barriers because suspicion is not the default. The same mechanisms that speed up legitimate cooperation (e.g., minimal bureaucracy) also make it cheaper to consume “pooled social capital” without replenishing it.

    – Result: Erosion of trust over time, leading to phenomena like declining civic participation (as documented in Robert Putnam’s Bowling Alone, which charts the drop in U.S. community bonds since the mid-20th century) or rising polarization, where exploiters game the system (e.g., corporate lobbying that captures regulatory commons for private gain).

    Historical and Economic Parallels:

    – Western Europe’s transition from feudalism to market economies relied on institutions like guilds and courts that enforced reciprocity, creating trust surpluses that fueled the Enlightenment and capitalism. Ronald Coase’s theory of transaction costs aligns here: Lower costs enable larger firms and markets, but without safeguards, they invite opportunism (as in agency problems or moral hazard).

    – Modern examples include Nordic countries’ high-trust welfare states, where low corruption enables efficient public services—but immigration or economic shocks can strain this if newcomers don’t internalize the same norms, leading to debates on “trust decay.”

    2. Non-Western Systems: Higher Suspicion as a Protective Barrier

    Core Mechanism: Outside the West (e.g., in many parts of Asia, Africa, the Middle East, or Latin America), the baseline is often one of suspicion toward non-kin or outsiders. Trust is preserved within tight networks (family, clans, or ethnic groups) but extended cautiously, with higher upfront costs for verification and enforcement.

    This “higher baseline of suspicion” means consuming trust is more expensive: Deals require extensive negotiation, guarantees, or intermediaries (e.g., bribes in corrupt systems aren’t just exploitation but a crude way to signal commitment). Reciprocal constraint isn’t assumed; it’s explicitly built and monitored.

    Benefits: This curbs parasitism by raising the bar for defectors. Freeriding is harder because access to commons (social, economic, or political) is gated, reducing the velocity of exploitation.

    The Trade-Off: Limited ScalabilityWhile this preserves trust within bounded groups, it hampers large-scale cooperation. Discounts on signaling cooperative intent are minimal, so transactions are slower and costlier—limiting economic velocity, innovation, and growth.
    ContraFabianist notes that non-Western systems haven’t “approximated the accumulated discounts” the West has encoded over centuries, so they prioritize preservation over expansion. This results in more resilient but smaller-scale commons.

    Historical and Economic Parallels:
    – In clan-based societies like those in parts of the Arab world or sub-Saharan Africa, trust is kin-centric (as per Francis Fukuyama’s Trust: The Social Virtues and the Creation of Prosperity), leading to stable but fragmented economies. High suspicion deters broad parasitism but fosters nepotism or corruption as workarounds.

    – China’s historical mandarin bureaucracy or modern “guanxi” networks exemplify this: Relationships are built slowly with high vetting costs, enabling massive scale once established (e.g., Belt and Road Initiative) but at the expense of openness to outsiders.

    – Contrast with Western vulnerabilities: Events like the 2008 financial crisis showed how low-barrier trust in derivatives markets allowed widespread freeriding by banks, eroding social capital far more than in suspicion-heavy systems like Russia’s oligarchic economy, where exploitation is contained but growth is stunted.

    3. Broader Implications and the Core Tension

    – Vulnerability in High-Trust Systems: The West’s strength—efficient scaling through trust discounts—becomes its Achilles’ heel when facing non-reciprocal actors (e.g., ideological movements, mass migration without assimilation, or globalized crime). As ContraFabianist puts it, the weakness isn’t in producing expensive commons but in the discounts that “accelerate the velocity of cooperation at the expense of reducing the barriers to parasitism.” This echoes game theory concepts like the Prisoner’s Dilemma, where repeated interactions favor cooperators in high-trust settings—until defectors multiply.

    – Pathways Forward: To mitigate this, suggestions from similar thinkers (e.g., in Natural Law Institute circles, which Curt Doolittle is associated with) include reinstating stricter reciprocity enforcement—through legal reforms, cultural revivals, or tech-enabled transparency—to raise defection costs without losing scalability. Non-Western systems might benefit from selective trust-building to unlock growth, as seen in Singapore’s hybrid model blending suspicion with enforced meritocracy.

    The Choice
    This exposition highlights a fundamental societal design choice: Optimize for speed and scale (West) or resilience and preservation (non-West)?

    Both have merits, but the confusion Weinhagen notes—mistaking responsibility for unfettered freedom—exacerbates the West’s risks, inviting exploitation that could undermine its engine altogether.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-15 19:19:51 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2023115055244759460

  • (NLI) DISAMBIGUATING PROPERTARIANISM AND NATURAL LAW Interesting Insight from Ch

    (NLI)
    DISAMBIGUATING PROPERTARIANISM AND NATURAL LAW

    Interesting Insight from ChatGPT 5.3:

    —“If you want the criterion and test for which rules produce cooperation, you are in Natural Law (of cooperation). If you want the legal-political architecture that implements that criterion as rights/obligations around property and exchange, you are in Propertarianism.”—

    –““Natural Law (of cooperation)” is described as the discovery-and-test apparatus for deciding what rules sustain cooperation, while “Propertarianism” is described as the normative/legal rule-family that results when you apply that apparatus and cash it out as property/contract/tort/restitution.”–

    I think I separate ‘the methodology’ for producing the science of decidability as distinct from the resulting science, but I can see how that’s an arbitrary distinction.

    –“If Natural Law is a procedure for making moral/legal claims operational and testable, then it yields criteria (reciprocity, decidability, full accounting) that select for certain institutions; the consequence is that the selected institutional form is framed as property/contract/restitution; the function is enforceable cooperation under constraint rather than narrative justification.”–

    –“The documents describe Natural Law as an attempt to make social/moral claims operational, testable, and decidable—i.e., “define terms operationally, measure variables, test causality” as an evaluative procedure rather than merely a policy preference.
    They also frame Natural Law as a universal framework drawing on evolutionary/game-theoretic selection: rules are treated as “discovered” by what sustains cooperation vs what produces conflict/decay.
    Therefore, “Natural Law (of cooperation)” is functioning as the criterion/test suite: does a norm/law/policy produce reciprocal cooperation under constraints, after full accounting?—not yet as a particular constitution or statute-set.”–

    In my understanding that’s ‘science’.

    –“The same materials explicitly say that the reciprocity/non-imposition ethic reduces in practice to property rights and voluntary exchange, and then state that this property/exchange ethic is what Doolittle “elsewhere terms ‘Propertarianism.’”
    They cash this out in common-law terms—tort (“harm requires compensation”), property (“clear ownership to avoid disputes”), contract (“honor agreements”)—and describe the program as making this “common-law justice in algorithmic form,” i.e., enforceable institutional machinery rather than only a criterion.
    Hence: once Natural Law supplies the test (“no involuntary reduction of others’ demonstrated interests without restitution”), the “implementation layer” naturally becomes property/contract/restitution rules—the political-juridical architecture that gets labeled Propertarianism in these texts.”–

    In my understanding that’s applied science.

    –“Scarcity + strategic interaction over resources → stable cooperation requires reciprocity (no uncompensated imposition) → Natural Law is presented as the measurement/decidability procedure for testing which rules satisfy that reciprocity across cases → when you implement reciprocity institutionally you converge on property/contract/tort/restitution as the enforceable grammar → that enforceable grammar is what the documents identify as “Propertarianism” (the property-rights/voluntary-exchange encoding).”–

    So we have “The Methodology” > “The Science” > “The Applied Science” as a hierarchy that constitutes this intellectual project.

    The Clean Disambiguation:
    Natural Law = method (formal/operational social science);
    Propertarianism = applied jurisprudence (normative institutional design).

    This framing lets me preserve Propertarianism. Nice. 😉

    I didn’t think of that disambiguation. I see Propertarianism as the insight that all of social science (all of behavioral science) can be reduced to analysis of demonstrated interests (property). I see Natural Law of cooperation as the science of decidability and the means of implementing it. But the above analysis is correct. The method is what it is. The science is what it is. The paradigm for its use in institutions is what it is. Elegant really. Wish I’d thought of it. Simplifies explaining it. 😉

    Cheers
    CD


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-13 18:56:11 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2022384323203309648

  • The age of art you recall destroyed the age of art I recall as the VP of the wor

    The age of art you recall destroyed the age of art I recall as the VP of the world’s largest supplier of commercial art supplies. And I recall it clearly.

    The day I saw early desktop publishing and typesetting I told the CEO to sell the company immediately. I left and bought an office supply company and computerized it. His 230-odd location company shrank to five stores barely surviving. But millions who were not skilled or talented enough to produce art by hand were able to vastly scale in numbers by producing so called art digitally.

    At present vast numbers who could not and were not skilled enough to produce digital equivalents of art are creating the post-hollywood industry. Just when that industry is dying of economic and conceptual exhaustion.

    At present gaming is trying to figure out how to add AI to games further competing in the attention economy.

    It takes time, but it just means we all have multiple careers.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-03 16:40:13 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2018726227381793068

  • DON’T TAKE AI FOUNDATION MODEL CEO’s TOO SERIOUSLY I’d counsel against taking AI

    DON’T TAKE AI FOUNDATION MODEL CEO’s TOO SERIOUSLY
    I’d counsel against taking AI company leads terribly seriously when it comes to the economy. Most of it is motivated reasoning and attention seeking to cover their vast losses while keeping the financial markets betting on them. And while AI will have greater military consequences, robotics will have greater economic consequences. And even if we are to see unemployment rise from AI, solving the problem is a relatively easy opportunity for good, and civilizations have done so repeatedly in history. Periods of great architecture, art, infrastructure, technology, and science are often the product of shifting a polity and economy from individual consumption to collective production of commons that increase the quality of life for all.
    We have exhausted consumption as an economic vehicle and descended into consumption as a signaling method. It’s one of the sources of our political problems. Shifting to producing commons can restore unity in a population.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-03 16:06:34 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2018717760956842270

  • VALIDATION OF AND LIMITS OF USING AI AGENTS I probably have told you some part o

    VALIDATION OF AND LIMITS OF USING AI AGENTS
    I probably have told you some part of this story, but around 2006, a couple of senior microsoft guys, one in the tools division (programming) who I had known as a a software architect for a long time and one in the test division (same relative area) who had programmed the stealth bombers, came to me with an idea suggesting competing agents on an N-Dimensional manifold. They told me the tech didn’t exist yet, but that they could build it.

    I was already too overloaded and felt it as a lot of time and money before returns and so hard to raise money for (basically it was too early). That said the same idea, which is adversarial processes (bots, agents) on an n-dimensional manifold (neural network) can compete (darwinian selection) for superior outcomes (solutions).

    Now the brain does the same thing with networks of brain regions, and only raises to your attention the best of the ‘hallucinations’ (Imagination).

    So that’s validation. On the other hand I still see rapid commoditization of a tiny number of agent design patterns that like a piano keyboard can compose by combination and recombination a relatively infinite permutation of outcomes.

    IMO we are at the ‘toy’ stage. And the extrapolation of the possibilities is the equivalent of an AI hallucination. In other words I think the outcome is deterministic and what we are seeing is the equivalent of another operating system layer that will add functionality in limited patterns just like we added applications in a limited number of patterns. Jus like we added mobile application in a limited number of patterns.

    So what am I saying? I’m saying that the money to be made is in that commoditization into a fixed number of design patterns that can be organized or self organized by an LLM into a solution without much user interaction or even understanding.

    And that process appears to be underway.

    Cheers
    CD


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-30 21:36:12 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2017351162287296658