Theme: Cooperation

  • (NLI) From Volume 3 Chapter 5: –“In institutional systems, clearing capacity co

    (NLI)
    From Volume 3 Chapter 5:
    –“In institutional systems, clearing capacity consists of monitoring, enforcement, and reciprocity mechanisms. When temptation load exceeds clearing capacity, defection becomes the lowest-cost strategy. Closure dissolves.”–


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-16 22:44:34 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2023528962367123623

  • 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

  • Perfect for you is not the same as best that is possible. The perfect for you is

    Perfect for you is not the same as best that is possible. The perfect for you is the enemy of the good for all of us.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-15 07:41:35 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2022939329723797600

  • (NLI HUMOR) I think beer may be cognitive lubricant. Well, I know it’s a sh*t-ta

    (NLI HUMOR)
    I think beer may be cognitive lubricant. Well, I know it’s a sh*t-talking lubricant – and thus a humor lubricant and as such a male-bonding enhancer. And it’s possible that sh*t-talking is then a cognitive lubricant by externality. All I know is that if there is


    Source date (UTC): 2026-02-15 00:58:45 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2022837953639469238

  • (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

  • Modern sense as a science of cooperation, but whether the enlighenment, the scho

    Modern sense as a science of cooperation, but whether the enlighenment, the scholastics, aquinas, or Aristotle much of it is consistent and difers only in attribution of causality.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-31 07:56:34 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2017507283534811500

  • I follow @BrianRoemmele of course because I love his takes and his passion. I wo

    I follow
    @BrianRoemmele
    of course because I love his takes and his passion. I work on different ambitions that seek to allow people to work together with ai at scale whether in private or public domains. And so I’m interested in his work as an experiment in possibility. But not deeply enough to comment on it rather than him as a thought leader.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-27 20:02:49 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2016240500660175033

  • Key Concepts in Doolittle’s Methodology: The Science of Cooperation Here are the

    Key Concepts in Doolittle’s Methodology: The Science of Cooperation

    Here are the key concepts in Curt Doolittle’s methodology, drawn from his overarching framework (often called Propertarianism or more precisely his Natural Law system). This is a unified, scientific approach to epistemology, ethics, law, politics, economics, and human behavior. It treats cooperation as an evolutionary computation problem, demanding operational rigor, reciprocity, and decidability to suppress parasitism, deception, and irreciprocity while maximizing high-trust, low-friction societies.
    1. Reciprocity as the Sole Moral and Legal LawThe universal constraint on human cooperation: the only permissible interactions are productive, fully informed, warrantied, voluntary exchanges free of negative externalities (imposed costs without consent or repair).All ethics, morality, and law reduce to this.
      Violations = parasitism, theft, fraud, or aggression under any cover (including ideology, pseudoscience, or moralizing).
      Reciprocity + realism (empirical grounding) = objective morality, as it’s the only strategy that survives evolutionary selection at group level.

    2. Property-in-Toto (Demonstrated Property)Property is expansively defined as anything an individual or group defends with force (physical body, time, labor, reputation, norms, family, commons, self-ownership).Rights emerge from demonstrated interests (what people actually defend), not normative assertions.
      All conflicts resolve via tort (demonstrated harm and restitution), not punishment or redistribution.

    3. OperationalismKnowledge, arguments, and claims must be expressed in testable, constructive, falsifiable operations (sequences of actions with observable consequences).Eliminates ambiguity, pseudoscience, moralizing, and unfalsifiable ideology.
      Language becomes a “grammar” of decidability: reduce to actions, costs, and outcomes.
      Mirrors scientific method but applied to ethics, law, and discourse.

    4. TestimonialismStrict liability for speech: all public claims must be warrantied as truthful under penalty of restitution for harm caused (deception = aggression).Enforces truth-telling to prevent parasitism via lying, framing, loading, or obscurantism.
      Suppresses “industrialization of lying” (e.g., via Marxism, postmodernism, feminism, or other ideological sequences).

    5. DecidabilityConflicts must be resolvable by objective criteria (evidence + reciprocity test), without arbitrary authority, relativism, or unfalsifiable narratives.Applies to truth (epistemology), morality (ethics), and law (politics).
      Hierarchy of criteria: internal consistency → external correspondence → constructibility → rational choice.

    6. Evolutionary ComputationReality (physics to society) evolves via variation, competition, selection, and adaptation.Human societies are computational processes optimizing for survival/cooperation.
      Groups flourish by suppressing free-riding/parasitism and producing commons (shared institutions like law, trust, science).

    7. Parasitism and Free-RidingExploitation of asymmetry (information, complexity, trust) to impose unreciprocated costs.Includes deception, rent-seeking, externalities, moral hazards, and institutional irreciprocity.
      Core threat to high-trust polities; must be suppressed via reciprocity enforcement.

    8. Spectrum of AggressionAggression ranges from physical violence to subtle impositions (fraud, baiting into hazard, reputation attacks, gossip, shaming).All forms violate reciprocity if involuntary.

    • Full Accounting (Seen and Unseen Costs) — Measure all externalities, informal capital (trust, family, virtue), and long-term harms; economics without negatives enables deceit.
    • Sex, Class, and Cultural Differences — Probabilistic predispositions rooted in evolutionary pressures (e.g., biology → predisposition → probability → behavior); used as causal baselines for explanation, not rigid boxes.
    • Critique of Ideologies — Abrahamic → Marxist → postmodern sequences as seditions undermining reciprocity/truth (e.g., via accusation, relativism, or parasitism).
    • Western Exceptionalism — Arises from aristocratic egalitarianism, truth-telling, common law, militia organization, and suppression of parasitism → high trust, rapid adaptation, commons production.
    In summary, Doolittle’s methodology reconstructs natural law as a science of cooperation: empirical, operational, reciprocity-enforced, and decidable. It aims to formalize Western aristocratic-egalitarian traditions into a constitution-ready system that outperforms alternatives by minimizing frictions and maximizing evolutionary velocity. This framework is ambitious, interdisciplinary (evolutionary psychology, game theory, economics, law), and designed for high-IQ, high-trust societies while rejecting moralizing or relativism.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-22 22:40:41 UTC

    Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/2014468286646518061

  • Don’t be a nitwit. I didn’t say that. I said that’s what the strategists are say

    Don’t be a nitwit. I didn’t say that. I said that’s what the strategists are saying. That’s their argument.

    NLI’s policy is ‘let a thousand nations bloom’ in order to improve cooperation and reduce conflict.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-06 16:42:48 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2008580018595848423

  • Q: “What if everyone’s AI had access to our Runcible Protocols?” Short answer: u

    Q: “What if everyone’s AI had access to our Runcible Protocols?”

    Short answer: universal access would raise the cost of nonsense, lower the cost of cooperation, and expose parasitism—but only where people accept being measured by the same grammar. If they won’t, you get conflict at the boundary.
    1) Single ingress + pinned tests → fewer rhetorical escapes → computable discourse.
    Because the stack requires ingress through a commands/registry gate and pins Truth → Reciprocity → [Possibility] → Decidability in order, speech must pass the same checks or fail closed. Consequence: less equivocation, more
    “show your operations” culture. Function: interoperable judgments across domains.
    2) Output-contracting claims → visible externalities/liability → cleaner incentives.
    The protocols force a
    Sphere of Full Accounting, externalities ledger, and reciprocity gates before verdict emission. Consequence: institutions must either internalize costs or admit irreciprocity. Function: markets, law, and policy align on the same audit surface.
    3) Deflationary grammar as the default → less inflationary narrative → higher signal density.
    By construction the system privileges operational/deflationary language and treats inflationary narrative as non-measurement. Consequence: media, academia, and politics must translate rhetoric into operations or accept undecidability. Function: compression to commensurable, testable statements.
    4) Ten-Tests + reciprocity scoring → standardized falsification → portable trust.
    Truth tests with calibrated confidence and lie-severity, plus reciprocity scoring with hard gates (warranty/restitution), make verdicts comparable across cases. Consequence: less reliance on status/credential; more reliance on survivability under tests. Function:
    portable trust across firms, agencies, and polities.
    5) Registry + aliases → civic usability → low-friction adoption.
    Human-friendly commands mapped to canonical protocols lowers the skill threshold. Consequence: practitioners can invoke tests quickly; specialization remains optional, not necessary. Function: broad literacy in measurement, not just elite gatekeeping.
    • Boundary refusal: Groups that profit from inflationary grammars will reject ingress and pinning. Expect institutional trench warfare where auditability threatens rents. (Undecidability guard prevents laundering uncertainty into false certainty.)
    • Overreach risk: Forcing deflationary grammar into domains of genuine ambiguity can stall action; the stack mitigates by emitting UNDECIDABLE rather than faking verdicts.
    • Governance capture: If a monopoly actor controls registry/versions, the system can be weaponized. Countermeasure: pinned schema versions and single-door telemetry checks in the invariants.
    • Media/academia: Shift from opinion throughput to measurement throughput; publish claims with output contracts or mark them as undecidable narrative.
    • Firms/HR: Replace credential proxies with falsification reports and reciprocity compliance for role design, promotion, and vendor selection. Hard gates kill “performative compliance.”
    • Policy/law: Bills and regulations come with declared accounting spheres + externalities matrices, enabling citizen and market audit. Function: reversible policy with insurable risk bounds.
    1. Open registry + public commands layer so anyone can call the tests; keep canonical text immutable, versions pinned.
    2. Ship a citizen-grade “contractor”: paste a claim → get Truth/Reciprocity/Decidability + externalities sheet; default emission = plain summary + findings.
    3. Mandate output contracts for state-facing actions (procurement, grants, rulemaking); incentivize in markets via warranty/restitution advantages.
    4. Publish playbooks for translating inflationary grammars to deflationary form (ordinary → operational language conversion).
    • Necessary: shared ingress, pinned checks, and output contracts to make speech auditable.
    • Sufficient (with adoption): a civilizational upgrade from persuasion to computation in public reasoning—cooperation where possible, clean separation where not.
    • Contingent: political will to accept “UNDECIDABLE” as honest output rather than weaponizing pretense.

    [audit | applied rules]
    [style:prompt_protocol:operational_language] enforce causal→consequence→function; suppress moralization.
    [closure:invariants:ingress/ordering/versions] single-door ingress; Truth→Reciprocity→Decidability; schema pins.
    [contracts:output_contract:sphere+externalities] require full accounting before verdicts.
    [reciprocity:hard_gates+warranty] liability and restitution as non-bypassable gates.


    Source date (UTC): 2026-01-01 20:09:41 UTC

    Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/2006820143612178685