Friday, March 6, 2026

Scope of Misesian economic calculation problem

This was asked in a conversational context, omitted here, that contained the entire contents of Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth, by Ludwig von Mises.

Try formalizing the argument in abstract terms to make the scope of the problem very precise, e.g., it seems that there is an economic calculation problem along these same lines with individual state-owned firms, as well as nonprofits, so I would like the common abstract description that is shared by Misesian economic calculation problem situations.

Yes. A useful way to sharpen Mises’s point is to strip away the historical socialism-vs-capitalism framing and state a more general organizational decision problem.

The common structure is not “state ownership” by itself. It is this:

An agent or organization must choose among many technically feasible, intertemporally linked uses of scarce, heterogeneous resources, but lacks a nonarbitrary way to impute the opportunity cost of those resources across competing uses.

That is the abstract Misesian calculation problem.

A compact formalization

Let:

  • $R = {r_1,\dots,r_n}$ be scarce resources or productive assets.

  • $A$ be the set of feasible production plans.

  • Each plan $a \in A$ specifies:

    • inputs used over time: $x(a) \in \mathbb{R}^n_+$,
    • outputs/outcomes over time: $y(a)$,
    • timing, complementarities, and irreversibilities.
  • The planner or manager must choose $a^* \in A$.

To choose rationally, the decision-maker needs some way to rank feasible plans. In a market setting this is typically done by a value functional like

$$
\Pi(a) = \text{value of outputs} - \text{value of inputs}
$$

or, intertemporally,

$$
NPV(a)=\sum_t \frac{R_t(a)-C_t(a)}{(1+i)^t}.
$$

The key issue is not the formula. It is whether the terms in it are economically meaningful.

For them to be meaningful, the organization needs a mapping

$$
V: \text{resource uses and outcomes} \to \mathbb{R}
$$

that assigns comparable values to different input combinations and output streams in a way that tracks opportunity cost.

Mises’s claim can be generalized like this:

A Misesian calculation problem exists when an organization must choose among alternative plans $A$, but lacks a reliable value-imputation rule $V$ for some crucial inputs, outputs, or time-structured combinations of them.

Without such a $V$, it can know engineering facts and physical quantities, but not whether plan $a$ is economically preferable to plan $b$.

What makes the problem specifically “Misesian”

The distinctive feature is not mere uncertainty, ignorance, or bad management. It is the absence of a way to reduce alternative resource uses to a common denominator that reflects their forgone alternatives.

So the problem appears when all of the following are present:

  1. Heterogeneous resources
    The organization uses different kinds of labor, land, machines, buildings, materials, and time.

  2. Multiple feasible uses
    Those resources can be recombined in many possible ways.

  3. Complementarity and substitutability
    Inputs matter not only individually but in combinations, and one input’s value depends on what else is available.

  4. Intertemporal structure
    Decisions today affect future options, often through long production chains.

  5. No market-generated opportunity-cost signals for some key margins
    At least some relevant assets, outputs, or constraints are not priced by competitive exchange.

  6. No residual-claimant test strong enough to correct error
    Decision-makers are not tightly disciplined by profit and loss tied to alienable ownership stakes.

That package is the common core.

The abstract mechanism

The mechanism can be stated very precisely.

A market with exchange in relevant assets does two things:

  • it generates relative prices that compress dispersed tradeoffs into a usable metric;
  • it subjects proposed plans to profit-and-loss tests, which compare ex ante appraisals to ex post realities.

The Misesian problem arises when an organization has to decide but lacks one or both of these:

  • price formation for the relevant means of action, and
  • a feedback mechanism that nonarbitrarily reveals whether the plan used resources well.

Then the organization can still act, but cannot know whether it has economized.

Why this is broader than “full socialism”

This is where your instinct is right.

Full socialism is just the limiting case where the missing valuation problem becomes system-wide, because nearly all higher-order goods are removed from exchange. But the same structure can appear at smaller scales.

The important distinction is between:

  • global calculation failure, where the whole economy lacks prices for capital goods, and
  • local calculation failure, where a particular organization lacks meaningful prices or meaningful output valuation at some decision margins.

Both are instances of the same abstract problem.

A general definition

Here is a concise abstract definition.

Misesian Economic Calculation Problem (MECP):
An agent faces a Misesian calculation problem when it must choose among alternative, resource-using, time-structured plans, but the institutional setting fails to generate a sufficiently informative and decision-relevant scalar ordering of those plans grounded in actual opportunity costs.

That scalar ordering need not literally be market profit in every case, but if it is not market-grounded, it tends to become arbitrary, politically assigned, donor-imposed, bureaucratically fixed, or otherwise detached from forgone alternatives.

State-owned firms

A state-owned firm can have the problem in stronger or weaker form depending on context.

Weak form: partial escape from the problem

A state-owned firm operating inside a broader market economy can often borrow market prices for many things:

  • wage rates,
  • fuel,
  • steel,
  • outside contractors,
  • comparable products,
  • interest rates.

So it is not in the same position as a fully socialist economy. It can often calculate using prices formed elsewhere.

That is why Mises emphasized that nationalized firms inside a market order can “parasitically” use the surrounding price system.

Stronger form: where the problem bites

The state-owned firm has a local Misesian problem when one or more of the following are true:

  • its capital is not bought and sold on markets;
  • its cost of capital is politically set or subsidized;
  • losses are covered by a soft budget constraint;
  • it has multiple noncommensurable goals;
  • output prices are regulated or politically fixed;
  • key inputs are internally allocated rather than competitively acquired;
  • there is no transferable residual claimant.

Then apparent “costs” and “returns” stop reflecting opportunity cost.

So the common abstract point is:

A state firm’s problem is not just bad incentives; it is that some of the terms needed for genuine economic calculation are inherited administratively rather than discovered competitively.

Nonprofits

Nonprofits fit the same schema, but in a different place.

A nonprofit usually buys many inputs on markets, so it often has meaningful input prices. Its distinctive difficulty is usually on the output side.

If a charity feeds people, counsels families, preserves habitat, funds art, or advocates for policy change, the outputs are often not sold at market prices. Then the nonprofit can know:

  • dollars spent,
  • people served,
  • measurable outcomes,

but not necessarily the opportunity-cost-ranked value of one program relative to another in the way a for-profit firm can compare revenues and profits.

So the nonprofit’s calculation problem is typically:

  • input prices exist,
  • output valuation is weak or plural,
  • mission tradeoffs are not fully commensurable.

That still fits the same abstract structure: choice among rival plans without a decisive value-imputation rule.

But it is usually less severe than under socialism because the nonprofit still benefits from market prices for most inputs, and donor behavior can reveal some valuation signals.

A useful typology

It helps to distinguish four cases.

1. Full market calculation

Prices exist for most relevant inputs and outputs, and managers face hard profit-and-loss discipline.

Example: competitive for-profit firm.

2. Partial calculation with borrowed prices

The organization can use market prices formed elsewhere, but some key margins are insulated.

Example: state-owned airline in a market economy.

3. Input-side calculation only

Inputs are market-priced, but outputs are mission-based or nonmarket.

Example: nonprofit hospital, museum, foundation.

4. Systemic calculation failure

No genuine market for means of production, so the entire capital structure lacks meaningful prices.

Example: comprehensive socialism.

These are not different species of problem. They are degrees and locations of the same problem.

What is essential and what is not

A lot of discussion muddies this by mixing the calculation problem with incentive problems or knowledge problems.

Not essential

These can worsen the problem, but are not the core:

  • corruption,
  • bureaucracy,
  • laziness,
  • ignorance,
  • lack of computational power,
  • absence of altruism,
  • weak managerial talent.

Essential

These are the core:

  • no genuine opportunity-cost prices for relevant assets or outputs,
  • no robust market test for alternative plans,
  • no strong residual claimant structure to force correction.

That is why the problem can persist even with honest, brilliant, public-spirited managers.

Another way to state it

Here is a more stripped-down version:

A Misesian calculation problem exists whenever control rights over resources are separated from a process that competitively imputes those resources’ alternative-use value.

That gives you the common abstraction across socialism, state enterprise, nonprofits, and even some internal divisions of large private firms.

Internal divisions of private firms

This is worth noting because it shows how general the idea is.

Inside a large corporation, many transfers are internal, not market transactions. Headquarters must assign transfer prices, overhead allocations, internal hurdle rates, and shadow values. Those can be arbitrary.

Why does this not immediately collapse into full Misesian chaos?

Because the private firm is still nested inside external markets:

  • capital markets value the firm,
  • product markets price outputs,
  • labor and supplier markets price many inputs,
  • ownership is transferable,
  • ultimate profit and loss discipline the whole structure.

So internal calculation problems are real, but bounded by the surrounding market order.

That is exactly the pattern Mises would predict.

The scope condition

The “scope” of the problem becomes precise if you say:

The severity of the calculation problem increases with the share of decision-relevant margins for which opportunity costs are not market-generated and not corrigible by profit-and-loss discipline.

That gives you a continuum rather than a binary.

At one end: full market firm.
At the other end: comprehensive socialism.
In between: regulated monopolies, public agencies, nonprofits, state-owned firms, internally bureaucratized corporations.

A clean formal criterion

A neat criterion would be:

Let $M \subseteq R$ be the set of decision-relevant resources and outputs for which the organization has market-grounded valuation signals.

Let $K \subseteq R$ be the set of decision-relevant resources and outputs for which valuation must be assigned administratively.

The organization faces a Misesian calculation problem to the extent that:

  1. $K$ is large relative to $M$, and
  2. choices in $A$ are highly sensitive to how $K$ is valued.

In words:

The problem becomes serious when many of the margins that matter most are precisely the ones that are not genuinely priced.

Final formulation

Here is the shortest common abstract description.

The shared structure in Misesian calculation-problem cases is this: an organization must allocate heterogeneous, multi-use, time-structured resources across rival plans, but lacks a nonarbitrary, institutionally grounded way to impute opportunity costs to those resources and outcomes. Where that happens, “rational planning” can at best be technical or administrative, not economic.

And the most important qualification is:

Full socialism is the universal case of this problem; state firms, nonprofits, and bureaucratic subunits exhibit local or partial cases of the same structure.

If you want, I can turn this into a more formal theorem-style statement with assumptions, propositions, and corollaries.

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Comtean Positivist World Order

This was in a conversational context containing the entire SEP article on Auguste Comte, which I have omitted.

Write an alternate history narrative where Auguste Comte’s proposed new world order was achieved, with a positivist “spiritual power” ruling over the European “republic of the west”, etc.

The first banners went up quietly.

Not in Paris—Paris was always too loud—but in Lyon, on a gray morning in 1858, when the river mist still clung to the quays and a procession of workers in clean aprons crossed the bridge behind a brass band that didn’t play a hymn so much as a march that remembered a hymn. They carried no crucifixes, no tricolor cockades. Their poles bore round plaques of polished wood: a woman’s profile in relief, serene and severe, above a single word burned into the grain:

HUMANITÉ.

A priest of the old kind watched from the doorway of Saint-Nizier with the baffled squint of a man who had been told that winter had been repealed.

No one called it a revolution. The Positivists disliked the word. Revolutions were critical, corrosive, metaphysical. This was a reorganization. This was a return to order as if order had been there all along and mankind had merely been too distracted to see it.

On September 5 of the previous year, Auguste Comte had died. On September 5 of this year, his followers began the work of proving him immortal.


I. The Second Concordat

History books in our world say Comte’s “Religion of Humanity” never took. In this world, it took because the old religions broke their teeth on the same problem at the same time: the gods had become plausible in the countryside and impossible in the cities. The factories swallowed the calendar. The rail lines turned holy days into scheduling headaches. The newspapers made miracles feel small.

Comte’s friends—once derided as a salon of cranks—had become, by 1860, the only group with a plan that spoke in the language of engineers and in the language of grief.

They understood what the liberals did not: people did not only ask to be free. They asked to belong.

The breakthrough was not philosophical. It was administrative.

Napoleon III, whose instinct for symbols was sharper than his instinct for justice, had always been willing to borrow costumes. He had borrowed Rome, he had borrowed Revolution, he had borrowed Empire. In 1861, after another season of strikes and barricade whispers, he borrowed the Positivists.

The deal was known later as the Second Concordat, though no pope signed it.

In exchange for public endorsement of the regime—order as basis—the Positivist Society was granted legal recognition as a national institution. Not a church; the word stank of ancient quarrels. They were chartered instead as the Council of Spiritual Power, tasked with “moral education, scientific coordination, and the harmonization of social life.”

The Emperor kept the police and the army. The Positivists got the schools, the civil registries, and the calendar.

When the first Positivist Calendar was printed in state presses, the day names were no longer saints or kings. They were the dead: Aristotle, Gutenberg, Shakespeare, Newton—women too, scandalously, like Hypatia and Joan. In every town hall, the old crucifix was replaced by a simple plaque: Vivre pour autrui—live for others.

And then the strangest thing happened: violence went down.

Not because people became better overnight, but because an invisible machinery of meaning slid into place. The Positivists did not promise salvation. They promised continuity: you were not a speck; you were a link. Your work went somewhere. Your suffering joined a ledger, not a void.

Even the skeptics admitted—grudgingly, of course—that Comte’s new priests had found the one thing modern Europe lacked: a way to say “we.”


II. The West Discovers Itself

Comte had always written as if “Europe” were an unfinished word. The Continent was too much geography, too little history. Nations were too much pride, too little purpose. The answer, he said, was not a continent at all but a tradition: the West, an “Occidentality” bound by a shared sequence of intellectual stages and a shared task—to lead Humanity out of metaphysics into positive maturity.

At first this sounded like a Frenchman polishing his own reflection.

Then came 1870.

In our world, France’s humiliation at Sedan and the birth of the German Empire solidified a violent new Europe. In this world, Sedan still happened—but its consequence was inverted by a single decision made in panic, in a room thick with cigar smoke and fear.

The Emperor fled, yes. The Paris streets boiled, yes. But the men who stepped into the vacuum were not the Commune’s improvisers and not the old monarchists clawing their way back. They were the Positivists, who had spent a decade building lists, schedules, curricula, and networks of local “intendants” across the provinces.

They did what engineers do when a bridge collapses: they stabilized the remaining structure before arguing about architecture.

A provisional government called itself, without irony, the Directory of Reorganization. It immediately did two things:

  1. It invited the German states—not Bismarck’s empire, which had not yet fully congealed—to a congress “for the scientific settlement of European relations,” hosted in neutral Geneva.

  2. It declared the French army temporarily under the “moral supervision” of the Council of Spiritual Power.

Germany, exhausted by its own victories and wary of endless occupation, came to Geneva expecting bargaining. It found something closer to an audit.

The Positivists did not appeal to honor. They appealed to arithmetic.

How many sons would this rivalry consume in the next fifty years? How much coal would be burned in military trains rather than factories? How many bridges would be built with the iron not melted into cannon?

They spread maps on tables like surgeons. They spoke of “division of labor between nations.” They offered a new model: not empires, not alliances, but a Republic of the West—a confederation of European temporal governments under a single spiritual authority responsible for education, science policy, and moral consensus.

Bismarck laughed—until he saw that the alternative was not French revenge, but French collapse, and that collapse would spill refugees and radicals across borders like acid.

He did not join. Not yet. But he agreed to a truce, to mutual recognition, and, most crucially, to a shared Western Commission on Industry and Public Health—the first permanent body in which the Positivist spiritual power sat as chair while kings and ministers sat as “temporal delegates.”

In later years, historians would point to Geneva as the moment “Europe” died and “the West” was born.


III. The Separation That Changed Everything

The Council of Spiritual Power, in Comte’s scheme, was supposed to have no soldiers, no prisons, no taxes. It would rule by education, ceremony, and the slow pressure of consensus. Temporal power would remain local, practical, coercive when needed—like a hand that could grip—but spiritual power would be planetary in aspiration, like a mind that could not be fenced.

This distinction was mocked as naïve.

Then it worked.

The Positivists never tried to replace parliaments with pulpits. They replaced arguments about ultimate values with a standardized civic formation that made most values feel settled by adulthood.

Schoolchildren learned the encyclopedic scale of sciences as naturally as prayers. They learned that social life had laws. They learned that freedom without cohesion dissolved into noise. They learned to commemorate. They learned to sing. They learned that “Humanity” was not a crowd but a continuity of the dead acting through the living.

Every year, on the Day of Gutenberg, apprentices in printing houses read aloud a list of books published in their district. On the Day of Pasteur (added after 1878), nurses and doctors processed together, as if medicine were a sacrament—which, in this world, it almost became.

The most controversial reform was the civic registry.

Birth, marriage, death—events once recorded by churches—were now registered by the Positivist clergy. Not clergy, they insisted. Functionaries of continuity.

To die in the Republic of the West was to be entered into Humanity’s ledger by name, occupation, and contribution. And once you were in the ledger, you could be invoked—not as a saint, but as an ancestor in the human project.

This did not make people immortal.

It made them count.

The Church protested, then negotiated, then retreated into the private sphere, still powerful in pockets, still beloved by millions, but no longer sovereign over the rhythms of public life. In Britain, where the monarch was head of an established church, the transition was bloodless precisely because the Positivists presented it not as an attack on belief but as a necessary separation of spatial scales: the Church, if it wished to be universal, could not be tied to one crown. The Anglican compromise became a model. Spiritual authority was no longer a throne’s ornament.

It was an institution of its own.


IV. The Nineteen Intendances

Comte’s critics had always said he was a centralizer at heart, a Frenchman addicted to Paris.

His followers proved the opposite with a pen stroke.

In 1882, the French Republic—now explicitly “a Western Republic in France”—divided itself into nineteen intendances, each designed to be large enough for economic coherence and small enough for human attachment. The move startled everyone because it seemed, at first glance, like decentralization.

And it was—temporally.

But spiritually, the curriculum, the calendar, the civic rites were identical across all intendances. You could travel from Marseille to Lille and find the same commemorations, the same hymns, the same lectures in workers’ halls on Sunday evenings replacing sermons. The mind had no boundaries.

Local governments handled roads, policing, trade disputes. The spiritual authority handled meaning.

A new European joke spread: “In the West, the mayor fixes your sewer; the priest fixes your soul—without mentioning God.”

It was a good joke. It was also almost true.


V. The Great Men and the Great Silence

Not everyone loved the new order.

There were riots in 1889 when the Council issued a “Moral Circular” discouraging nationalist rallies as “metaphysical agitation.” There were whispered pamphlets, in backrooms, mocking the Positivist liturgy as “Catholicism without Christ.”

And there were tragedies.

The most famous was the Great Silence of 1893, when a charismatic young mathematician—Emile Renaud, whose name is still spoken with a mixture of reverence and fear—refused to accept the Council’s condemnation of a new “metaphysical” philosophy spreading from Vienna.

Renaud argued that the Council had become exactly what it claimed to prevent: dogmatic, allergic to doubt, hostile to the ferment that produced science.

His public lecture in Paris ended with a sentence that shocked the city into stillness:

“Humanity is a god that bleeds.”

He was not arrested. The Council did not have prisons.

He was excommunicated—not from salvation, but from civic recognition. His name was removed from the registry of commemorations. His students were barred from teaching posts. It was the gentlest punishment imaginable and, therefore, the most terrifying.

The scandal forced a reform.

In 1895, after weeks of bitter internal debate, the Council issued the Charter of Critical Positivity, declaring that “the positive spirit includes systematic doubt as method, while excluding metaphysical doubt as aim.” It established “Free Academies” within the spiritual system—spaces where hypotheses could be proposed without moral censure, as long as they did not incite political fragmentation.

The West had learned something it had forgotten in its hunger for order: minds need oxygen.

Renaud’s name was restored to the calendar, though his day was placed in the “Controversy” week at the year’s end, a time set aside for public disputation. The Council called it “a hygiene of the intellect.”

People called it “the week we’re allowed to breathe.”


VI. The West and the Rest

The Republic of the West was not, as its enemies predicted, a militarized monolith. Its spiritual power distrusted conquest. Comte himself had condemned colonial brutality as a betrayal of Europe’s supposed mission.

So the West’s expansion was less flag and more syllabus.

In North Africa, in Indochina, in India, Positivist envoys—often English—argued against “civilizing missions” carried out with guns. They proposed instead a gradual withdrawal of temporal control paired with the offer of spiritual affiliation: independent states could join the “Western moral federation” through shared education, scientific institutions, and participation in the commemorative calendar.

Some called this merely imperialism in softer clothing.

Others—especially reformers trapped between tradition and invasion—found in positivism a third option: secularism without nihilism, modernity without the humiliation of mimicry.

The Ottoman intellectuals were among the earliest adopters. By 1908, when the old empire convulsed, the Young Turks in this world did not reach for ethnic nationalism first. They reached for the Positivist separation: local temporal reforms under a universal spiritual framework that could unify a multiethnic population without forcing it into one language of worship.

The slogan painted on the walls of Istanbul that year was neither “God” nor “Nation,” but:

Love as principle. Order as basis. Progress as end.

Even critics admitted it was a better prophecy than most.


VII. The War That Didn’t Happen

The greatest advertisement for Comte’s world order was a ghost: the First World War, which in our world burned Europe into the twentieth century.

In this world, the ingredients still existed: rivalries, arms manufacturers, assassins, pride. There was still an Archduke shot in 1914 in a city with too many histories.

But there was also, by then, a continental machinery built precisely to absorb shocks.

When the news reached Paris, Vienna, Berlin, London—by telegraph, crackling like a panic attack—temporal ministers demanded mobilization. The Council demanded a conference.

Not a conference of diplomats, but of sociologists.

This was the Positivist innovation that conservatives had once sneered at: when society was threatened, the West consulted the science of society.

Within seventy-two hours, the Western Commission convened in Geneva again. The assassination was treated not as insult but as symptom. The Council’s report—still studied today—began with a sentence that enraged patriots:

“A murder is not a cause; it is an occasion.”

They mapped the chain of alliances like a disease’s transmission. They identified points of escalation. And then they did something no nineteenth-century power would have dared: they publicly published the costs of full mobilization—projected dead, projected debt, projected political collapse—before a single train moved.

The report circulated faster than orders.

Workers in Germany refused to load artillery. French railwaymen slowed troop transports “for maintenance.” British dock unions held a “Day of Humanity” strike. The temporal powers, confronted not only with moral pressure but with the practical breakdown of compliance, backed down.

Austria demanded vengeance. The Council offered something new: a ritual.

A public trial, international, followed by a continental day of commemoration for “victims of political fanaticism,” with lectures in every city about the dangers of metaphysical nationalism.

Vengeance became pedagogy.

No war. A decade of tension, yes. But no continent-wide slaughter.

Later generations would argue about whether positivism saved Europe or merely postponed its reckoning. But everyone agreed on one point: the West had discovered a way to make bloodshed feel, not glorious, but unscientific.

And that was enough to change behavior.


VIII. A Walk Through Paris, 1937

You can still walk through Paris in this world and feel the difference in your bones.

The churches still stand. Cathedrals are too beautiful to demolish. But their bells ring less often, and when they do, they sound like a language spoken by grandparents.

On the Île de la Cité, Notre-Dame has been converted into what the Council calls a Temple of Continuity—not because it worships the building, but because it worships what the building represents: the dead laboring for the living. Inside, under the high vaults, there is a simple wall of names: masons, carpenters, anonymous donors. The famous are there too, but smaller. The point is not greatness. The point is linkage.

On the first floor of the old Hôtel de Ville, a lecture hall is full. Tonight’s topic: “Astronomical Conditions and Human Destiny.” Not astrology—Comte would have spit—but a sober meditation on the planet’s fragility, the atmosphere’s thinness, the dependence of life on cosmic steadiness. Children fidget. Adults take notes. Someone coughs. The mood is not holy, exactly. It is attentive.

Across the street, a café is loud with arguments about whether the Council’s new guidelines on “artistic education” are too prescriptive. A poet is calling the Positivists tyrants. An engineer is calling the poet childish. A woman at the bar says both are missing the point and orders another drink.

Outside, on the walls, posters announce the coming festival week:

WEEK OF DESCARTES
Public debates permitted under Charter of Critical Positivity
Topics: Free Will, Determinism, the Limits of Sociology
Attendance encouraged, violence prohibited

It is, oddly, a city that has institutionalized disagreement.

At the end of the boulevard, a statue stands in a small square. Not of Comte. The Council has always been careful to avoid idolizing the founder too openly. The statue is of a woman in a simple dress holding a ledger and extending her other hand.

The plaque reads:

À L’HUMANITÉ
Les vivants sont gouvernés par les morts.

The living are governed by the dead.

A tourist from America, where positivism has grown into a parallel spiritual authority rather than a ruling one, stares at the inscription and shivers. It sounds authoritarian, like a threat.

A Parisian beside him smiles, almost kindly.

“No,” she says. “It’s a comfort. It means you’re not alone. Even when you fail, you fail inside a story that continues.”

The tourist looks up at the woman’s stone face.

“And who governs the governors?” he asks.

The Parisian shrugs.

“Reality,” she says. “And the children. Eventually.”


IX. The Cost of Harmony

The West, by 1950, had achieved what Comte predicted in outline: a layered world order with temporal governments managing local life and a unified spiritual power coordinating education, science, and moral consensus across Europe and beyond.

The result was stability. Prosperity. A slower, steadier modernization without the jagged trauma of total war.

But every harmony has its price.

The Positivist spiritual power, lacking police, learned to rule through exclusion. It could not imprison you, but it could make you socially weightless. It could refuse you teaching licenses, deny you ceremonial recognition, cut you from the rituals that made life feel meaningful.

For many, that was worse than a fine.

The Council’s defenders argued that all societies enforce norms; the Positivists simply did so openly and, they claimed, rationally.

Their critics argued that a spiritual monopoly, even without guns, could become a velvet dictatorship over thought.

In the late twentieth century, a new movement rose within the West itself: Plural Positivism, insisting that the spiritual function could be fulfilled by multiple competing institutions, as long as they shared a commitment to the positive method and the social coordination of knowledge.

The Council resisted, then compromised—again, as it always had when it wished to survive.

By 2000, the Republic of the West had become less like a church and more like a federation of civic philosophies. The calendar remained, but people celebrated some days and ignored others. The temples remained, but they hosted concerts as often as ceremonies. The Council still issued moral circulars, but now they were debated in public, sometimes laughed at, sometimes obeyed.

Comte would have been horrified.

Comte would have been pleased.

He had wanted order. He had wanted progress. Above all, he had wanted a future shaped by deliberate thought rather than drifting tradition.

And perhaps the truest sign that his world order had achieved itself was this: it had become ordinary enough to argue with.


Epilogue: The Motto

In a school courtyard in Recife—yes, Brazil still took Comte seriously enough that the West’s spiritual authority became a global partner, though never a master—a child recites the old motto during a ceremony honoring the “Week of Great Women.”

She says it carefully, as if each clause must fit into place like a gear.

“Love as principle,” she begins.

Her classmates repeat it.

“Order as basis.”

They repeat it.

“Progress as end.”

They repeat it again, and the sound echoes off the walls painted with murals of scientists and nurses and farmers and poets, all woven into one long, continuous figure labeled, in bright letters:

HUMANITY.

The teacher watches with the tired affection of someone who knows that rituals are imperfect tools but still tools.

In the back row, one boy whispers to another, “Do we really have to say it every year?”

The other boy grins.

“Probably,” he whispers back. “Until we invent something better.”

And that, in the Republic of the West, is considered a perfectly positive hope.

In a separate conversation, I also generated this image based on the story above.

ChatGPT-generated image.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Activist movement model and strategy

A thread by eigenrobot had outlined a model of activist movements and their capture by their least sympathetic elements. This post cleans up that model and tries to use the result to answer strategic questions that were raised by Maya. It is stated in abstract terms, and applies variably to immigration, trans issues, etc. As with some of my other posts, the only custom instruction is “User language: English”.

I think Rothbard’s memorandum on activist movement strategy (and other Leninist writings on strategy) is also relevant to the problem in some way, but I did not try to incorporate anything from it.

Eigenrobot’s model, improved

Try to clean up and develop the model described below.

The following is a tentative rational agent explanation for why the public perception of identitarian activist groups tends to be dominated by the least sympathetic members of whatever community they purport to represent. The key intuition here is that it’s an act of self-defense for the high-friction group.

Imagine some excluded group A with measure α < 0.5 and an excluding majority B with measure (1-α). To become “included,” at least 0.5 of the population must agree to inclusion. inclusion imposes a cost C(Ai) borne by B, but produces a benefit Y accruing to included members of A. But A is not homogeneous: some fraction γ∈[0, 1] of A imposes a cost Ch on B when included; fraction (1-γ) imposes a cost Cl on B when included. Here, Ch > Cl.

To interpret these ideas, A is some minority group. If they were accepted by wider society, which currently shuns them, they would benefit; but it would moderately irritate the majority. The amount of irritation increases with the number of A-members accepted and varies by type. Some A-members are low-friction A-members. They’re already well integrated with the majority in some ways and basically chill. However, the high-friction A-members? They’re—say—crazy criminals who sacrifice dogs in their backyards.

Crucially, let’s stipulate that Ch > Y > Cl. That is: the benefit accruing to an included low-friction A-member is greater than the cost imposed on the majority by his inclusion. This means he can in theory bargain with the majority to gain his own inclusion in a Pareto improvement. This isn’t possible for a high-friction A-member because whatever he gets from inclusion is insufficient to compensate the majority for the inconveniences his dog sacrifice ceremonies are causing them.

In this base model, individual low-friction A-members each compensate the majority from some fraction of their inclusion returns, and high-friction A-members are left out in the cold. Obviously this doesn’t explain our phenomenon; we need an story for why the high-friction A-members are in charge. A richer model driving the observed equilibrium might include cost sensitivity heterogeneity in the majority group leading to some kind of coalition politics in the minority, or a structure in the game that requires a representative role for a subset of the minority group.

Regardless of what form a solution actually looks like, the intuition this is groping toward is that the high-cost subpopulation is motivated to dominate activism by the possibility that they’ll be shut out of the integration process and left in the cold by a majority-compatible subgroup.

Narrative variants: the high-cost subgroup has lower opportunity costs to activism (eg, no career or whatever) and pay that cost to control group bargaining position, using it to trade surplus accruing to the low cost subgroup in the base model in for their own inclusion; some kind of strategic lock into a coalition with superior bargaining power—maybe their benefit from inclusion is lower?; possession of some lever for extorting the majority. Regardless, the usual result is transfer of surplus from the low cost group to the high cost group.

Here’s a cleaner “workhorse” model that captures your intuition with a minimal set of added ingredients. I’ll keep your primitives, but I’ll (i) make the policy non-separable, and (ii) explicitly model who becomes visible / representative as an equilibrium selection outcome.


1) Baseline primitives (yours, slightly normalized)

Population mass 1. Minority group $A$ has mass $\alpha<1/2$; majority $B$ has mass $1-\alpha$.

Types in $A$:

  • Low-friction type $l$ has mass $\alpha(1-\gamma)$ and imposes per-capita cost $C_l$ on $B$ if included.
  • High-friction type $h$ has mass $\alpha\gamma$ and imposes per-capita cost $C_h$ on $B$ if included, with $C_h>C_l$.

Each included $A$-member gets benefit $Y$. Your key inequality: $$C_h > Y > C_l.$$ So (in a separable world) including $l$ is potentially Pareto-improvable; including $h$ is not.


2) The missing structural assumption: inclusion is not separable

To get “high-friction dominates the bargaining/branding,” you need a reason the world can’t just include $l$ and exclude $h$.

A crisp way to do that:

Non-separability / imperfect screening: the political/organizational decision is a single binary policy $I \in {0,1}$ (“include the group”), and if $I=1$ then all who can claim membership get included. Formally, the majority cannot condition inclusion on type: $$ I=1 \Rightarrow \text{all } A\text{-types included.} $$

This can represent: legal non-discrimination constraints, unverifiable “type,” administratively costly screening, or a norm that “inclusion must be group-wide.”

Then the majority’s cost of inclusion is $$ \text{Cost to }B = \alpha\left[(1-\gamma)C_l+\gamma C_h\right]. $$ Even if $l$ is “efficient,” the presence of $h$ can make the group’s inclusion unattractive in aggregate, which sets up a real conflict inside $A$: $l$ would like a carve-out; $h$ needs bundling.


3) Who becomes “the face” of the group: a simple collective-action/attention stage

Add a standard Olson-style activism stage with heterogeneous opportunity costs.

Stage 0: outside options

Let $u_t^0$ be the outside option for an $A$-member of type $t\in{l,h}$ if the policy fails ($I=0$). A natural asymmetry: $$ u_l^0 > u_h^0, $$ meaning low-friction members can partially “self-include” via assimilation, private markets, passing, norm-conforming behavior, etc., while high-friction members can’t.

So the incremental value of policy success is $$ \Delta_t := (Y - u_t^0), $$ with $\Delta_h > \Delta_l$.

Stage 1: activism as a public good with type-dependent cost

Each $A$-member chooses activism effort $e_i \ge 0$. Total effort $E=\sum e_i$ increases the probability of inclusion $p(E)$ where $p'>0, p''<0$.

Effort cost depends on type: $$ \text{cost}(e\mid t)=\frac{k_t}{2}e^2, $$ and crucially $k_h < k_l$ (lower opportunity cost / fewer career penalties / fewer foregone alternatives).

Each member solves $$ \max_{e_i\ge 0} ; p(E)\Delta_t ;-;\frac{k_t}{2}e_i^2. $$

Stage 2: visibility / representation

Public perception is shaped disproportionately by the most active/visible members. Model that as:

  • media/attention weight $w_i = \frac{e_i}{E}$ (share of attention proportional to effort), or
  • “the spokesperson” is the highest-effort individual (a tournament).

Either way: higher $e$ ⇒ more likely to be seen as representative.


4) Equilibrium logic: why the high-friction subgroup dominates visibility

In the standard public-good-with-heterogeneous-costs setup:

  • Those with lower marginal costs ($k$ small) and higher marginal benefits ($\Delta$ large) supply more effort.
  • Those with high $k$ (high opportunity cost) and low $\Delta$ free-ride.

Concretely, in any interior equilibrium, a type’s first-order condition is approximately $$ p'(E)\Delta_t \approx k_t e_t. $$ So effort scales like $$ e_t \propto \frac{\Delta_t}{k_t}. $$ Thus $e_h > e_l$ when $$ \frac{\Delta_h}{k_h} > \frac{\Delta_l}{k_l}. $$

Given $\Delta_h>\Delta_l$ and $k_h<k_l$, this inequality is very easy to satisfy. Then:

  1. High-friction members supply most activism effort (they’re the “marginal activists”).
  2. Attention/representation concentrates on them via $w_i$ or the tournament.
  3. Public perception becomes dominated by the least sympathetic members even if they’re a minority within $A$.

This is already enough to generate your phenomenon without assuming “high-friction is in charge” as a primitive. They become in charge because equilibrium activism supply selects them.


5) Bringing your “surplus transfer” intuition into the model

Now add an internal bargaining constraint that’s especially natural under non-separability.

If inclusion is group-wide, then low-friction members may want “moderation” to maximize acceptance probability by $B$. High-friction members may prefer aggressive tactics that (i) increase mobilization and internal solidarity, or (ii) impose costs on $B$ to force bargaining.

A clean way to formalize “transfer from $l$ to $h$” is:

  • There is a group organization that chooses a “line” (demands/tactics) $a$ and funds activism.
  • Low-friction members can pay dues/transfers $T$ to influence $a$ toward moderation.
  • High-friction members have a credible “spoiler” action (they can produce damaging visibility or disruption) unless $a$ and/or $T$ meet their participation constraint.

Participation/spoiler constraint for $h$: $$ \text{If } (a,T) \text{ not acceptable, }h\text{ exerts independent effort }e_h^{\text{spoiler}} \text{ that captures attention.} $$

Then equilibrium often has the structure you described:

  • $l$ would like a “separable bargain” (include $l$, exclude $h$) but can’t get it.
  • $h$ uses (low-cost, high-visibility) activism as leverage to keep the coalition bundled.
  • $l$ pays (resources, rhetorical compliance, reputational cover) to reduce the damage of $h$’s dominance, which is a transfer of surplus from $l$ to $h$.

6) What this model explains (and what it predicts)

Explains

  • Why visibility skews toward “worst” or least sympathetic members: they have the biggest stakes and lowest opportunity costs, so they out-supply activism and capture attention.
  • Why moderates often appear passive: it’s rational free-riding + higher reputational/career costs.
  • Why internal rhetoric can look “hostage-like”: under non-separability, $h$ has a credible veto/spoiler, so coalition policy shifts toward $h$’s constraints, financed by $l$.

Predictions (useful if you want to push toward an empirically testable story)

  1. When outside options for moderates improve ($u_l^0\uparrow$), activism and representation skew more extreme (because $\Delta_l\downarrow$).
  2. When opportunity costs of public activism fall for everyone (e.g., anonymized online activism), you should see more “moderate supply,” potentially reducing the skew—unless anonymity benefits $h$ disproportionately.
  3. When screening becomes feasible (separable inclusion), the extreme subgroup’s leverage collapses and “moderate representation” becomes easier to sustain.

7) One-line version of the refined intuition

If (i) inclusion is effectively group-wide and (ii) activism/visibility is supplied by those with the lowest opportunity costs and highest marginal benefits, then the subgroup that is hardest to integrate rationally becomes the most active and most visible—so public perception of the whole group gets anchored to them, and coalition bargaining shifts surplus away from the easy-to-integrate members.


If you want to take this one notch more “game-theory formal,” the next step is to explicitly model $B$’s decision as a voting game with heterogeneous tolerance (or moral payoffs) and make “tactics” affect both $p(E)$ and perceived expected cost. But the core mechanism above is already doing the main explanatory work with clean comparative statics.

Strategic implications

For a movement that ultimately wishes for inclusion of all A-members, it is better to have low-friction A-members as its public-facing identity, but incentives are against it, as we just modeled. Low-friction A-members also have the incentive to try to distinguish themselves and try to appease the B-members, but this is bad for the high-friction A-members. Think of how political movement strategy should account for this.

In your model, the movement is playing a two-level game:

  • External bargain (with B): you want B to believe “including A won’t be too costly / we can manage the costs.”
  • Internal bargain (within A): you need high-friction members not to veto/sabotage moderation, and low-friction members not to peel off into “separate-but-included” deals.

So “movement strategy” is mostly about engineering incentives and institutions so that (a) low-friction members reliably occupy the front stage (where persuasion matters), while (b) high-friction members still get credible inclusion and real voice (so they don’t rationally seize the mic).

Here are the main levers.


1) Keep “no carve-outs” credible without letting “worst examples” define the brand

Low-friction members distinguishing themselves (“I’m not like those people”) is locally rational but coalition-poisoning: it increases the perceived $\gamma$ and salience of $C_h$, and it tells high-friction members they’re about to be sold out.

A stable line is: “No carve-outs on personhood; lots of carve-outs on behavior.”

  • Don’t publicly split the identity into “good A” vs “bad A.”
  • Do publicly split conduct into “okay in civil society” vs “not okay,” and make that symmetrical (rules apply to everyone, not just A).
  • This lets the movement reassure B that costs are bounded without creating a permanent underclass inside A.

In your terms: you’re trying to reduce perceived $C_h$ (and perceived $\gamma$) without redefining $h$ out of A.


2) Convert “high-friction types” into “high-friction states”

Your model treats $h$ as a type. Movements do better if they treat much of it as a state that can be improved.

Strategically: invest movement resources in lowering $C_h$ rather than only arguing about it.

Examples (abstractly):

  • internal norms and accountability that prevent the most visibly costly behaviors
  • services/mutual aid that reduce dysfunction, instability, or antisocial spillovers
  • training/mentorship that increases members’ capacity to navigate mainstream institutions

If you can make $C_h$ move toward $Y$, you weaken the core “can’t be Pareto-improved” barrier that makes $h$ desperate to control bargaining.


3) Subsidize moderate participation (raise $e_l$ without asking them to be saints)

Your earlier equilibrium is driven by $\Delta_h/k_h > \Delta_l/k_l$: high-friction members have higher stakes and lower opportunity costs, so they out-supply activism and become “the movement.”

If you want low-friction members to front the movement, you must change those ratios:

  • Lower $k_l$: protect moderates from career/reputational costs (anonymity options, legal defense funds, employer shielding, professionalized comms that reduces personal exposure).
  • Raise $\Delta_l$: make movement success matter to them (status, leadership pipelines, selective benefits like networks, professional opportunities, real voice).

This sounds cynical, but it’s just mechanism design: if the movement needs “ambassadors,” it has to pay the opportunity costs of ambassadorship.


4) Separate “mobilization engine” from “public face” via roles and institutions

A common failure mode is pretending the same people can optimally do:

  • base mobilization (high arousal, high conflict)
  • elite persuasion (low arousal, high trust)
  • mass-image management (low variance, high discipline)

You can explicitly adopt a frontstage/backstage structure:

  • Frontstage: disciplined spokespeople; message coherence; high empathy; low variance; optimized for B’s median.
  • Backstage: broader internal deliberation; higher tolerance for anger/heterodoxy; optimized for keeping $h$ included and heard.

This only works if backstage has real power (agenda-setting, vetoes, budget shares), otherwise $h$ correctly treats it as a trick and fights for frontstage control.


5) Make internal representation robust to “activist capture”

If attention is proportional to effort, “whoever can shout all day becomes the movement.” Counter that with governance that weights membership more than activism hours:

  • leadership selection by election with high-turnout mechanisms, not whoever shows up to meetings
  • rotation/term limits for spokesperson roles
  • transparent decision rights: who sets demands, who chooses tactics, who speaks externally
  • formal “communication discipline” rules: not censoring beliefs, but controlling who represents the org publicly

The key is to decouple “time available” from “formal authority.”


6) Bundle demands in a sequence that avoids internal betrayal

Movements that want inclusion of all A-members usually need staging—but staging can look like betrayal to $h$.

A workable framing is:

  • Sequence policies, not people.
  • Start with policies that expand inclusion broadly while imposing minimal perceived costs on B.
  • Pair every early win with movement-visible investments that benefit $h$ (so $h$ sees progress, not abandonment).

So the coalition story becomes: “We win step 1 for everyone, then step 2 for everyone,” not “we win for the good ones first.”


7) Treat “appeasement” as a scarce resource; use it where it buys real votes

Low-friction members trying to appease B can backfire if it:

  • legitimizes B’s worst stereotypes
  • teaches B that outrage yields concessions
  • signals to $h$ that the coalition is conditional

So appeasement should be replaced with targeted reassurance:

  • acknowledge concrete concerns B has
  • offer universal safeguards (behavioral standards, enforcement symmetry, institutions that limit externalities)
  • keep moral posture consistent: “you don’t get to exclude people, but we do take costs seriously.”

A compact strategic slogan (model-faithful)

Keep identity inclusive, keep behavior governable, pay for moderation, and institutionalize who speaks.

If you want, I can sketch a simple formal extension where the movement chooses (i) a spokesperson-selection rule, (ii) an internal transfer $T$ to subsidize $e_l$, and (iii) a “cost-reduction investment” that lowers $C_h$, and then show the comparative statics for when “low-friction face, high-friction included” is an equilibrium.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Philosopher’s Confession (Leibniz), formalized

The prompt said, “Explain the core arguments using formal logic:”, and contained the full text of this dialogue.

Below is a reconstructive formalization of the main argumentative moves in the dialogue. I’ll use (i) first-order logic with identity, (ii) a light modal layer for Leibniz’s “necessary/possible,” and (iii) explicit definitions (since Leibniz’s strategy is: replace troublesome words with their meanings).


0) Notation (minimal “language”)

Individuals: agents (x,y); God $g$; events/acts $e$; states $s$. Predicates / relations:

  • $God(g)$
  • $Omni(g)$: omniscient (enough for the early proof)
  • $Just(x)$
  • $Loves(x,y)$
  • $Happy(y)$
  • $Harmony(s)$
  • $HasHappyState(y,s)$
  • $Knows(x,s)$
  • $Exper(x,s)$: $x$ “experiences” $s$ (as harmony)
  • $Del(x,s)$: $x$ is delighted by $s$
  • $Sin(e)$
  • $PartOf(e,B)$: event $e$ is part of world-series $B$
  • $Will(x,e)$, $NotWill(x,e)$, $Permit(x,e)$
  • $Cause(x,e)$, $Author(x,e)$

Modal operators (Leibniz’s “in itself”):

  • $\Box p$: $p$ is necessary (its negation implies contradiction)
  • $\Diamond p$: $p$ is possible (conceivable without contradiction)

1) “God is just” via definitions (justice → universal love)

Definitions (as in the dialogue)

  1. Justice: $$ Just(x) \; \overset{def}{\leftrightarrow}\; \forall y, Loves(x,y) $$
  2. Love: $$ Loves(x,y) \;\overset{def}{\leftrightarrow}\; \exists s,(HasHappyState(y,s)\wedge Del(x,s)) $$ (Informally: loving $y$ is being delighted by $y$’s happiness-state.)
  3. Delight: $$ Del(x,s)\;\overset{def}{\leftrightarrow}\; Exper(x,s)\wedge Harmony(s) $$
  4. Happiness is harmonic: $$ Happy(y)\to \exists s,(HasHappyState(y,s)\wedge Harmony(s)) $$ (This encodes the earlier sub-argument that happiness is a maximally harmonious mind-state.)
  5. Omniscience “covers” harmony: $$ Omni(x)\to \forall s,(Harmony(s)\to Knows(x,s)) $$
  6. Knowing harmony yields experiencing it (a substantive bridge the dialogue relies on): $$ \forall x\forall s,((Knows(x,s)\wedge Harmony(s))\to Exper(x,s)) $$

Target claim

$$ God(g)\wedge Omni(g)\;\to\; Just(g) $$

Derivation sketch

Let $y$ be arbitrary.

  1. Assume $God(g)\wedge Omni(g)$.
  2. Suppose $Happy(y)$. Then by (4) pick (s) with ($asHappyState(y,s)\wedge Harmony(s)$.
  3. From $Omni(g)$ and $Harmony(s)$, get $Knows(g,s)$ by (5).
  4. From $Knows(g,s)\wedge Harmony(s)$, get $Exper(g,s)$ by (6).
  5. Then $Del(g,s)$ by (3).
  6. So $Loves(g,y)$ by (2).
  7. Since $y$ was arbitrary, $\forall y, Loves(g,y)$.
  8. Hence $Just(g)$ by (1).

So the early “God is just” proof is essentially: definitions + (Happiness ⊆ Harmony) + (God knows all Harmony) + (knowing harmony = experiencing it).


2) Principle of Sufficient Reason (PSR) ⇒ God is the ultimate reason for the world-series

Core PSR axiom

$$ \forall p,(Exists(p)\to \exists r,SR(r,p)) $$ $(SR(r,p)$ = “$r$ is a sufficient reason for $p$”)

“Sufficient reason entails” principle

$$ SR(r,p)\to (Exists(r)\to Exists(p)) $$ (If $r$ is sufficient for $p$, then $r$’s existence guarantees $p$’s.)

Leibniz’s key move: let $A$ be God, $B$ be the actual world-series

Let $A := Exists(g)$ and $B := Exists(WorldSeries)$.

Assume: $$ SR(g,WorldSeries) $$ Then: $$ Exists(g)\to Exists(WorldSeries) $$ i.e. $$ A\to B $$

By classical contraposition: $$ \neg B \to \neg A $$

That is the “if this series were removed/changed, God would be removed/changed” move in formal clothing: given “this God” as the sufficient reason of “this world-series,” you don’t get the same God with a different series.


3) “God is cause of sin” but “not author of sin” (will vs understanding; whole vs parts)

Definitions he later insists on

  1. To will: $Will(x,e)$ = “$x$ is delighted by $e$’s existence” (we can model it as) $$ Will(x,e)\;\overset{def}{\leftrightarrow}\; Del(x,Exists(e)) $$
  2. To not-will: $$ NotWill(x,e)\;\overset{def}{\leftrightarrow}\; Del(x,\neg Exists(e)) \;\;\vee\;\; Pain(x,Exists(e)) $$
  3. To permit: $$ Permit(x,e)\;\overset{def}{\leftrightarrow}\; Knows(x,e)\wedge \neg Will(x,e)\wedge \neg NotWill(x,e) $$
  4. Author: (explicitly stated in the text) $$ Author(x,e)\;\overset{def}{\leftrightarrow}\; Will(x,e)\wedge Cause(x,e) $$

The “whole does not distribute to parts” point

Let $B$ be the whole world-series. Leibniz wants:

  • God wills the whole series: $$ Will(g,B) $$
  • Sins are parts of the whole: $$ Sin(e)\to PartOf(e,B) $$
  • But it does not follow that God wills each sinful part: $$ Will(g,B)\wedge PartOf(e,B)\;\not\vdash\; Will(g,e) $$

Formally, Leibniz blocks an invalid inference schema: $$ \forall x\forall B\forall e,\big((Will(x,B)\wedge PartOf(e,B))\to Will(x,e)\big) $$ He rejects that schema.

What he does keep

  • God is (in a grounding/“physical”) sense the cause of anything in the series: $$ PartOf(e,B)\to Cause(g,e) $$
  • But sins are not willed “in themselves”: $$ Sin(e)\to \neg Will(g,e) $$
  • Therefore: $$ Sin(e)\to \neg Author(g,e) $$ since $Author(g,e)$ requires $Will(g,e)$.

So the structure is:

  1. Grounding: $Cause(g,e)$ for all $e\in B$
  2. Non-authorship: $Sin(e)\to \neg Will(g,e)$
  3. Therefore: God is not the “author” of sin though he is ultimate reason/cause of the existence of the series in which sin occurs.

4) The “fatalism” objection and Leibniz’s modal fix: necessity-in-itself vs necessity-by-hypothesis

Leibniz’s explicit definition

$$ \Box p \;\overset{def}{\leftrightarrow}\; \neg \Diamond \neg p $$ (“Necessary = opposite implies contradiction.”)

Then “contingent in itself” is: $$ Cont(p) \;:=\; \Diamond p \wedge \Diamond\neg p $$

His key denial

He rejects the unrestricted rule: $$ (\Box A \wedge (A\to p))\to \Box p $$ in the intended reading of “follows.” (He treats the relevant “follows” as hypothetical/certainty from the actual series, not as metaphysical entailment.)

So he separates:

  • Absolute necessity: $\Box p$ (contradiction if not-$p$)
  • Certainty given the actual harmony: think “given $H$”: $$ \Box(H\to p)\quad \text{and}\quad H $$ which yields $p$, but not $\Box p$.

This matches his line: Judas’s non-salvation is certain/foreseen/“necessary by accident” (given the actual series), while not contradictory to conceive Judas saved: $$ \Diamond(Saved(Judas)) $$ even though (in the actual world-series) ( \neg Saved(Judas)).

The reduplication point (“whatever is, necessarily is”)

He interprets “Whatever is, necessarily is” as the tautology: $$ \Box(Exists(e)\to Exists(e)) $$ not as: $$ Exists(e)\to \Box Exists(e) $$ So he’s dissolving fatalistic slogans by expanding them into what they actually mean.


5) Freedom under PSR: reject “libertarian indifference,” keep spontaneity + rational choice

PSR applied to willing

$$ Will(x,e)\to \exists r,SR(r,Will(x,e)) $$

His definitional chain (compressed)

  • Willing tracks what appears good/harmonious: $$ Will(x,e)\leftrightarrow AppearsGood(x,e) $$
  • Appearing good depends on agent+object+medium: $$ AppearsGood(x,e)=F(Temperament(x),Object(e),Context) $$ So (holding fixed the full state), will is not “up to” a further will: $$ \neg \exists w ,(Will(x,w)\wedge SR(w,Will(x,e))) $$ on pain of regress.

The criticized definition of free will

The target is roughly:

able to act or not act with all requisites equal.

If “all requisites” includes the complete sufficient conditions for acting, then:

Let $Req(x,e)$ be the conjunction of requisites for $Do(x,e)$, and define action as: $$ Do(x,e)\leftrightarrow Req(x,e) $$ Then: $$ Req(x,e)\to Do(x,e) $$ So the libertarian demand $$ Req(x,e)\wedge \neg Do(x,e) $$ is inconsistent.

Leibniz’s positive definition (Aristotelian)

He keeps:

  • Spontaneity: source of action in agent
  • Freedom: spontaneity + choice (improved by knowledge)

You can model the “degree of freedom” idea as: $$ FreedomDegree(x)\uparrow \text{ as } Knowledge(x)\uparrow \text{ and } PassionNoise(x)\downarrow $$ Not a single clean FOL axiom, but the logical point is:

  • no “reasonless toggling” is needed for freedom;
  • freedom is compatible with PSR because the relevant explanation is: the agent acts from their own reasons/character/intellect, not from external compulsion alone.

6) Damnation as self-caused: hatred of God → maximal pain → “always damnable”

Definitions paralleling the love argument

  1. Love: delight at another’s happiness
  2. Hatred: pain at another’s happiness $$ Hates(x,y) \;\overset{def}{\leftrightarrow}\; PainAt(x,Happy(y)) $$
  3. God as maximal happiness: $$ MaxHappy(g) $$
  4. Max pain (= damnation) arises from hating maximal happiness: $$ (Hates(x,g)\wedge MaxHappy(g))\to Damned(x) $$

Persistence post mortem (a substantive premise)

He assumes: after death, no new sensory inputs, so the “last dominant orientation” persists/escalates: $$ Dies(x)\wedge LastStateIsHatred(x,g)\to \forall t>death, Hates(x,g) $$ Then: $$ \forall t>death,Damned(x) $$ But he rhetorically reframes this as: they are never “statically damned,” always “damning themselves” (an “always re-instantiating” state).

“No just complaint” structure

His complaint-blocking move is basically:

If a person is shown the consequence and has the (internal) route to avoid it conditional on willing it, then responsibility attaches to the will-state: $$ (SeesConsequence(x)\wedge CanAvoidIfWills(x))\to \neg JustifiedComplaint(x) $$ Even if the will-state itself has an explanation, punishment is keyed to the present resolved wicked will, not to tracing an infinite regress of causes.


7) “Why this soul?” dissolves into individuation-by-place-and-time

He treats “thisness” (haecceity) as fixed by spatiotemporal determination in cases of maximal similarity.

A clean way to capture the punchline:

Let $Origin(x)$ be the ordered pair $\langle t,place\rangle$.

Principle (for the “maximally similar eggs/souls” case): $$ (Origin(x)=Origin(y)\wedge Intrinsic(x)=Intrinsic(y))\to x=y $$

Then the question:

Why is this soul in these circumstances?

becomes:

Why does $x$ have $Origin(x)$?

But if you “move” the origin, you are no longer talking about the same individual: $$ Origin(x)\neq Origin(y)\to x\neq y $$ So “Why am I not born elsewhere/otherwise?” reduces to “Why am I not someone else?”, which is not a substantive complaint about justice on his view.


What ties these arguments together (one meta-schema)

Leibniz is repeatedly doing this:

  1. Replace loaded terms by definitions (justice, love, will, permission, necessity).

  2. Block invalid distribution rules (whole → parts, “follows” → “necessary in itself”).

  3. Distinguish kinds of explanation:

    • grounding/physical cause vs moral authorship,
    • absolute necessity vs certainty under the actual harmony,
    • freedom as rational self-determination vs “reasonless indifference.”

If you want, I can rewrite the above into a single compact “axiom set + theorems” presentation (like a mini formal system) or do a Fitch-style proof for one thread (e.g., the anti-fatalism move) in full detail.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Economics of animals? ft. Adam Smith

Adam Smith (Wealth of Nations, book 1, chapter 2) wrote:

This division of labour, from which so many advantages are derived, is not originally the effect of any human wisdom, which foresees and intends that general opulence to which it gives occasion. It is the necessary, though very slow and gradual consequence of a certain propensity in human nature which has in view no such extensive utility; the propensity to truck, barter, and exchange one thing for another.

Whether this propensity be one of those original principles in human nature of which no further account can be given; or whether, as seems more probable, it be the necessary consequences of the faculties of reason and speech, it belongs not to our present subject to inquire. It is common to all men, and to be found in no other race of animals, which seem to know neither this nor any other species of contracts. Two greyhounds, in running down the same hare, have sometimes the appearance of acting in some sort of concert. Each turns her towards his companion, or endeavours to intercept her when his companion turns her towards himself. This, however, is not the effect of any contract, but of the accidental concurrence of their passions in the same object at that particular time. Nobody ever saw a dog make a fair and deliberate exchange of one bone for another with another dog. Nobody ever saw one animal by its gestures and natural cries signify to another, this is mine, that yours; I am willing to give this for that. When an animal wants to obtain something either of a man or of another animal, it has no other means of persuasion but to gain the favour of those whose service it requires. A puppy fawns upon its dam, and a spaniel endeavours by a thousand attractions to engage the attention of its master who is at dinner, when it wants to be fed by him. Man sometimes uses the same arts with his brethren, and when he has no other means of engaging them to act according to his inclinations, endeavours by every servile and fawning attention to obtain their good will. He has not time, however, to do this upon every occasion. In civilized society he stands at all times in need of the co-operation and assistance of great multitudes, while his whole life is scarce sufficient to gain the friendship of a few persons. In almost every other race of animals each individual, when it is grown up to maturity, is entirely independent, and in its natural state has occasion for the assistance of no other living creature. But man has almost constant occasion for the help of his brethren, and it is in vain for him to expect it from their benevolence only. He will be more likely to prevail if he can interest their self-love in his favour, and show them that it is for their own advantage to do for him what he requires of them. Whoever offers to another a bargain of any kind, proposes to do this. Give me that which I want, and you shall have this which you want, is the meaning of every such offer; and it is in this manner that we obtain from one another the far greater part of those good offices which we stand in need of. It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages. Nobody but a beggar chooses to depend chiefly upon the benevolence of his fellow-citizens. Even a beggar does not depend upon it entirely. The charity of well-disposed people, indeed, supplies him with the whole fund of his subsistence. But though this principle ultimately provides him with all the necessaries of life which he has occasion for, it neither does nor can provide him with them as he has occasion for them. The greater part of his occasional wants are supplied in the same manner as those of other people, by treaty, by barter, and by purchase. With the money which one man gives him he purchases food. The old clothes which another bestows upon him he exchanges for other old clothes which suit him better, or for lodging, or for food, or for money, with which he can buy either food, clothes, or lodging, as he has occasion.

These are broad sweeping statements about humans and animals which today would be criticized, but nevertheless, it does seem true that humans are the only objects of study by economics, decision theory, and studies of agency more broadly. Expound upon this topic.

Smith is doing two things at once in that passage:

  1. giving an origin story for division of labour (“it’s a slow consequence of our propensity to exchange”), and
  2. drawing a sharp species boundary (“contracts” and deliberate exchange are uniquely human).

A lot of the 18th-century biology in the contrast is dated, but the underlying question is still live: how far do “economic” and “agentic” explanations reach beyond humans, and where do they stop being the same kind of thing?

Economics as a subject vs economics as a toolkit

If “economics” means markets with prices, money, firms, contracts, property rights, and institutions, then yes—its natural home is humans (and human-like institutions).

But if “economics” means allocating scarce resources under constraints, then it’s hard to avoid animals. Modern behavioral ecology is basically “economics of survival and reproduction”: animals face tradeoffs (energy vs. risk, present vs. future, exploration vs. exploitation) and you can model them with optimization and choice under constraints.

A canonical example is optimal foraging theory and Charnov’s Marginal Value Theorem, which predicts when a forager should leave a food “patch” based on diminishing returns and travel time. (ScienceDirect) A standard synthesis frames foraging explicitly as “economic analyses of animal feeding behavior.” (De Gruyter Brill)

So: economics-the-discipline often studies humans, but economics-the-mathematics is used all over biology.

“Markets” without money: biological market theory

Smith’s “no contracts among animals” claim looks less solid once you broaden “exchange” beyond explicit bargaining. A big line of work treats many animal interactions as markets where partner choice and competition to be chosen create something like supply-and-demand “prices,” even when the “currency” is grooming, tolerance, access, or effort.

That’s basically what Biological Market Theory proposes. (EurekaMag) And it’s not just metaphor—there are empirical tests showing “market effects” (prices changing with supply).

Examples:

  • Female baboons: grooming time functions like a “payment,” and the “price” of infant handling varies with the number of infants available (a supply effect). (ScienceDirect)
  • Grooming reciprocity in baboons: framed explicitly as market forces shaping exchange patterns. (PMC)
  • Bonobos: recent work analyzes sex and grooming as exchangeable commodities in a daily “market.” (Nature)

These systems don’t require language or legal contracts; they require (a) repeated interaction, (b) some ability to choose partners, and (c) enough cognition (or evolved heuristics) to respond to who offers what.

Cleaner fish: partner choice, “punishment,” and reputations

One of the cleanest (no pun intended) demonstrations of market-like dynamics is the cleaner wrasse–client fish mutualism.

  • Experiments show cleaners prioritize “choosy clients” (those who can leave and go elsewhere) over “resident clients” (those stuck with one station), matching the idea that outside options change bargaining power. (Libra)
  • Clients can curb cheating via partner switching or punishment, which stabilizes cooperation. (PubMed)
  • There’s even evidence of something akin to reputation/image scoring affecting cooperation. (Nature)

What’s striking here is that you can analyze this with the same strategic logic economists use (outside options, incentives, enforcement), even though there’s no written contract.

And the bridge back to “decision theory” is explicit: researchers model what kinds of learning machinery are required to solve the cleaner-fish “market task” using reinforcement-learning theory. (PubMed)

Primates: barter-like behavior exists, but it’s limited

Smith says nobody ever saw an animal “make a fair and deliberate exchange.” Today we have seen exchange-like behavior—often in controlled settings—but it also highlights what may be missing relative to humans.

  • Capuchins have been trained to trade tokens for food and show strong reactions to unequal outcomes (“unequal pay”), which researchers interpret (with debate) as a precursor to fairness/inequity sensitivity. (Nature)
  • Chimpanzees will barter in some contexts (including giving up lower-value food to get higher-value food), but they don’t trade whenever it would benefit them; one proposed explanation is weak “ownership” norms and/or high perceived risk of defection. (PubMed)

So animals can “exchange,” but the scope and reliability often look different from human trade—especially when you need stable property, delayed reciprocity, or guarantees.

Why humans still look special (and why Smith’s core intuition survives)

Even if Smith overstated the uniqueness of exchange, a refined version of his point still has bite:

  • Generalized, scalable exchange: Humans trade with strangers routinely, and not just via repeated dyadic relationships. This depends on norms, reputations, institutions, and often third-party enforcement.
  • Abstract representations: money, accounting, standardized measures, transferable property claims.
  • Commitment devices: contracts, courts, organizational forms, “credible commitments” that make specialization safe at scale.
  • Cumulative cultural evolution: we inherit practices (weights, writing, double-entry bookkeeping, legal templates) that massively extend what any individual could negotiate ad hoc.

Animals can have reciprocity, partner choice, and even rudimentary “market effects,” but human economies are weirdly institution-heavy—and that’s what turns small-scale exchange into complex division of labor spanning millions of people.

Where this leaves “agency”

Modern work tends to treat agency as graded rather than all-or-nothing:

  • Many organisms behave as if they’re optimizing (e.g., foraging models), whether by cognition, learning, or evolved heuristics. (ScienceDirect)
  • Some species show strategic social behavior consistent with incentives, partner choice, punishment, and reputation-like dynamics. (Libra)
  • Humans add a layer of explicit reasons, shared symbols, and institutional commitments that makes “economic agency” in the full modern sense far more portable and scalable.

So the cleanest way to reconcile Smith with current evidence is:

  • Economics as “choice under scarcity” applies broadly across animals.
  • Economics as “institutionalized exchange and production” is overwhelmingly human.
  • The boundary isn’t “animals don’t exchange”; it’s that humans evolved (and culturally accumulated) the machinery that makes exchange general, explicit, and enforceable, which is what supercharges division of labor.

If you want, I can map this into a tighter taxonomy—e.g., reciprocity → partner choice → market effects → property norms → enforceable contracts—and show where different species plausibly sit on that ladder.

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Modal Natural Law

the parallel between deontic and alethic modalities is very convenient for natural law theory

sketch out a formal natural law theory that leans on this by having the same modalities be alethic or deontic depending on whether it’s a free being

Here’s a compact “one-operator” natural law theory that exploits the structural parallel between alethic and deontic modality by letting the same modal vocabulary become alethic or deontic depending on whether the subject is a free being.


1) Language

Two sorts of things:

  • Entities: \(x,y,\dots\)
  • Worlds: \(w,v,\dots\)

Predicates / relations:

  • \(\mathrm{Free}(x)\): \(x\) is a free (rational/volitional) agent.
  • \(\mathrm{Nat}(x)\): the “nature” (essence/functional organization) of \(x\). (Treat as a parameter supplying constraints.)
  • \(\mathrm{End}(x,e)\): \(e\) is a proper end \(telos\) of \(x\).
  • \(\mathrm{Means}(e,\varphi)\): \(\varphi\) is a constitutive means for \(e\).
  • \(\mathrm{Act}_x(\varphi)\): “\(x\) sees to it that \(\varphi\)” (optional, but helpful for deontic readings).
  • \(\mathrm{Flour}(x)\): \(x\) flourishes / realizes its form well.

One modal pair, indexed by subject:

  • \(\Box_x \varphi\)
  • \(\Diamond_x \varphi := \neg \Box_x \neg \varphi\)

Intended neutral gloss of \(\Box_x\):

“\(\varphi\) holds by the law of \(x\)’s nature.”

The trick is that “law of nature” bites as necessity for non-free beings, and as obligation for free beings.


2) Semantics: one frame family, different constraints

Model:
\[
\mathcal{M}=(W,{R_x}_{x\in E},V,\mathrm{Free},\mathrm{Nat},\dots)
\]

Truth clause:
\[
\mathcal{M},w \vDash \Box_x \varphi \quad\text{iff}\quad \forall v,(wR_x v \rightarrow \mathcal{M},v \vDash \varphi).
\]

Now impose different frame conditions on \(R_x\) depending on freedom:

(A) Non-free beings: alethic (necessity)

If \(\neg \mathrm{Free}(x)\), then \(R_x\) is reflexive (at least), optionally S4/S5-ish if you like strong natural necessity:

  • Reflexive: \(\forall w, (wR_x w)\)
    validates T: \(\Box_x \varphi \to \varphi\)

Intuition: non-free things “follow” their natures as necessities (acorns become oaks unless impeded; electrons repel, etc.). When the modal says “must,” it’s literally must.

(B) Free beings: deontic (obligation)

If \(\mathrm{Free}(x)\), require \(R_x\) to be serial (at least):

  • Serial: \(\forall w,\exists v, (wR_x v)\)
    validates D: \(\Box_x \varphi \to \Diamond_x \varphi\)

But do not require reflexivity, so you do not validate T.
That blocks “ought implies is”:

  • For free \(x\): \(\Box_x \varphi\) does not entail \(\varphi\) at the actual world.

Intuition: if you can fail, then “bound by nature” shows up as practical necessity (obligation), not as guaranteed fact.

So the same operator \(\Box_x\) yields:

  • non-free \(x\): natural necessity
  • free \(x\): natural obligation

3) Core “Natural Law” principles

Now add axioms that make this natural-law-shaped rather than just “modal toggling.”

NL1. Teleological grounding

A minimal teleology-to-law schema:

\[
\mathrm{End}(x,e)\ \wedge\ \mathrm{Means}(e,\varphi)\ \to\ \Box_x \varphi.
\]

Reading: if \(\varphi\) is constitutive of realizing a proper end of \(x\), then \(\varphi\) is required by \(x\)’s nature.

  • For non-free \(x\), this is an alethic requirement: the unfolding of form.
  • For free \(x\), this becomes a deontic requirement: what practical reason must treat as action-guiding.

NL2. Freedom-sensitive compliance

Make the “is/ought split” explicit:

\[
\neg \mathrm{Free}(x) \to (\Box_x \varphi \to \varphi) \qquad\text{(necessity entails fact)}
\]
\[
\mathrm{Free}(x) \to \neg(\Box_x \varphi \to \varphi) \qquad\text{(obligation needn’t be met)}
\]

(Second line is not a single axiom in normal systems, but you can enforce it by not giving free agents reflexivity.)

NL3. Ought implies can (internalized)

Use the serial/D condition for free agents as the modal version:

\[
\mathrm{Free}(x) \to (\Box_x \varphi \to \Diamond_x \varphi).
\]

This is “ought implies can” in the same modality.

NL4. Practical form: obligations target agency

If you want obligations to be about what the agent does, tie \(\Box_x\) to agency:

\[
\mathrm{Free}(x)\ \wedge\ \Box_x \varphi \to \Box_x,\mathrm{Act}_x(\varphi)
\]

(or instead define obligation as \(\Box_x \mathrm{Act}_x(\varphi)\) and keep \(\varphi\) as outcome propositions.)


4) The natural law “bridge” without an is/ought fallacy

In this setup, the classical natural law move:

“From facts about nature to norms”

is recast as:

“From teleological structure to \(\Box_x\)-claims; whether those are is-like or ought-like depends on \(\mathrm{Free}(x)\).”

So you never infer an “ought” from a bare “is.” You infer a modal claim (“required by nature”), and then the logic itself tells you what kind of requirement it is, because the subject is free or not.

A handy definitional gloss:

  • Natural necessity: \(\mathrm{NatNec}(x,\varphi) := \neg\mathrm{Free}(x)\wedge \Box_x\varphi\)
  • Natural obligation: \(\mathrm{NatOught}(x,\varphi) := \mathrm{Free}(x)\wedge \Box_x\varphi\)

Same \(\Box\), different mode of governance.


5) Defect and wrongdoing as one notion, two manifestations

Define defect relative to nature:

\[
\mathrm{Defect}(x,\varphi) := \Box_x \varphi \wedge \neg \varphi.
\]

  • If \(\neg \mathrm{Free}(x)), (\mathrm{Defect}(x,\varphi)\) is typically impossible unless you also model impediments (injury, interference). Defect is “broken functioning.”
  • If \(\mathrm{Free}(x)), (\mathrm{Defect}(x,\varphi)\) is exactly the shape of wrongdoing: an obligation unmet.

This yields a unified natural law idea:

vice is a kind of malfunction in a rational animal.


6) Tiny illustrative example

Let \(a\) be an acorn, \(h\) a human.

  • \(\neg \mathrm{Free}(a)\), \(\mathrm{Free}(h)\)
  • \(\mathrm{End}(a,\text{oak})\), \(\mathrm{Means}(\text{oak},\text{develop_roots})\)
  • \(\mathrm{End}(h,\text{flourishing})\), \(\mathrm{Means}(\text{flourishing},\text{seek_truth})\)

From NL1:

  • \(\Box_a,\text{develop_roots}\)
    By reflexivity for non-free beings, \(\text{develop_roots}\) follows in the normal case (alethic “must”).
  • \(\Box_h,\text{seek_truth}\)
    But no T for free beings: it does not follow that \(h\) seeks truth. It’s an “ought.”

Same modal skeleton; different upshot because \(h\) is free.


7) What you get “for free” with this design

  • A single formal connective \(\Box_x\) that covers both “must” and “ought.”
  • A clean explanation of why natural law looks “descriptive” in biology/physics but “normative” in ethics: freedom is the switch.
  • A unified account of deviation (impairment vs wrongdoing) as failure to realize natural modal requirements.

If you want to push it further, the next natural move is to add a ranking (a “better-than” ordering) over \(R_x\)-accessible worlds for free agents (à la preference/ideality semantics), so \(\Box_x\) becomes “true in all best \(x\)-realizations of nature,” while for non-free agents it remains “true in all nature-compatible worlds.” That gives you a very natural-law-ish story about prudence, conflict of goods, and exception handling without changing the basic modal parallel.