Wednesday, March 18, 2026

A new song about the greatness of America

 The direction of this song is sunny, high-energy, and proudly celebratory. 

                   America, You Shine

Style, genre, mood

  • Genre: 1960s surf-rock meets sunshine pop with tight vocal stacks and bright guitars. [2]
  • Mood: Happy, up-tempo, open-road optimism; big smiles, beach air, and Saturday-night energy. [3]
  • Vibe cues: Spring-reverb twang, handclaps, “ooh/ahh” harmonies, tambourine on 2 and 4. [1]

Music form

  • Intro (instrumental surf riff, 2–4 bars), Verse 1 (8 bars), Pre-chorus (4 bars), Chorus (8 bars)
  • Verse 2 (8), Pre-chorus (4), Chorus (8)
  • Bridge with key lift + short sax/guitar break (8)
  • Final double chorus + tag/outro with riff (fade or hard stop). [2][3]

Key, tempo, meter

  • Key: A major for verses/choruses; lift up a whole step to B major for the bridge/final choruses to heighten excitement. [2]
  • Tempo: 164–176 BPM; straight 8ths, driving drums (surf beat). [1]
  • Meter: 4/4; add occasional triplet drum fills for period flavor. [3]

Chord progressions

  • Intro (A major): A – E – F#m – D (I – V – vi – IV), end with E (V) to launch Verse. [2]
  • Verse (A major): A – F#m – D – E (I – vi – IV – V), classic sunny motion. [1]
  • Pre-chorus (A major): Bm – D – E – E (ii – IV – V – V), building tension. [3]
  • Chorus (A major): A – D – A – E (I – IV – I – V) or A – E – F#m – D (I – V – vi – IV) for an anthemic sweep. [2]
  • Bridge (modulate to B major): E – F# – B – F# (IV – V – I – V) with a quick turnaround G#m – E – F# to keep momentum. [3]
  • Tag/Outro: Cycle A – D – A – E with a surf riff; final stinger on A. [1]

Suggested melody (guide)

  • Range: Keep lead around A3–E4 (male) or E4–B4 (female) for energetic belt without strain. [2]
  • Verse (A major): Start on scale degree 3 (C#) for instant brightness; use a stepwise 3–3–2–1 motif over I–vi–IV–V. [1]
  • Pre-chorus: Sequence upward 2–3–4–5 to feel lift as chords rise toward V. [3]
  • Chorus hook (A major): Big, singable leap 5→1, then 1–1–2–3–3–2–1 on “Ride the red, white, and blue!” Example notes: E–A | A–A–B–C#–C#–B–A. [2]
  • Bridge (B major): Repeat the chorus contour a whole step higher; add a harmony a 3rd above on the second half. [3]

Instrumentation and production

  • Guitars: Two bright single-coils (Strat/Tele) with spring reverb; one plays the twangy lead riff, one strums offbeat chords; add a baritone guitar doubling the bass on key hits. [1]
  • Keys: Farfisa/organ or clean piano for percussive jangle in choruses. [2]
  • Bass: Root–5th drive with occasional walking fills; lock tight with kick. [3]
  • Drums: Snappy snare, steady ride/hi-hat 8ths, tom fills into sections; tambourine and handclaps on choruses. [1]
  • Vocals: Stacked “ooh/ahh” pads and a call-and-response line in the final chorus; double-track the lead for sheen. [2]
  • Optional break: Short tenor sax or surf-guitar solo in the bridge before the key-lift chorus. [3]

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Lyrics draft
Strong start (immediate, visual)
Verse 1
Sunrise catching on the boardwalk rail,
Golden wheels spinning down the coastal trail,
From the palms to the peaks where the eagles fly,
I feel that freedom wind, and it lifts me high. [2]

Pre-chorus
Every mile, every town, lights are shining true,
Open roads and open hearts—yeah, they’re shining too. [3]

Chorus
Coast to coast and back again,
Hear the ocean meet the plain,
Stars are blazing, red, white, blue—
Riding high, America, you shine right through!
Hands to the sky, we sing it too:
How great you are—America, we’re riding with you! [1]

Verse 2
Neon nights on a desert line,
Riverboats rolling to a southern time,
Amber waves in a Midwest breeze,
City dreams rising like the tallest trees. [2]

Pre-chorus
Every mile, every town, chorus breaking through,
Different voices blend as one—yeah, they’re breaking through. [3]

Chorus
Coast to coast and back again,
Hear the ocean meet the plain,
Stars are blazing, red, white, blue—
Riding high, America, you shine right through! [1]

Bridge (key lift)
Turn it up, let the good times roll,
From the docks to the canyon soul,
We stand as one, and the road runs long—
Bigger than a dream, we’re a freedom song. [2]

Break/Solo (sax or surf guitar) [3]

Final double chorus (higher key)
Coast to coast and back again,
Hearts in rhythm, hand in hand,
Stars are blazing, red, white, blue—
Riding high, America, we shine right through!
Tag: How great you are—America, we’re riding with you! [1]

Rhyme and phrasing tips

  • Use mostly couplets in verses (A A B B) and a broader rhyme in the chorus for chantability. [2]
  • Keep lines 7–9 syllables, with a clipped pickup on the downbeat for that surf snap. [3]

Performance/arrangement notes

  • Start with a 2-bar surf lick on A mixolydian flavor (touch of G natural as a passing tone), then lock to straight A major for vocals. [1]
  • Put tambourine only in choruses for lift; add handclaps in the final double chorus. [2]
  • For maximum smile-factor, key-lift before the bridge solo so the last choruses explode. [3]

If you want a simpler, three-chord version

  • Use A – D – E throughout; keep the melody hooky and stack harmonies in the choruses. [2][1]

Sources

1 The Song Writers Idea Book by Sheila Davis


2 The Craft of Lyric Writing by Sheila Davis


3 Successful Lyric Writing by Sheila Davis


In addition:

Here’s a clean, notated lead sheet you can print or drop into any ABC-compatible notation app (like EasyABC or abcjs) to render standard sheet music with chords and lyrics in a bright 60s surf/pro-California style. [1][2][3]

Title: Ride the Red, White and Blue [2]

  • Key: A major (modulates up to B major for the bridge/final choruses) [2]
  • Tempo: 1/4 = 168–176, driving 8ths, surf backbeat [1]
  • Meter: 4/4 [3]
  • Form: Intro 2 bars, Verse (8), Pre-chorus (4), Chorus (8); Verse 2 (8), Pre-chorus (4), Chorus (8); Bridge with key lift (8); Final double chorus in higher key + tag [2][3]

ABC notation (melody + chords)
Copy everything from X: to the end into an ABC editor to get staff notation, chord symbols, and a printable lead sheet. [1][2]

X:1
T:Ride the Red, White and Blue
C:Words & Music: You
M:4/4
L:1/8
Q:1/4=172
K:A
%%MIDI program 25
P:Intro
| "A" E E C B A B C | "E" B B A G F E E z |
P:Verse
| "A" C C B A B C E E | "F#m" C C B A A B C B |
| "D" A A B A G F G A | "E" B B A G F E E z |
| "A" C C B A B C E E | "F#m" C C B A A B C B |
| "D" A A B A G F G A | "E" B B A G F E E z |
P:Pre-chorus
| "Bm" B B C D E D C B | "D" A A B C D C B A |
| "E" B B B C D C B A | "E" B C D C B A G F |
P:Chorus
| "A" E A A A B C C B | "D" A A A G F E F G |
| "A" E A A B C C B A | "E" B B A G F E E z |
| "A" E A A A B C C B | "D" A A A G F E F G |
| "A" E A A B C C B A | "E" B B A G F E E z |
K:B
P:Bridge (key change)
| "E" B B C D E D C B | "F#" C C B A G F G A |
| "B" B B A G F E E E | "F#" F F E D C B B z |
| "G#m" G G F E D C D E | "E" B B C D E D C B |
| "F#" C C B A G F E F | "F#" B B A G F E E z |
P:Final Chorus (higher key)
| "B" F B B B C D D C | "E" B B B A G F G A |
| "B" F B B C D D C B | "F#" C C B A G F F z |
| "B" F B B B C D D C | "E" B B B A G F G A |
| "B" F B B C D D C B | "F#" C C B A G F F z |
P:Tag
| "B" B8 |

Lyrics (align to sections)
Verse 1
Sunrise catching on the boardwalk rail,
Golden wheels spinning down the coastal trail,
From the palms to the peaks where the eagles fly,
I feel that freedom wind, and it lifts me high. [2]

Pre-chorus
Every mile, every town, lights are shining true,
Open roads and open hearts—yeah, they’re shining too. [3]

Chorus
Coast to coast and back again,
Hear the ocean meet the plain,
Stars are blazing, red, white, blue—
Riding high, America, you shine right through!
Hands to the sky, we sing it too:
How great you are—America, we’re riding with you! [1]

Verse 2
Neon nights on a desert line,
Riverboats rolling to a southern time,
Amber waves in a Midwest breeze,
City dreams rising like the tallest trees. [2]

Bridge (key change)
Turn it up, let the good times roll,
From the docks to the canyon soul,
We stand as one, and the road runs long—
Bigger than a dream, we’re a freedom song. [2]

Final chorus (higher key)
Coast to coast and back again,
Hearts in rhythm, hand in hand,
Stars are blazing, red, white, blue—
Riding high, America, we shine right through!
Tag: How great you are—America, we’re riding with you! [3]

Chord roadmap (for quick reference)

  • Verse (A major): A – F#m – D – E, twice (I – vi – IV – V), sunny motion with classic surf lift into V [1]
  • Pre-chorus: Bm – D – E – E (ii – IV – V – V), builds tension to the hook [3]
  • Chorus: A – D – A – E, twice (I – IV – I – V), singable and anthemic [2]
  • Bridge (modulates to B): E – F# – B – F#, then G#m – E – F# – F# (IV – V – I – V; quick turnaround) [3]

Style and arrangement tips to nail the 60s surf vibe

  • Guitars: bright single-coils with spring reverb; one twangy lead riff, one offbeat strums; add tambourine and handclaps on choruses for sunshine-pop lift [1][2]
  • Drums: snappy snare, straight 8ths, tom fills into sections; keep tempo driving and carefree [1]
  • Vocals: stacked “ooh/ahh” pads, call-and-response in final chorus; double-track the lead for sparkle [2]
  • Production move: the whole-step key lift into the bridge/final choruses delivers that classic hands-up energy [3]

Sources

1 The Craft of Lyric Writing by Sheila Davis


2 The Song Writers' Idea Book by Sheila Davis


3 Successful Lyric Writing by Sheila Davis


Praxeology: Poland's extremely high GDP per capita growth after communism

 Praxeological framing of the phenomenon

  • Phenomenon restated: “Poland’s high growth of GDP per capita (1990–2024)” means that, over time, millions of individual actors in Poland reallocated scarce means toward ends they preferred more intensely, under changing institutional constraints, resulting in a higher monetary appraisal of output per person. “Poland achieved high growth” is shorthand for coordinated individual actions through markets; collectives act only through individuals.

  • Relevant categories: purpose and choice; scarcity; opportunity cost; time and uncertainty; private property; monetary calculation; entrepreneurship; profit and loss; exchange and the division of labor; time preference; capital accumulation; monetary stability; institutional rules changing the constraints of action.

Deductive praxeological explanation (universal, not statistical)

  1. From the axiom of action it follows that actors seek to remove felt uneasiness using scarce means. Under socialism (state ownership of the means of production), there are no market prices for capital goods; therefore monetary calculation of alternative production plans is impossible. This necessarily implies systematic misallocation and lower productivity.

  2. Reintroducing private property in capital goods and allowing free pricing reinstates economic calculation. Entrepreneurs can now compare input and output money prices, appraise alternatives, bear uncertainty, and reallocate resources toward higher-valued uses. This necessarily raises the coherence of production plans with consumer preferences, increasing the value product.

  3. Expanding the scope of voluntary exchange (via internal liberalization and external openness) necessarily deepens the division of labor. A wider market increases opportunities for specialization, which, ceteris paribus, raises physical productivity and the monetary value of outputs.

  4. Greater monetary stability and credible constraints on arbitrary intervention reduce uncertainty and expected confiscation, lowering actors’ time preference. Lower time preference implies more saving and longer-term investment, which necessarily increases the stock of capital goods over time and the marginal productivity of labor.

  5. Profit-and-loss signals in a market setting select plans that better anticipate consumer preferences and deselect those that do not. Over time this entrepreneurial selection mechanism must improve the structure of production and real incomes relative to a setting without such signals.

  6. Inflows of foreign capital, technology, and managerial know‑how are voluntary exchanges. They expand the available means sooner than domestic saving alone would permit, accelerating capital accumulation and specialization. This is not a “free lunch”: it reflects mutually perceived gains from trade.

  7. Rules that lower transaction costs (clear property rights, contract enforcement, bankruptcy procedures) necessarily widen the feasible set of exchanges and investment projects. Conversely, interventions that suppress price signals or raise uncertainty predictably impair calculation and coordination.

Therefore, praxeologically speaking, the primary cause of Poland’s relative outperformance is the restoration and enlargement of the institutional preconditions for rational economic calculation and extensive market exchange—private ownership, free prices, sounder money, trade openness, and predictable rules—which enabled entrepreneurship, capital accumulation, and deepening division of labor.

Thymological/historical instantiation (illustrative, not praxeology)

  • Early transition (“Balcerowicz Plan,” 1989–1991): rapid price liberalization, current-account convertibility, disinflation program, trade opening, bankruptcy and company law, tax reform, and extensive small-scale privatization. These measures reestablished price signals and property-based calculation quickly.

  • 1990s consolidation: privatization and creation of thousands of SMEs; emergence of special economic zones; relatively stable and comprehensible tax environment (e.g., CIT at 19% for long stretches); banking sector reform; gradual decline of inflation and increased central bank credibility; development of capital markets. Result: clearer profit-and-loss regime, lower transaction costs, more investable opportunities.

  • EU accession (2004): full access to the Single Market, removal of most trade and capital barriers, legal harmonization, and a powerful credible-commitment device constraining drastic policy reversals. FDI scaled up, integrating Poland into European value chains (automotive, appliances, furniture, electronics, logistics), plus growth of business services/IT. Structural and cohesion funds co-financed infrastructure; praxeologically, these are resource reallocations that can facilitate exchange when aligned with entrepreneurial plans.

  • Labor market and human capital dynamics: large-scale post-2004 emigration and remittances; later inflows of Ukrainian workers increasing labor supply flexibility; steady gains in general education quality and tertiary enrollment; firm-level training as foreign producers transferred know‑how. These phenomena altered relative scarcities and skills, supporting specialization.

  • Macroeconomic resilience: relatively moderate public debt and avoidance of severe boom-busts; a flexible exchange rate cushioning shocks; strong banking supervision limiting foreign-currency household leverage. Lower macro-uncertainty sustained longer planning horizons.

What praxeology can and cannot say

  • It can deduce that replacing central planning with private property and free prices must raise calculational coherence, improve entrepreneurial selection, deepen the division of labor, and thereby increase the value product relative to socialism.
  • It does not measure utility nor rely on GDP; GDP is an empirical aggregate that can illustrate but not prove praxeological theorems.
  • Specific magnitudes (how much each reform “contributed,” precise growth rates) are thymological or econometric questions, not praxeology.

Concise conclusion

  • Necessary cause: the restoration of monetary calculation via private property and market prices, combined with wider exchange opportunities and lower uncertainty, enabled entrepreneurship and capital accumulation. Poland’s institutions after 1990 aligned incentives and information so that individual actors could better coordinate their plans; EU integration further extended the division of labor. These structural, praxeologically necessary mechanisms explain the sustained rise in output per head relative to other post-communist economies.


Sources for this response
Praxeological foundations:

  • Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (1949; 1966 rev. ed.), esp. Parts I–III (action, calculation, entrepreneurship, money)
  • Ludwig von Mises, Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth (1920)
  • Ludwig von Mises, The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science (1962)
  • Murray N. Rothbard, Man, Economy, and State (1962), Ch. 1; and “Praxeology: The Methodology of Austrian Economics”
  • Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Economic Science and the Austrian Method (1995)
  • F. A. Hayek, The Use of Knowledge in Society (1945) — on dispersed knowledge and price signals

Historical/empirical context on Poland (illustrative):

  • Leszek Balcerowicz, Socialism, Capitalism, Transformation (1995)
  • World Bank, Poland Country Economic Memoranda and World Development Indicators (GDP per capita, PPP; trade; FDI)
  • OECD Economic Surveys: Poland (various years, 1990s–2020s)
  • IMF Article IV Staff Reports on Poland (various years)
  • European Commission, Single Market and Cohesion Policy reports; structural funds evaluations for Poland
  • National Bank of Poland (NBP) publications on disinflation, monetary policy, and financial stability
  • Statistics Poland (GUS) yearbooks (national accounts, labor, sectoral data)
  • OECD PISA reports on education outcomes (2000s onward)
  • EBRD Transition Reports (1990s–2010s) on reforms and enterprise restructuring

Note: The praxeological theorems do not depend on these empirical sources; they merely illustrate the historical instantiation in Poland. Empirical events can exemplify but never refute praxeology.


In addition:

Praxeological deep dive (beyond the prior summary)

  1. Restatement in praxeological terms
  • The outcome: A sustained rise in the monetary appraisement of per‑capita output in Poland means individual actors increasingly coordinated their plans under institutions that enabled better economic calculation, deeper division of labor, and greater capital accumulation.
  • Collective attributions (“Poland achieved high growth”) reduce to countless individual choices under changed constraints; only individuals act.
  1. Relevant categories (expanded)
  • Economic calculation: requires private property in capital goods and free prices.
  • Exchange and division of labor: market widening, specialization, and roundaboutness of production.
  • Time and time preference: longer plans become feasible when expected confiscation/uncertainty falls.
  • Entrepreneurship: bearing uncertainty, arbitrage in time and across stages of production.
  • Monetary regime: money’s non-neutrality, price signals, and the coordinating role of profit/loss.
  • Institutional predictability: property, contract, bankruptcy rules, and the expected integrity of enforcement.
  • Capital structure: lengthening of production processes and complementary human capital.
  1. Deductions and mechanisms (more granular)
  • Calculation restored → plan selection improves: With private ownership and price liberalization, entrepreneurs can compare alternative uses of capital goods. Losses weed out discoordinated plans; profits reward superior anticipation. Necessarily, average plan coherence rises relative to non-calculative socialism.
  • Market widening → specialization: Trade openness and EU entry expand the feasible set of exchanges. By praxeological law, a wider market enables finer specialization and longer production chains, raising productivity.
  • Lower perceived policy arbitrariness → longer horizons: Credible constraints on expropriation and sudden rule changes reduce the premium actors place on present over future consumption in their plans (not “changing” innate time preference, but changing the effective security of future claims). Longer-horizon projects and higher saving/investment follow, ceteris paribus.
  • Monetary stabilization → clearer relative prices: Disinflation and later stable, predictable monetary policy reduce the fog that inflation throws over relative price movements. This sharpens entrepreneurial appraisement and reduces malinvestment risk.
  • Foreign capital/know‑how → earlier deepening of roundabout production: Voluntary FDI and integration into global supply chains accelerate access to advanced techniques and complementary capital goods. This raises the marginal productivity of local labor sooner than domestic saving alone would.
  • Institutionalized exit (bankruptcy) → dynamic reallocation: Clear insolvency rules ensure that scarce means leave failing uses and reenter higher-valued lines. This is a necessary precondition for ongoing coordination.
  • Transaction-cost reducers (infrastructure, commercial law, registries) → more exchanges become worthwhile: Lower costs expand the margin at which mutually beneficial trades occur, deepening the division of labor.
  1. Historical/thymological instantiation (illustrative examples mapped to the above mechanisms)
  • 1989–1991 “big bang” liberalization (Balcerowicz): near-complete price liberalization, external convertibility of the złoty, trade opening, hard budget constraints, early privatizations, and bankruptcy/company law. These reintroduced price signals, calculability, and exit.
  • 1990s: SME explosion; bank reform and (largely) foreign‑owned, prudentially supervised banking system; corporate income tax anchored at 19% for long stretches; special economic zones offering tax relief and streamlined procedures. Predictability reduced policy risk and widened the exchange network.
  • 1998–2004 monetary regime building: modern central bank law, disinflation to single digits, inflation targeting, and later a floating exchange rate. Reduced monetary noise improved relative‑price signals; flexibility cushioned shocks without disabling domestic calculation.
  • 2004 EU accession: legal harmonization, access to the Single Market, capital and labor mobility. FDI scaled up in autos, white goods, furniture, electronics, logistics, and later business services/IT. Cohesion funds co‑financed transport/digital infrastructure and wastewater/energy networks—reducing transaction costs where they matched entrepreneurial plans.
  • Labor dynamics: post‑2004 emigration eased domestic labor-market slack; later large inflows of Ukrainian workers increased labor-supply flexibility. Both are reallocations of labor to lines of higher appraised productivity, supporting specialization.
  • Capital-market and enterprise formalization: KRS business registry, land/collateral registries, and maturing commercial courts reduced frictions for contracting and secured lending—key to calculable, longer production processes.
  • 2008–2009 resilience: flexible exchange rate, low FX household leverage relative to some peers, and no euro adoption insulated domestic calculation from external shocks. Prices—including the exchange rate—adjusted, preventing more destructive quantity adjustments (unemployment, bankruptcies) than under rigid pegs.
  1. Comparative praxeological notes (why Poland outperformed many peers)
  • Faster restoration of calculation across a broad swath of the economy than gradualist or partially reformed systems; harder budget constraints relative to soft financing of legacy SOEs.
  • Legal and commercial predictability sufficient to anchor long supply chains. Even with imperfections, expected rule stability was high enough for multi‑year plans.
  • Choice of a floating currency avoided the calculation distortions and crisis dynamics that often attend hard pegs without corresponding fiscal/financial discipline.
  • High absorptive capacity for FDI and technology transfer because the institutional prerequisites for calculative entrepreneurship were in place.
  1. Clarifications on contested items (praxeological stance)
  • EU funds: They are intergovernmental transfers that reallocate resources; they do not create wealth by themselves. When deployed on projects that lower transaction costs (e.g., roads linking firms to markets), they can facilitate more exchanges and longer production chains. When politically allocated without regard to entrepreneurial plans, they risk misallocation. The effect hinges on whether they complement calculative private action.
  • State-owned enterprises: To the extent SOEs are insulated from profit/loss and soft budget constraints, they impair calculation. Poland’s strong performance despite persistent SOEs in energy/mining reflects that a large share of the economy operated under private calculation; remaining SOE pockets likely dragged rather than propelled growth.
  • “Human capital”: From a praxeological view, education/training are time-using investments in complementary factors. When institutions allow private capture of returns (e.g., higher wages, entrepreneurship), actors invest more in such skills, supporting longer, more specialized production structures.
  1. Forward-looking invariants and potential headwinds
  • Invariants: Anything that widens markets, secures property and contract, clarifies bankruptcy, and stabilizes money necessarily improves calculability and coordination.
  • Headwinds (logical implications, not forecasts): Ad hoc sectoral taxes, politicization of courts/regulators, price controls (e.g., energy/food caps), or creeping re‑nationalization suppress or garble price signals and raise uncertainty. Praxeologically, these must impair calculation and, at the margin, shorten planning horizons and misallocate capital.

Concise conclusion

  • The essence of Poland’s success is institutional: rapid reintroduction of the preconditions for monetary calculation and exchange, followed by credible, predictable rules that widened markets at home and abroad. Entrepreneurship, guided by profit/loss under sounder money and lower transaction costs, lengthened production processes and deepened specialization—mechanisms that necessarily raise per‑capita incomes relative to socialist or interventionist alternatives.


Sources for this response
Praxeological foundations:

  • Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (1949; 1966 rev. ed.), esp. Parts I–III.
  • Ludwig von Mises, Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth (1920).
  • Ludwig von Mises, The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science (1962).
  • Murray N. Rothbard, Man, Economy, and State (1962), Ch. 1; and “Praxeology: The Methodology of Austrian Economics.”
  • Hans‑Hermann Hoppe, Economic Science and the Austrian Method (1995).
  • F. A. Hayek, “The Use of Knowledge in Society” (1945) for price‑signal arguments consistent with praxeology.

Historical/empirical context (illustrative):

  • Leszek Balcerowicz, Socialism, Capitalism, Transformation (1995).
  • EBRD Transition Reports (1990s–2010s) on liberalization, privatization, and enterprise restructuring.
  • World Bank, Poland Country Economic Memoranda; World Development Indicators (openness, FDI, GDP per capita, PPP).
  • OECD Economic Surveys: Poland (various years).
  • IMF Article IV Staff Reports on Poland (various years).
  • European Commission reports on Single Market integration and Cohesion Policy evaluations.
  • National Bank of Poland (NBP) on monetary policy, disinflation, and financial stability.
  • Statistics Poland (GUS) yearbooks and business registries.

Finally:

What are the conditions and policies that lead to achieving high economic progress and high growth of prosperity in a country?

Praxeological framing

  • Question restated: If the end is sustained growth in market‑valued prosperity, what institutional conditions and policies serve as means that necessarily improve calculability, deepen the division of labor, and foster capital accumulation?
  • Relevant categories: economic calculation, private property, free pricing, exchange and specialization, time preference, uncertainty, entrepreneurship, profit/loss, capital structure, methodological individualism.

Deductive implications and the corresponding policies

  1. Private property in the means of production and freedom of contract
  • Theorem: Calculation over alternative uses of capital goods requires private ownership and transferable titles. Without them, rational appraisement is impossible.
  • Policies: strong constitutional/property protections; clear title/land and collateral registries; enforceable contracts; impartial courts; easy firm entry/exit; general rules over ad hoc permissions.
  • Avoid: expropriation, discretionary licensing, politicized enforcement, and pervasive SOEs insulated from profit/loss.
  1. Free, flexible prices and profit/loss discipline
  • Theorem: Prices convey marginal information; controls sever means‑ends feedback. Profit/loss selects coordinated plans and weeds out discoordination.
  • Policies: remove price controls (incl. wage/rent caps); competitive markets; allow bankruptcy; no guaranteed bailouts.
  • Avoid: price ceilings/floors (incl. binding minimum wages and rent control), subsidies that keep malinvestments alive, soft budget constraints.
  1. Sound money and constrained credit expansion
  • Theorem: Inflation and artificial credit expansion distort relative prices and interest rates (Austrian business cycle), inducing malinvestment and boom‑bust.
  • Policies: rule‑bound monetary regime (predictable, low inflation); no directed credit; hard budget constraints for banks; credible resolution/bankruptcy; transparency.
  • Avoid: monetized deficits, politicized lending, financial repression, pegs that require future abrupt breaks.
  1. Open trade and capital mobility
  • Theorem: A wider market necessarily deepens the division of labor and specialization, raising productivity.
  • Policies: low/zero tariffs and quotas; simple customs; openness to FDI/technology; mutual recognition/standards interoperability; labor mobility.
  • Avoid: protectionism, local‑content mandates, capital controls.
  1. Low, simple, predictable taxation and restrained public spending
  • Theorem: Taxation alters the opportunity costs of action; high and erratic wedges reduce production, exchange, and investment at the margin.
  • Policies: broad bases, low rates, stable rules; minimal complexity; credible debt limits; avoid retroactivity.
  • Avoid: volatile tax changes, high marginal wedges on work/capital, chronic deficits.
  1. Fast, credible exit via bankruptcy and collateral enforcement
  • Theorem: Reallocation of scarce means from failing to higher‑valued uses requires real exit.
  • Policies: timely insolvency procedures; secured‑credit enforcement; efficient courts/administration.
  • Avoid: evergreen loans, politicized restructurings, blanket bailouts.
  1. Labor market freedom
  • Theorem: Wages are prices; if the wage floor exceeds a worker’s marginal value product, unemployment necessarily results.
  • Policies: flexible hiring/firing; decentralized bargaining; portable, actuarially transparent benefits; ease of formalization.
  • Avoid: binding minimum wages far above productivity, rigid mandates that block mutually beneficial contracts.
  1. Predictability and credible commitment
  • Theorem: Heightened uncertainty shortens planning horizons and raises effective time preference; rules beat discretion for long projects.
  • Policies: stable, general, prospective laws; independent, law‑bound judiciary; transparent regulatory processes; constitutional checks.
  • Avoid: retroactive rules, ad hoc windfall levies, abrupt bans.
  1. Institutions and infrastructure that reduce transaction costs
  • Theorem: Lower transaction/search/enforcement costs widen the set of mutually beneficial exchanges.
  • Policies: high‑quality commercial law, digital one‑stop administration, interoperable standards, logistics/connectivity where user demand is evident (ideally via user fees or private provision).
  • Avoid: prestige megaprojects detached from market demand; politicized procurement.
  1. Toleration of entrepreneurial discovery and innovation
  • Theorem: Profit opportunities drive discovery; regulation that forbids trial‑and‑error blocks coordination improvements.
  • Policies: rapid firm formation; permissive defaults/sandboxes; minimal, targeted licensing; fast IP adjudication with limited monopoly rents; competition as process, not protection of competitors.
  • Avoid: precautionary bans, occupational cartels, entry barriers.
  1. Land and housing flexibility (to enable mobility and agglomeration)
  • Theorem: Mobility to higher‑valued uses and agglomeration economies raise productivity; binding price controls and exclusionary zoning create shortages and misallocation.
  • Policies: by‑right building, flexible zoning, market rents, fast permitting.
  • Avoid: rent control, rigid urban containment that blocks growth.
  1. Limited, general‑rule state—eschew outcome targeting and industrial policy
  • Theorem: Socialism and discretionary intervention face the calculation/knowledge problems; “picking winners” substitutes political signals for profit/loss.
  • Policies: neutrality across sectors; focus the state on defining/enforcing property, contract, and liability; allow market prices to guide structure of production.
  • Avoid: sectoral subsidies, state credit allocation, targeted protection.

Sequencing and scope (praxeological notes)

  • Breadth beats partialism: Restoring calculation widely and imposing hard budget constraints across sectors improves coordination faster than piecemeal reforms that leave islands of non‑calculation.
  • Rules over technocracy: The aim is not to “engineer” outcomes but to establish universal conditions under which individual plans can coordinate through prices and profit/loss.

What praxeology does and does not claim

  • Claims: The above conditions are necessary (and strongly conducive) means to higher, more coordinated value production because they secure calculation, widen exchange, and lengthen production processes.
  • Non‑claims: Exact growth rates, optimal tax numbers, or the timing of outcomes are empirical/thymological questions, not praxeological theorems.

Sources for this response
Praxeological foundations:

  • Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (1949; 1966 rev. ed.), Parts I–III.
  • Ludwig von Mises, Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth (1920).
  • Ludwig von Mises, The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science (1962).
  • Murray N. Rothbard, Man, Economy, and State (1962), Ch. 1; and “Praxeology: The Methodology of Austrian Economics.”
  • Hans‑Hermann Hoppe, Economic Science and the Austrian Method (1995).
  • F. A. Hayek, The Use of Knowledge in Society (1945), consistent with praxeological insights on prices and dispersed knowledge.
  • George Reisman, Capitalism (1996), on property, capital accumulation, and prosperity.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Praxeology: The causes of the depression of 1784 in the United States

 What were the causes of the post‑Revolutionary War slump of the 1780s? The Treaty of Paris ended the war in 1783, and much of the United States experienced a severe adjustment crisis roughly from 1784 to 1787.

Praxeological restatement

  • Actors: Individuals (farmers, merchants, creditors, debtors, legislators) sought to remove felt uneasiness by using monetary and legal means to attain ends such as solvency, tax payment, or commercial gain.
  • Context: A wartime, inflation-distorted monetary order shifted abruptly toward peacetime exchange and debt settlement under scarcity, time, and uncertainty.
  • Means: Media of exchange (specie, paper notes), credit contracts, tax laws, tender and stay laws, and trade relationships.

Relevant praxeological categories

  • Monetary calculation and indirect exchange; changes in the quantity and distribution of money.
  • Intertemporal choice, credit, and the coordination of production over time.
  • Costs as foregone alternatives; debt contracts fixed in nominal terms.
  • Uncertainty and the role of legal rules in facilitating or impeding market clearing.
  • Methodological individualism: all “state” actions occur through individuals enacting policies.

Deductive implications and their application to the 1780s

  1. Wartime inflation → postwar liquidation is inevitable.

    • The Revolution was financed by large emissions of paper (Continental currency and various state notes), which necessarily distorted relative prices and misled actors about real scarcities.
    • From the axiom of action and the role of money in calculation, it follows that when inflation ceases and paper is retired or repudiated, earlier price signals are revealed as illusory; entrepreneurial plans made under distorted signals must be revised. Losses, bankruptcies, and idle factors are the necessary form of this re‑coordination.
  2. Sudden increase in the demand for specie (taxes and debt settlements) tightens money and raises the purchasing power of money.

    • States sought to service war debts with high, often specie‑payable taxes. Private creditors also demanded specie repayment.
    • Praxeologically, a higher demand for money (and/or a reduced money stock) implies higher money’s marginal utility and thus lower nominal prices and wages. With nominal debts fixed, this raises real debt burdens and forces asset liquidations, which are necessary consequences of the contract structure given the monetary change.
  3. International specie outflows reflect underlying price‑money relations and induce further domestic adjustment.

    • Americans eagerly imported British goods postwar; combined with limited export markets, specie flowed out to settle balances.
    • Praxeologically, an external drain that shrinks the domestic money stock does not “cause depression” per se; it compels a domestic price‑wage adjustment. Where legal or social rigidities impede downward adjustments, unemployment and bankruptcies necessarily appear during the transition.
  4. Legal interventions that impair contracts, prices, and calculation exacerbate discoordination.

    • Many states oscillated between hard‑money tax demands and debtor relief via paper emissions, legal‑tender/stay laws, or court closures (e.g., Rhode Island’s paper‑money regime, various stay laws; Massachusetts’s stricter specie regime that helped trigger Shays’ Rebellion).
    • From praxeology, legal‑tender coercion and impediments to contract enforcement distort exchange ratios and increase uncertainty, hampering market clearing and prolonging adjustment.
  5. Banking/financial reorientation tightened credit.

    • The shift from emergency finance to attempts at specie discipline (e.g., Bank of North America operations, retrenchment of emissions) necessarily contracted nominal spending relative to wartime peaks.
    • Given prior inflationary malinvestment, praxeology implies the liquidation phase must reallocate resources toward lines sustainable under voluntary saving, not forced money creation.

Thymological/historical particulars (illustrative, not praxeological)

  • Hyperinflation and collapse of the Continental (“not worth a Continental”) severely redistributed wealth and credibility of paper.
  • British mercantile restrictions reduced access to West Indies markets, compressing export opportunities and compounding the specie squeeze.
  • States’ divergent policies created cross‑state frictions; Massachusetts’s heavy specie taxes and aggressive debt collection fed unrest culminating in Shays’ Rebellion (1786–87).
  • Rhode Island’s 1786 paper‑money and tender laws provoked commercial boycott and litigation, illustrating the calculational chaos from coercive money.

Praxeological conclusion

  • Necessarily, an inflationary wartime monetary regime followed by curtailed emissions and heightened specie demand yields a painful but unavoidable readjustment: falling nominal prices/wages, elevated real debt burdens, bankruptcies, and idle resources during reallocation.
  • Attempts to “paper over” the adjustment via legal‑tender laws, stays, or new emissions cannot avoid real scarcities; they only worsen calculational uncertainty and delay re‑coordination.
  • The 1780s downturn is thus best understood as the liquidation of war‑induced distortions under a contracting money environment and rigid nominal obligations, compounded by legal impediments to market clearing and by reduced export avenues.


Sources

  • Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (1949/1966), esp. Part One–Three on the logic of money, calculation, and intervention.
  • Ludwig von Mises, Theory and History (1957), on the distinction between praxeology and historical interpretation.
  • Murray N. Rothbard, A History of Money and Banking in the United States: The Colonial Era to World War II (esp. chapters on colonial and Revolutionary finance and the 1780s).
  • Murray N. Rothbard, The Mystery of Banking (1983), on inflation, credit expansion, and necessary readjustments.
  • E. James Ferguson, The Power of the Purse: A History of American Public Finance, 1776–1790 (1961), on war finance, taxation, and debt in the 1780s.
  • Forrest McDonald, We the People: The Economic Origins of the Constitution (1958), on the fiscal-monetary strains of the Confederation period.
  • Standard narratives of Shays’ Rebellion and postwar trade restrictions in early U.S. economic histories (e.g., discussions in Douglass C. North, The Economic Growth of the United States, 1790–1860, for broad context).

In addition:

Here is additional detail, organized praxeologically but with concrete illustrations from the 1780s readjustment.

  1. Sequencing the adjustment (1781–1789)
  • Praxeological frame: A wartime inflationary regime ends; actors must recalc their plans under a contracting money environment and fixed nominal debts.
  • 1781–83: Continental paper collapses; states continue emissions unevenly; war demand ceases; foreign trade reopens.
  • 1784–86: Demand for specie spikes (taxes, private debt settlement, foreign payments), money balances tighten, nominal prices and wages fall. Debtor–creditor conflict intensifies as real debt burdens rise.
  • 1786–87: Policy oscillation across states (hard-money taxation vs. debtor relief via paper, tender, and stay laws) increases uncertainty. Notable unrest (e.g., Shays’ Rebellion).
  • 1788–89: Some stabilization as prices adjust downward, trade patterns partially reorient, and expectations settle; constitutional reform sets stage for federal fiscal-monetary consolidation after 1789.
  1. Money, credit, and banking mechanics
  • Praxeologically: A reduction in the quantity of (and/or increased demand for) money raises the purchasing power of money. Given nominal contracts fixed in money terms, real debt burdens necessarily rise, forcing sales, bankruptcies, and credit contraction.
  • Operational channels observed:
    • Retirement/repudiation of wartime paper and higher specie preferences by both public treasuries and private creditors.
    • Emergence of early commercial banks under specie discipline (Bank of North America 1781; Bank of New York 1784; Massachusetts Bank 1784). Banknotes redeemable in coin constrain overissue; when redemption pressure rises, banks call loans and tighten discounts—compressing nominal spending further.
    • Note discounts and multiple monies: Where legal-tender rules forced acceptance of depreciated notes, calculation was impaired and exchange was rerouted to avoid bad tenders (boycotts, dual prices), raising transaction costs and stalling market clearing.
  1. Trade and the external drain
  • Praxeologically: An external balance settled in specie is an implication of domestic actors’ voluntary choices to import relative to export; the outflow compels internal price-wage adjustment. It does not “cause” depression apart from the necessity of nominal readjustment.
  • Historical illustrations:
    • Postwar import surge of British manufactures on trade credit; weaker export access (e.g., British restrictions on direct American trade with the West Indies) narrowed dollar-earning outlets.
    • As sterling claims came due, specie (and bills on London) were used for settlement, shrinking domestic money balances unless offset by new inflows; prices and wages adjusted downward where not legally impeded.
  1. Taxes, public debt, and the specie squeeze
  • Praxeologically: When the state demands heavy taxes payable in specie while retiring paper, it increases the community’s demand for money. Given scarcity, actors liquidate assets or curtail spending to obtain coin.
  • Illustrations:
    • Several states levied high postwar taxes to service/redeem debts, often specifying coin payment dates. This raised the marginal utility of holding money and tightened credit.
    • Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress lacked taxing power; states bore fiscal loads unevenly, creating cross-border frictions and policy divergence.
  1. Policy divergence and its effects
  • Praxeological principle: Interventions that impair voluntary exchange, contract enforcement, or price flexibility intensify discoordination by obscuring true exchange ratios and raising uncertainty.
  • “Hard-money” approach (e.g., Massachusetts):
    • Heavy specie taxes and strict debt enforcement accelerated liquidation and provoked unrest (a thymological/historical outcome), but praxeologically hastened nominal adjustment where prices could fall.
  • “Soft-money/debtor-relief” approach (e.g., Rhode Island):
    • Large paper emissions with stringent legal-tender provisions and penalties for refusal led to commercial boycotts, lawsuits, and dual pricing. Praxeologically, this impaired calculation and exchange and delayed recoordination by adding legal uncertainty.
  • Mixed approaches (e.g., Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina):
    • Combinations of emissions, stays, and attempted fiscal consolidation produced stop-go credit conditions; each policy reversal altered expected money holding and contract terms, raising uncertainty premia.
  1. Debtor–creditor conflict: logic and forms
  • Praxeologically: In deflationary readjustments, fixed nominal debts transfer real wealth to creditors; debtors seek means to reduce this burden (new paper issues, tender laws, stays). Creditors seek strict enforcement. These are predictable responses to changed monetary conditions.
  • Historical forms:
    • Stay laws (delaying execution on judgments), tender laws (forcing acceptance of paper at par), court closures or intimidation, and private boycotts of depreciating media.
    • Absent a unified bankruptcy framework, adjustments fell heavily on foreclosure and seizure processes, intensifying visible social conflict.
  1. Adjustment endpoints and why recovery emerges
  • Praxeologically: As prices and wages adjust to the smaller effective money stock and as legal uncertainty recedes, entrepreneurial calculation improves; profitable arbitrage reappears, idle resources are bid back into use, and exchange expands.
  • Historically: By late 1780s, partial price-level adjustment, more predictable legal regimes in several states, and expectations of federal fiscal reform reduced uncertainty. After 1789–91 (outside your window but causally connected), federal funding/assumption and a more uniform monetary framework further lowered calculation costs.
  1. Common confusions clarified
  • “The problem was simply a lack of money.” Praxeologically, any given money stock can facilitate exchange at corresponding price levels. The pain came from the transition from inflated wartime prices to lower peacetime prices amid rigid debts and legal impediments.
  • “The trade deficit caused the depression.” The external drain was a manifestation of actors’ time and consumption preferences and relative price signals; the necessary domestic nominal adjustment, not the mere fact of imports exceeding exports, produced the visible contraction.
  • “More paper would have restored prosperity.” New emissions redistribute and distort calculation; unless matched by genuine saving, they perpetuate malinvestment and uncertainty.
  1. What praxeology can and cannot add
  • Necessarily true (praxeology): Ending inflation plus higher demand for specie raises the purchasing power of money; with nominal debts fixed, real burdens rise; absent flexible prices and secure contracts, unemployment and bankruptcies increase during reallocation; coercive tender/stay laws increase uncertainty and delay coordination.
  • Requires thymological/historical detail: The particular motives of legislators, the exact magnitudes of emissions, specific price paths by commodity or town, or the personal aims of rebels and merchants.


Sources of information for this response

  • Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (1949/1966), esp. Parts One–Three on money, calculation, credit, and intervention.
  • Ludwig von Mises, Theory and History (1957), on praxeology vs. historical interpretation.
  • Murray N. Rothbard, A History of Money and Banking in the United States: The Colonial Era to World War II (2002), chapters on Revolutionary finance and the 1780s.
  • Murray N. Rothbard, The Mystery of Banking (1983), on credit expansion, redemption, and necessary liquidation.
  • E. James Ferguson, The Power of the Purse: A History of American Public Finance, 1776–1790 (1961), for fiscal measures, taxation, and debt management.
  • Forrest McDonald, We the People: The Economic Origins of the Constitution (1958), for the Confederation-era monetary-fiscal strains and policy divergence.
  • John J. McCusker and Russell R. Menard, The Economy of British America, 1607–1789 (1985), for trade structure and the postwar external sector.
Finally:

What are the lessons that can be learned from this history? What conditions and policies would have prevented this depression?

Praxeological restatement

  • Phenomenon: A wartime inflationary monetary regime ends; actors must re-coordinate plans under a tighter money environment while honoring nominal debt contracts. Legislators choose between rules that facilitate voluntary exchange and calculation vs. rules that impair them.
  • Question: What universally valid lessons follow, and what institutional conditions would have prevented or mitigated the severe postwar readjustment?

Key praxeological categories

  • Means-ends choice under scarcity; intertemporal choice and credit; monetary calculation; contract and enforcement; uncertainty; price formation and adjustment; legal-tender and price-control effects; Gresham’s law (a corollary of price control).

Deduced lessons (universally valid)

  1. Inflation to finance war necessarily misleads calculation and shifts, not eliminates, real costs.

    • From the action axiom and the role of money in calculation, new money does not create real goods; it changes relative prices and profit signals. Plans made on distorted prices must later be liquidated when inflation stops. You can choose when to bear the cost (during the war via taxes/borrowing) or after via painful readjustment, but you cannot escape it.
  2. Ending inflation plus a higher demand for money raises the purchasing power of money and, with fixed nominal debts, increases real debt burdens.

    • Liquidations, bankruptcies, and asset sales are the logically necessary form of reallocating resources after an inflationary boom when money tightens. This is not “optional,” only its extent and duration are affected by institutions.
  3. Legal impediments to market clearing prolong and intensify discoordination.

    • Price controls, legal-tender coercion, stays on execution, court closures, and arbitrary contract impairment obscure exchange ratios, elevate uncertainty, and fragment markets (dual prices, boycotts). Necessarily, this delays the re-coordination that falling prices and renegotiation would otherwise achieve.
  4. External specie drains are not causal “depression makers.”

    • If domestic actors import more than they export, specie outflows occur. With flexible domestic prices, this compels an internal adjustment in the purchasing power of money and wages; it does not create unemployment unless legal or social rigidities block the adjustment.
  5. Rule stability and contract certainty reduce calculation uncertainty.

    • Because action occurs under uncertainty, predictable, general rules (not ad hoc policy swings) lower the spread between buying and selling prices and facilitate investment and renegotiation. Stop-go monetary/fiscal/legal changes necessarily push actors toward precautionary hoarding and shorten planning horizons.

Conditions and policies that would have prevented or mitigated the downturn

  • Prevention at the root (avoiding the later slump)

    1. Do not finance war by paper inflation or forced legal tender.

      • Finance by voluntary taxation and market-rate borrowing in sound money. Praxeologically, this aligns resource use with genuine saving and prevents the malinvestments that must later be liquidated.
    2. Allow the market to choose and value money; avoid price controls on money.

      • No fixed mint ratios (bimetallic price control); no forced par acceptance between heterogeneous monies. Gresham’s law shows that when the state overvalues one money, the undervalued money disappears, shrinking effective media and distorting calculation.
    3. No privileges to suspend redemption; no monopoly over note issue.

      • Banks that issue fiduciary media must redeem on demand. Privilege to suspend redemption socializes losses and sustains mispricing longer, ensuring a bigger later contraction.
  • Mitigation once inflation has already occurred (smoothing the readjustment)
    4) Uphold contract enforcement but allow orderly bankruptcy and free renegotiation.

    • Contracts made under prior inflation will create real-loss conflicts. The least-disruptive path is to let parties freely renegotiate and, failing that, to liquidate through known, general bankruptcy procedures—not via retroactive legal-tender or stay laws that add uncertainty and arbitrariness.

    1. Permit full price and wage flexibility.

      • The purchasing power of money must rise if the effective money stock/demand changes. If nominal prices and wages are allowed to fall, labor and goods re-employ faster; if impeded (e.g., minimum wages, usury ceilings, price-fairness rules), unemployment and idle capacity necessarily persist.
    2. Use general, preannounced fiscal rules; avoid sudden specie-only tax pivots that spike money demand.

      • Heavy, abrupt specie tax calls mechanically raise the demand for money and intensify the squeeze. A predictable schedule and broad acceptance of market monies by weight (without coerced par) reduce the need for fire-sale liquidations. This is not empiricism; it follows from the theorem that a higher demand for money raises its purchasing power and tightens all nominally fixed positions.
    3. Keep trade free; do not restrict imports to “save specie.”

      • Import controls are price controls by another name and further distort domestic relative prices, worsening calculation problems. Let external adjustment occur through price movements, not quantity prohibitions.
    4. Protect freedom of monetary contracting.

      • Allow contracts denominated in weight of commodity money or clauses specifying settlement media without statutory interference. This reduces the redistributive shock of money-demand changes across long-term contracts.

What would not have prevented the slump

  • “More paper to maintain spending”: New emissions can only re-distort calculation and reallocate wealth; they cannot create the missing real savings needed to validate wartime investment patterns.
  • “Pegging exchange or mint ratios”: Any attempt to fix exchange ratios between different monies is a price control; it triggers Gresham effects and shrinks the effective medium.
  • “Banning imports”: This treats the manifestation (specie outflow) rather than the cause (relative prices and time preferences) and worsens domestic misallocation.

Praxeological conclusion

  • If you avoid war inflation and legal-tender coercion, you avoid the very source of the later liquidation. If inflation has already occurred, the only path to rapid recovery is to remove impediments to calculation and market clearing: enforce general rules, permit price/wage adjustment and voluntary renegotiation, keep banking subject to redemption, and avoid ad hoc policy swings. These outcomes follow necessarily from the logic of monetary calculation, contract, and price formation.

Scope note

  • The foregoing are praxeological theorems and their institutional corollaries. Specific magnitudes, dates, or personalities belong to thymology/history and are not required to deduce the lessons above.

Sources of information for this response

  • Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (1949/1966), esp. Parts I–III on monetary calculation, interventionism, and price controls.
  • Ludwig von Mises, The Theory of Money and Credit (1912/1953), on money, fiduciary media, redemption, and Gresham’s law implications.
  • Ludwig von Mises, The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science (1962), on the aprioristic method.
  • Murray N. Rothbard, Man, Economy, and State (1962), Chs. 11–12 on money, credit, and intervention; and Power & Market on price controls.
  • Murray N. Rothbard, The Mystery of Banking (1983), on inflation, boom-bust, and redemption discipline.
  • Murray N. Rothbard, A History of Money and Banking in the United States (2002), colonial/Revolutionary chapters (for illustrations consistent with the theorems).
  • Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Economic Science and the Austrian Method (1995), on the epistemology underpinning these deductions.

Thymology: an act of terrorism, what are its criteria?

 What are the criteria that must be met to be able to declare an action an act of terrorism?

Short answer up front

  • There is no single global legal definition of terrorism, but most definitions converge on these criteria: (1) use or threat of serious violence; (2) directed at civilians or non‑combatants (or intended to create indiscriminate fear); (3) with the intent to intimidate or coerce a population, or to influence a government/international organization; (4) for a political, ideological, or religious purpose; and (5) outside regular, authorized combat or law enforcement.
  • Knowing an act is “motivated by terrorism” is ultimately an interpretive judgment about motive. Analysts triangulate evidence such as perpetrator statements and communiqués, target symbolism, timing, ties to ideological networks, and the communicative aim to broadcast fear and extract political concessions.

From a thymological standpoint (how we infer motive in particulars), here is a practical guide:

A. Converging legal/analytical elements commonly used to classify an act as terrorism

  • Violence or its credible threat: Bombings, shootings, stabbings, vehicle ramming, arson, hostage-taking, etc., intended to cause death or serious bodily harm.
  • Intent to intimidate or coerce beyond the immediate victims: The act is staged as a message to a wider audience (population, government, international body).
  • Political/ideological/religious objective: The actor frames the deed as serving a cause (revolutionary, ethno‑nationalist, apocalyptic, supremacist, anti‑state, etc.).
  • Civilian or non-combatant targeting, or indiscriminate effect: Often chosen for symbolic impact rather than military necessity.
  • Extra‑legal context: Conduct occurs outside recognized rules of warfare or policing.
  • Notes and edge cases:
    • State actors are often excluded by statute (e.g., many national laws) but included in some academic discussions (“state terror”).
    • Guerrilla/insurgency vs. terrorism: Attacks on military targets in a war zone can be insurgency; attacks designed to terrorize civilians are more likely terrorism.
    • Hate crime vs. terrorism: Both can be ideologically tinged; terrorism adds the strategic, communicative intent to coerce a wider audience or policy.

B. How one knows it is motivated by terrorism: a thymological evidence hierarchy
From a thymological standpoint, we reconstruct the actor’s subjective meaning: Did they see this deed as a communicative instrument to advance a cause? The following indicators, ranked by probative weight, help answer that:

  1. Direct self-ascription (highest weight)
  • Public claim of responsibility with ideological demands.
  • Manifesto, martyrdom video, oath of allegiance, slogans at the scene.
  • Pre-attack messages to media or authorities stating goals.
  1. Corroborated communications and ties
  • Verified digital traces (chats, planning docs) with ideological framing.
  • Material support, training, or direction from a known terror network.
  • Pledges or fund flows linked to designated groups.
  1. Target, timing, and staging symbolism
  • Target embodies the cause/opponent (e.g., government office, place of worship, media outlet).
  • Attack timed to anniversaries, elections, legislative votes.
  • The deed is theatricalized to maximize audience impact (livestreaming, coordinated multi‑site attacks).
  1. Pattern fit and tradecraft
  • Tactics align with a group’s known modus operandi.
  • Use of propaganda-of-the-deed aesthetics: flags, chants, iconography.
  1. Post-attack behavior and audience-seeking
  • Calls to followers, justification communiqués, attempts to leverage fear for policy change.
  • Supporter ecosystems rapidly amplifying the act as exemplary.
  1. Absence of ordinary instrumental motives
  • No theft, personal gain, or solely interpersonal grievance; or such grievances are reframed as service to a grand cause (“personal grievance → political mission” pathway).

C. Common pitfalls and uncertainties

  • Early claims are often wrong or opportunistic; wait for corroboration.
  • Lone actors can blend personal crisis with thin ideological veneers; motive may be mixed.
  • Overpathologizing (e.g., attributing everything to mental illness) can obscure genuine ideological intent; the reverse error over-politicizes private violence.
  • Strategic denial by perpetrators or states can muddy classification; some governments stretch the label “terrorism” to delegitimize dissent.

D. A compact working rubric
An act is plausibly terrorism when the best explanation is: The actor chose violence mainly as a communicative instrument to intimidate a broader audience in order to advance a political/ideological/religious end, which they themselves recognized as such at the time. Confidence rises with direct self-ascription, corroborated ideological ties, and symbolic staging; it weakens when the evidence is only post hoc attribution or when ordinary criminal motives dominate.

Brief note: Thymology vs. praxeology on this subject
Praxeology can say only that “using violence to influence policy” is a purposeful means–ends action under conditions of perceived scarcity of other means. Thymology, by contrast, asks what this particular actor believed, valued, feared, and hoped at the moment: the stories and symbols that made violence seem meaningful; the audience they imagined; the emotions (humiliation, revenge, glory, salvation) they prioritized over safety; and how their cultural lifeworld suggested that terror would work. It is this thick, empathetic reconstruction—not universal axioms—that lets us judge whether the deed was subjectively a terrorist act to the perpetrator.

Sources for this response

  • Ludwig von Mises: Theory and History (1957), esp. chapters on thymology and historical understanding; The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science (1962), section on “The Thymological Method”; Human Action (1949/1966), contrasts between praxeology and psychology/history.
  • Max Weber: Economy and Society (selected writings on Verstehen).
  • Alfred Schütz: The Phenomenology of the Social World (lifeworld, motives).
  • R.G. Collingwood: The Idea of History (re-enactment of thought).
  • Legal/analytical definitions (summarized):
    • United States: 18 U.S.C. §2331 (domestic/international terrorism definitions); 22 U.S.C. §2656f(d)(2) (State Dept. definition).
    • United Kingdom: Terrorism Act 2000 (Section 1 definition).
    • European Union: Council Framework Decision 2002/475/JHA on combating terrorism (as amended).
  • Academic syntheses:
    • Bruce Hoffman, Inside Terrorism.
    • Alex P. Schmid and A.J. Jongman, Political Terrorism (consensus definition).
    • Martha Crenshaw, works on the strategic logic of terrorism.

In addition:

Here’s additional, practical depth on how terrorism is identified and how terroristic motive is inferred, with thymological emphasis on the actor’s subjective meaning.

Key distinctions that often decide borderline cases

  • Intent vs. effect: The core question is whether the actor intended to intimidate a broader audience for a cause, not merely whether the act frightened people. Mass fear without communicative, cause‑oriented intent is not sufficient.
  • Political/ideological frame vs. personal grievance: Many perpetrators have personal grievances; it becomes terrorism when those grievances are consciously reframed as service to a public cause (“my pain is our cause”) with an audience in mind.
  • Hate crime vs. terrorism: Hate crimes target victims for identity-based animus. Terrorism adds the strategic communicative aim to alter policy, governance, or public behavior beyond the immediate victims. Some events are both; classification hinges on the presence and salience of the coercive political intent.
  • Insurgency/sabotage vs. terrorism: Violence against military targets for military advantage tends toward insurgency; violence staged to frighten civilians or authorities into concessions tends toward terrorism. Property sabotage that carefully avoids harm may be political crime without being terrorism unless fear/coercion of a population is intended.

A compact motive-inference ladder (ordered by weight)

  1. Pre-attack self-ascription: Manifesto, oath, video, targeting rationale sent to media/authorities. Highest weight if specific, time-stamped, and consistent with actions.
  2. Direction or material ties: Training, funding, or directives from a designated group; membership pledges; coordination evidence.
  3. Symbolic target selection and timing: Choosing sites/dates that “speak” to the cause/opponent; staging for maximum audience impact.
  4. Tradecraft and aesthetic signaling: Tactics iconic to a movement; flags, chants, iconography at the scene; livestreaming or media choreography.
  5. Post-attack exploitation: Claims of responsibility with demands; calls to followers; propaganda seeding.
  6. Exclusion of ordinary motives: No profit motive or solely interpersonal vendetta; or such motives are subordinated to an overt, cause-driven frame.

Mixed motives taxonomy (common blends)

  • Ideological + personal grievance: The most frequent lone-actor pattern; humiliation or failure is alchemized into a grand mission. Thymologically, the actor values regained significance and moral clarity.
  • Ideological + thrill/recognition seeking: Performative violence for notoriety, but scripted in a cause narrative to legitimate it.
  • Criminal + political (narco-terror): Cartels/gangs use spectacular violence and public messaging to coerce state behavior. Depending on jurisdiction, may or may not be classed as terrorism.
  • Sectarian revenge spirals: Immediate retribution framed as defense of the community, with an implicit audience warning (“this can happen to you too”).

How analysts avoid common errors

  • Beware opportunistic claims: Groups sometimes claim credit they do not deserve; wait for corroborating details only the perpetrator would know.
  • Don’t overread lone posts: Isolated memes or vague sympathies ≠ terroristic intent. Look for planning documents that integrate ideology into target selection and expected audience effects.
  • Keep an eye on audience imagination: Terrorism is communicative violence. If the plan presupposes media attention, public shock, and policy reaction, that’s strong motive evidence—even without explicit demands.
  • Separate pathology from purpose: Mental illness can coexist with strategic intent. The thymological question is what purpose the actor thought the violence served.

Edge-case illustrations

  • Attack on a house of worship with a manifesto urging policy change and calling for imitators: Strong terrorism indicators (cause-framed, audience-seeking).
  • Pipeline bombing at night with warnings to avoid casualties, paired with a communiqué demanding an immediate moratorium: Could be terrorism if intimidation of the public/state is central; could be sabotage if framed as property disruption without intended public fear.
  • Mass shooting after a workplace dispute, later justified online with generic ideological tags: More ambiguous; if ideology was post hoc and not integral to target choice or staging, terrorism classification is weaker.
  • Cartel beheading with banners threatening politicians and voters: Depending on law, may be terrorism (political coercion) rather than “mere” organized crime.

Operational checklist for classifying with confidence bands

  • High confidence terrorism:
    • Explicit pre-attack cause statement + symbolic target/timing + audience-seeking staging or ties to a terror network.
  • Medium confidence:
    • Strong symbolic pattern and post-attack justification, but no verified pre-attack statement or organizational tie.
  • Low confidence:
    • Ideological trappings without coherent political aim; primarily personal grievance; no communicative staging.

Contextual factors that shift interpretation

  • Jurisdictional definitions: Some statutes require intent to influence government; others require targeting the public. Know your legal frame before classification.
  • State vs. non-state: Many laws exclude state actors; scholarly usage may include “state terror.” Keep legal vs. analytical vocabularies distinct.
  • “Stochastic” environments: Decentralized propaganda can prime individuals. Thymologically, the question remains whether the actor integrated the broader cause into their own in-order-to motive.

What to look for in digital traces

  • Planning notes that weigh target symbolism, media impact, and expected political reactions.
  • Draft statements timed for release.
  • Interaction with movement mentors or playbooks that explicitly teach intimidating the public to move policy.

From a thymological standpoint

  • We ask: What future state of the world did the actor imagine the audience would create out of fear or shock? Did the actor see the violence itself as speech? Which emotions—humiliation, vengeful justice, sacred duty, glory—were elevated above personal safety? How did their lifeworld (peers, media diet, cultural narratives) make this tactic seem efficacious and meaningful when other means looked closed?


Brief note: Thymology vs. praxeology on this subject
Praxeology tells us only that using fear to influence policy is a purposeful means–ends choice. Thymology reconstructs the particular actor’s inner narrative: why this target felt symbolically apt, why public terror was imagined as leverage, which identities and sacred values animated the deed, and how their perceived alternatives narrowed to violence. That interpretive understanding—grounded in the actor’s lifeworld—lets us distinguish terrorism from other violent crimes in practice.

Sources for this response

  • Ludwig von Mises: Theory and History (1957); The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science (1962), “The Thymological Method”; Human Action (1949/1966) on praxeology vs. psychology/history.
  • Max Weber: Economy and Society (Verstehen and interpretive sociology).
  • Alfred Schütz: The Phenomenology of the Social World (lifeworld; motives “in-order-to” vs. “because-of”).
  • R.G. Collingwood: The Idea of History (re-enactment of thought).
  • Legal/analytical references:
    • United States: 18 U.S.C. §2331; 22 U.S.C. §2656f(d)(2).
    • United Kingdom: Terrorism Act 2000, s.1.
    • European Union: Council Framework Decision 2002/475/JHA (as amended).
    • UN debates on the absence of a universally accepted definition (e.g., UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy).
  • Academic syntheses and motive analyses:
    • Bruce Hoffman, Inside Terrorism.
    • Alex P. Schmid & A.J. Jongman, Political Terrorism; Schmid’s consensus definition.
    • Martha Crenshaw, works on strategic logic and organizational choice.
    • Andrew Horgan (John Horgan), The Psychology of Terrorism.
    • Clark McCauley & Sophia Moskalenko, Friction: How Radicalization Happens to Them and Us.
    • Scott Atran, Talking to the Enemy (sacred values).
    • Robert A. Pape, Dying to Win (suicide terrorism patterns).
    • Andrew Kydd & Barbara Walter, Strategies of Terrorism.

Thymology: envy --> resentment agaist achievement --> destruction

 From a thymological standpoint, you’re pointing to a recurring pattern of action: an observer confronts another’s conspicuous achievement, experiences envy, this hardens into resentment toward the achiever, and then issues in destructive behaviors (denigration, sabotage, “leveling” policies, iconoclasm). Below is a reconstruction of why this sequence often makes subjective sense to the actor.

  1. Neutral restatement of the action
  • An individual or group encounters someone else’s superior performance, status, or recognition.
  • They move from an immediate pang of envy to a standing grievance against the achiever.
  • They then act to diminish the achiever or the achievement—socially (slander, ostracism), materially (sabotage, vandalism), or institutionally (rules aimed at cutting tall poppies).
  1. Surface motives visible to the actor
  • To relieve the pain of unfavorable comparison.
  • To restore a sense of fairness by “bringing down” what is perceived as undeserved or excessive success.
  • To protect or repair self-worth and standing before peers.
  1. Deeper thymological reconstruction
  • Lifeworld and comparison: The actor’s Lebenswelt is saturated with social comparison; prestige and identity are scarce “positional goods.” The achiever’s success functions as a mirror that intensifies shame, humiliation, or inadequacy. This felt loss is often sharper than any potential gain from emulation.
  • Subjective justice frame: The actor often reinterprets the achievement through a moral lens: “They must have cheated,” “They had unfair advantages,” or “Their kind of success harms the community.” This moralization licenses hostility while preserving self-respect.
  • Powerlessness and ressentiment: When the actor feels unable to match or outcompete (lack of resources, skill, or opportunity), envy can congeal into ressentiment (Scheler/Nietzsche sense): a revaluation that inverts the hierarchy—“humility/mediocrity = virtue; excellence/success = vice.” This conversion stabilizes the grievance.
  • Group norms and signaling: In milieus with strong leveling norms (egalitarian or honor-based), attacking conspicuous achievers signals loyalty to the group’s values and protects the actor from being judged a “collaborator,” “sycophant,” or “loser.”
  • Cognitive economy: It is cheaper psychologically to denigrate than to emulate. Emulation demands effort with uncertain payoff; denigration or obstruction offers immediate relief of status-pain and a clear in-group reward (applause for “speaking truth to power”).
  • Zero-sum perception: If status is seen as zero-sum, another’s rise is my fall. Destruction of the rival’s standing or output directly restores relative rank without the burdens of self-improvement.
  1. Primary motives and contributing factors
  • Primary:
    • Restoration of self-worth and relative status (relief from shame/resentment).
    • Moral vindication: reframing the achiever as illegitimate to justify counter-action.
  • Secondary:
    • Peer pressure and cultural leveling norms.
    • Political or organizational entrepreneurs who mobilize envy into collective action.
    • Prior slights by the achiever or their group that personalize the grievance.
    • Visibility and conspicuousness of the achievement (public salience intensifies the sting).
  1. Alternative interpretations and uncertainties
  • Sometimes “resentment” masks legitimate grievance: if the achievement relied on exploitation or rule-rigging, opposition may be justice-driven, not envy-driven.
  • Envy does not always produce destruction; with credible hope of advancement and fair rules, it can convert into emulation (work harder, learn skills) rather than sabotage.
  • “Destruction” may be symbolic (character assassination) rather than material; or it may be institutional (rule changes) that improve fairness rather than merely level down. The observer’s history, institutional trust, and perceived opportunity set shift which path is chosen.
  1. Coherent thymological explanation
  • The actor likely valued immediate relief from status-pain and the restoration of moral self-regard over the longer, riskier path of emulation. Given their perceived constraints and cultural matrix, devaluing the achiever and, if necessary, destroying the achievement removed the painful comparison, reasserted an image of justice, and signaled group fidelity. Subjectively, the “destructive” move is rational: it eliminates a threatening standard and rebalances the actor’s world to align with their valuations of fairness, respect, and belonging.

Brief note on “why resentment yields destruction”

  • Once achievement is reinterpreted as illegitimate, harming it feels like enforcing justice, not spite. Destruction (of reputation, works, or privileges) becomes a means to:
    • Remove the comparison object that triggers shame.
    • Deter future status threats (make achievement costly to others).
    • Reaffirm community norms by punishing deviations that the group has come to condemn.

Thymology vs. praxeology on this subject

  • Praxeology would say only: people act purposefully to remove felt uneasiness; envy is not needed to deduce action. Thymology, by contrast, reconstructs the concrete “why”: the actor’s experience of comparative shame, their moral re-framing of achievement, their group norms, and their felt powerlessness that converts envy into ressentiment and, finally, into destructive leveling. Thymology deals in historically and biographically grounded motives, not universal axioms, so it explains the content and direction of this particular sequence from envy to destruction.

Sources informing this interpretation

  • Ludwig von Mises, Theory and History (esp. sections on thymology and understanding in history).
  • Ludwig von Mises, The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science (section on the Thymological Method).
  • Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (contrasts between praxeology and psychology/history).
  • Max Weber, Economy and Society (Verstehen and ideal-typical reconstruction of meaning).
  • Alfred Schütz, The Phenomenology of the Social World (lifeworld, motives “because” vs. “in-order-to”).
  • Max Scheler, Ressentiment (analysis of ressentiment as value-inversion under powerlessness).
  • Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow (reference dependence, loss aversion as factors amplifying status loss).
  • Jonathan Haidt, The Righteous Mind (moralization and group-binding moral foundations).
  • Robert Greene, The Laws of Human Nature (practical patterns of envy, status dynamics).
  • Robert Cialdini, Influence (social proof and conformity pressures relevant to group-leveling norms).

In addition:

Here’s additional thymological depth on the envy → resentment → destruction arc, with practical lenses for recognizing when and why it emerges, and when it can be redirected.

Core trajectories of envy

  • Benign envy (aspirational): The actor admires the achievement and feels a sting but believes advancement is possible; this tends to transmute into emulation (learn, train, affiliate).
  • Malicious envy (leveling): The actor perceives advancement as blocked or the achiever as illegitimate; the sting hardens into a grievance that seeks to reduce the other’s standing.
  • Ressentiment (value inversion): Under chronic powerlessness, the actor revalues what they cannot attain: excellence is reframed as arrogance/vice; mediocrity or suffering becomes moral virtue. Destructive acts feel like moral enforcement, not spite.
  • Vicarious envy (coalitional): Individuals with mild personal envy are recruited by “entrepreneurs of resentment” who supply a story of injustice and a target. A thin personal sting is thickened into collective rancor.

Key triggers and moderators

  • Triggers that intensify envy
    • High visibility and conspicuous markers (awards, media praise, luxury signals).
    • Proximity and similarity (same cohort, role, or neighborhood)—comparisons feel fair and thus more painful.
    • Perceived unfairness (cheating, favoritism, inherited privilege).
    • Identity threat (achievement challenges a group’s status narrative).
    • Zero-sum environments (limited slots, fixed budgets, tournament-style rewards).
  • Moderators that dampen destructive turn
    • Credible upward paths (mentorship, training, transparent criteria).
    • Procedural fairness and trusted adjudicators (reduces moralization into “they cheated”).
    • Norms praising emulation and celebrating excellence that helps the group (“borrowed prestige” through affiliation).
    • Private recognition and modesty by achievers (lowering status-threat signals without erasing excellence).
    • Thick cross-cutting ties between achievers and observers (familiarity reduces villainization).

Micro-phenomenology of the shift from envy to destruction

  1. Encounter: The achievement becomes salient (award, promotion, viral post).
  2. Affective sting: A quick, embodied drop in self-regard or rank anxiety.
  3. Appraisal: Why do I feel this? The mind seeks a cause: effort gap, luck, rigging.
  4. Moralization: If “unfair,” blame attaches to the achiever/system; grievance gains ethical cover.
  5. Coalitioning: The actor seeks others who share the frame; narratives are standardized.
  6. Instrumentalization: Tactics chosen that maximize relief and social approval (gossip, complaints, policy changes, sabotage).
  7. Rationalization: After acting, the story is solidified (“We defended fairness”) to protect self-image.

Narratives that legitimize destructive action

  • Corruption frame: “They gamed the system; removing them restores justice.”
  • Harm frame: “Their success hurts the vulnerable; stopping them protects others.”
  • Community purity frame: “They defy our norms; sanctioning them preserves who we are.”
  • Equality-as-leveling frame: “No one should stand out; cutting tall poppies is civic hygiene.”

Contexts where the arc is common

  • Flat or egalitarian cultures with strong leveling norms: Standing out evokes suspicion; support comes if excellence is framed as communal service.
  • Tournament organizations (sales stacks, winner-takes-most arts/tech): The pain of near-miss comparisons encourages sabotage over emulation.
  • Transitional societies (rapid mobility, weak legitimacy): Visible leaps by some fuel stories of rigging, intensifying resentment.
  • Social media ecosystems: Algorithmic exposure magnifies success signals, compresses distance, and lowers the cost of coordinated denigration.

How envy is redirected into emulation rather than destruction

  • Make the ladder visible: Clear, attainable steps turn “impossible” into “maybe me next,” shrinking ressentiment.
  • Share the spotlight: Achievers who diffuse credit and open doors convert status-threat into status-participation.
  • Tighten fairness signals: Transparent rules and impartial evaluators undercut grievance entrepreneurs.
  • Create honorable rivalry scripts: Ritualized competition where losing doesn’t imply humiliation (sportsmanship norms, post-competition fraternization).
  • Convert positional goods to contributory goods: Emphasize the achiever’s externalities (mentoring, knowledge-sharing), inviting identification rather than rivalry.

Differentiating envy-driven resentment from legitimate critique (imperfect cues)

  • Proportionality: Envy-driven campaigns often seek humiliation or erasure rather than remedy or reform.
  • Substitutability: If the same critique moves to a new target when the first falls, it’s more about leveling than justice.
  • Evidence openness: Principled critics update when fairness is demonstrated; resentful critics often immunize their narrative against counter-evidence.
  • Recognition capacity: A critic who can acknowledge some excellence while seeking reforms is likelier justice-motivated.

Short vignettes (indicative, not exhaustive)

  • Workplace: A high performer gets public praise. Peers with blocked promotion paths reinterpret the success as favoritism. Gossip and minor non-cooperation reduce the star’s output—restoring relative standing without risking open conflict.
  • Academic department: A scholar’s media fame triggers norm-policing: “public intellectualism is vulgar.” Committees tighten criteria that devalue outreach, leveling prestige toward the median under a purity banner.
  • Startup scene: A founder’s conspicuous wealth is framed as extractive. Coalition forms around anti-elitist rhetoric; reputational attacks depress hiring and partnerships—destruction framed as protecting the “ecosystem’s ethos.”

Signals the destructive phase is near

  • Language shifts from critique of actions to demeaning of person or category.
  • Coalition members signal loyalty by escalating purity claims (one-upmanship).
  • Remedies proposed are leveling-down (cap, ban, strip, de-platform) rather than capability-building.

Questions to refine a concrete thymological read (if you share a case)

  • What alternatives did the envious actor perceive as realistically open to them at the moment?
  • Which moral frame did they use to justify counter-action?
  • What group norms made denigration safer or more rewarded than emulation?
  • How visible and proximate was the achievement to their identity or cohort?
  • Did any authority signal procedural fairness, or was there a vacuum resentment could fill?

Why resentment tends toward destruction

  • It promises immediate relief (remove the humiliating comparison object).
  • It’s coalition-friendly (easy to coordinate around a “bad apple”).
  • It preserves self-respect through moralization (punishment as justice).
  • It deters future status threats (a chilling effect on would-be achievers).

Thymology vs. praxeology (brief)

  • Praxeology notes the universal: actors choose means to remove uneasiness; nothing here requires talk of envy. Thymology, by contrast, reconstructs the concrete, historically and biographically textured “why”: the sting of comparison, the moral recoding of excellence as illegitimacy, the role of group norms and perceived blocked mobility, and the narratives that render destruction subjectively just. Thymology explains the content and direction of motive; praxeology explains only that purposeful action occurs.

If you have a specific case (person, setting, timeframe), I can apply this framework to deliver a ranked, evidence-weighted motive reconstruction.

Sources informing this response

  • Ludwig von Mises: Theory and History; The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science; Human Action (thymology vs. praxeology; understanding motives in history).
  • Max Weber: Economy and Society (Verstehen; meaning-oriented action; ideal types).
  • Alfred Schütz: The Phenomenology of the Social World (lifeworld; because- vs. in-order-to motives).
  • Max Scheler: Ressentiment (value inversion under powerlessness).
  • Alexis de Tocqueville: Democracy in America (envy dynamics in egalitarian societies).
  • Helmut Schoeck: Envy: A Theory of Social Behaviour (comparative anthropology of envy and leveling).
  • Daniel Kahneman: Thinking, Fast and Slow (reference dependence, loss aversion in social comparison).
  • Jonathan Haidt: The Righteous Mind (moralization patterns; group-binding foundations).
  • Robert Cialdini: Influence (conformity, social proof, and coalitional signaling).
  • Robert Greene: The Laws of Human Nature (practical patterns around envy and status).
  • Contemporary sociology of social media/publics (on visibility cascades and reputational mobs).

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