Friday, April 24, 2026

Synthemon: game theory. and synthemon

 Game theory and decision theory support the synthemon worldview

Here is a concise synthesis, from the vantage of synchronistic theistic monism (Synthemon), tying core ideas in game theory and decision theory to how a superior being with superior powers would act, how we might distinguish those actions, and whether these fields align with and support Synthemon.

  1. Brief primer: game theory and decision theory
  • Game theory studies strategic interaction among agents whose payoffs depend on one another’s actions (e.g., equilibria, signaling, commitment, correlated equilibrium, mechanism design).
  • Decision theory studies how an agent should choose under uncertainty (e.g., expected utility, risk/ambiguity attitudes, Bayesian updating, dynamic consistency).

Within Synthemon’s frame, both are read through a holistic, divinely ordered cosmos in which physical processes and meaningful patterns are woven together by synchronicity; God is omniscient, omnipotent, and purposeful, distinct from but intimately active within the cosmos’ unified fabric. [3] This integration draws on perennial and integral perspectives that emphasize “the One,” multi-level coherence, and spiritual-material harmony. [1] [2]

  1. How would a superior being act differently?
    Given Synthemon’s portrayal of God’s nature and the cosmos, a superior being’s strategic and decision behavior would diverge from human patterns in several principled ways:
  • Perfect or superlative information: Acts as if playing games with (near) complete state knowledge and transparent beliefs, selecting globally coherent responses that integrate physical and spiritual stakes. This follows Synthemon’s depiction of divine omniscience and the unity of thought (spirit) and extension (matter). [3]

  • Infinite-horizon optimization with mercy: Chooses policies for repeated interactions that sustain cooperation over very long horizons; justice is tempered by forgiveness to preserve relationship and growth, reflecting the all-good, purposive character of the divine will. [3] [4]

  • Mechanism design rather than mere play: Shapes the “rules of the game” (constraints, information flows, opportunities) so that freely chosen, prosocial behavior becomes incentive-compatible—often via meaningful coincidences that nudge alignment without coercion. Synthemon treats synchronicity as a lawful feature of a holistic cosmos and a channel of divine guidance. [3] [4]

  • Correlated equilibrium via synchronicity: Coordinates agents through acausal-yet-meaningful signals—dreams, symbols, timely encounters—functioning like a cosmic correlating device that improves joint outcomes while honoring freedom. [1] [3]

  • Multi-attribute value (material + spiritual): Optimizes over an expanded utility that includes spiritual growth, virtue, and alignment with purpose—not only material payoffs—consistent with attribute dualism and divine intentionality. [3]

  • Selective revelation as signaling: Discloses just enough guidance (revelation, intuition) to elicit trust and cooperation without erasing agency; Synthemon emphasizes divine epistemology through revelation and symbol alongside reason. [4] [1]

  • Non-zero-sum prosperity: Steers systems toward positive-sum dynamics—flourishing that scales with alignment—resonating with Synthemon’s integration with prosperity science and its emphasis on abundance over rivalry. [5] [6]

  1. Could we tell the difference?
    We cannot run a laboratory test on God, but Synthemon suggests practical, inferential “signatures” to watch for:
  • Improbable yet value-aligned coordination: Clusters of meaningful coincidences that repeatedly resolve coordination problems in ways that elevate virtue, wholeness, and long-run cooperation, beyond what random drift would predict. [4] [6]

  • Mechanism-design footprints: Institutions or life-patterns that, without coercion, reliably make the good “easier to do and the harmful harder,” especially when these patterns emerge through synchronistic guidance rather than centralized force. [3] [4]

  • Cross-domain coherence: Guidance that yields integrative gains across body, mind, relationships, and culture—an “integral” lift rather than a narrow win—matching Synthemon’s holism. [2] [6]

  • Prosperity with ethical contour: Growth and opportunity arising in tandem with moral development and service, not at others’ expense, which Synthemon treats as the tell of aligned abundance. [5] [4]

Synthemon is careful: such signatures are suggestive, not coercive “proofs,” because the divine plan preserves freedom and invites trust through meaningful patterns rather than compulsion. [3] [4]

  1. Do game theory and decision theory agree with and support Synthemon?
  • Areas of alignment:

    • Correlated equilibrium provides a natural analog for synchronicity as a lawful, non-coercive coordinator of choices. [3] [1]
    • Mechanism design models how a superior being could set environments that make cooperative good freely attractive. [3] [4]
    • Repeated-game cooperation with forgiveness mirrors Synthemon’s emphasis on mercy in sustaining relationship over long horizons. [4] [3]
    • Decision theory extended by divine epistemology: revelation, intuition, and symbol act as legitimate information channels, broadening the evidence base for rational choice within a unified cosmos. [4] [1]
    • Positive-sum, abundance-oriented strategies echo Synthemon’s integration with prosperity and holistic flourishing. [5] [6]
  • Clarifications and limits:

    • Standard models are value-neutral and typically causal; Synthemon adds teleology and lawful synchronicity, extending—not rejecting—them. [3]
    • Observational equivalence is real: some synchronistic coordination will look like luck. Synthemon therefore pairs rational inquiry with symbolic discernment and lived practice. [4] [1]

Conclusion
From the Synthemon perspective, a superior being acts less like a myopic player and more like a loving mechanism designer who coordinates, reveals, and forgives to sustain freedom and cooperative flourishing within a unified, meaningful cosmos. Game theory and decision theory do not prove Synthemon, but they offer a precise language and set of tools that map cleanly onto its core claims—correlated guidance (synchronicity), incentive alignment (mechanism design), infinite-horizon cooperation (mercy and justice), and prosperity that scales with alignment—thus coherently supporting and operationalizing the worldview in practice. [3] [4] [1] [2] [5] [6]


Sources

1
Synthemon: additions from Perennial Philosophy to make it more universal and complete https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/09/synthemon-additions-from-perennial.html


2
Synthemon: additions from Ken Wilber's Integral theory to make synthemon more universal and comprehensive https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/09/synthemon-additions-from-ken-wilbers.html


3
Synthemon: the nature of God's Cosmic Essence in the Synthemon worldview. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/05/synthemon-nature-of-gods-cosmic-essence.html


Synthemon: principles to live a life in conformity to synthemon. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/05/synthemon-principles-to-live-life-in.html


5
Synthemon: the integration of synthemon with the science of prosperity. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/10/synthemon-integration-of-synthemon-and.html


6
Synthemon: benefits of synthemon worldview. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/07/synthemon-benefits-of-synthemon.html



In addition:

Here is additional depth, still from the vantage of synchronistic theistic monism (Synthemon), and grounded in the Synthemon documents.

  1. Three complementary “roles” a superior being would occupy in game/decision-theoretic terms
  • God as loving mechanism designer: Rather than merely “playing” within fixed rules, God shapes payoff structures, information flows, and affordances so that freely chosen cooperation, virtue, and long-run flourishing become incentive-compatible without coercion. This matches Synthemon’s view of divine intentionality, synchronicity as guidance, and a holistic integration of spiritual and material outcomes. [3] [4] [6]
  • God as correlating signaler via synchronicity: Synchronic “meaningful coincidences” operate like a lawful correlating device that coordinates agents toward better joint outcomes while preserving freedom and moral growth. This fits the integral/perennial emphasis on multi-level coherence and “the One” expressed in patterns across domains. [3] [1] [2]
  • God as infinite-horizon guardian: Choosing policies that maximize good over unbounded horizons, God sustains cooperation through justice tempered by mercy (forgiveness and second-chances strategies), aligning with Synthemon’s account of an all-good, purposive, and relational divine will. [3] [4]
  1. Formal extensions that make Synthemon operational in game and decision theory
  • Synchronic Correlated Equilibrium (SynCE): Model synchronicity as a lawful, meaningful correlating signal that agents can condition on; unlike ad hoc “luck,” SynCE posits that signals are value-aligned and coherence-producing across physical and spiritual payoffs. This captures how guidance can improve coordination without overriding agency. [3] [1]
  • Virtue-compatible mechanism design: Mechanisms that reward truthfulness, reciprocity, and service—e.g., contracts or institutions where doing the good becomes the easiest equilibrium path—mirror Synthemon’s claim that God designs the cosmos to integrate growth with flourishing. [4] [6]
  • Mercy in repeated games: Generous tit-for-tat–like policies (swift to reconcile, slow to escalate) keep relationships repairable and foster positive-sum dynamics over long horizons, mapping ethically to mercy and spiritually to sanctification. [4] [3]
  • Expanded utility and evidence: Decision theory under Synthemon includes spiritual goods (virtue, alignment, meaning) as explicit utility components and admits revelation, intuition, and symbol as information channels to be rationally updated upon, consistent with divine epistemology. [3] [2]
  • Abundance-oriented design: Systems that scale prosperity as alignment deepens (non-zero-sum growth with ethical contour) instantiate Synthemon’s integration with the “science of prosperity.” [6] [5]
  1. Would we be able to tell?
    Synthemon emphasizes suggestive, not coercive, “signatures” that accumulate across life and culture:
  • Statistical improbability with ethical shape: Repeated, meaningful coincidences that resolve coordination problems and elevate character, relationship quality, and long-run cooperation beyond chance expectations. [4] [6]
  • Cross-domain coherence: Guidance that improves physical well-being, psychological integration, relationships, and contribution—an integral uplift rather than a narrow win—matching the holistic unity Synthemon stresses. [1] [2]
  • Mechanism footprints: Environments, communities, or practices where the good is easier to enact and harmful options are naturally disincentivized, without coercion—consistent with loving design. [3] [4]
  • Ethical prosperity: Growth that arrives with service, gratitude, and responsibility, not exploitation; prosperity becomes a byproduct of alignment rather than a substitute for it. [6] [5]
  1. Practical discernment protocol (how to reason with these ideas in daily life)
  • Triangulate evidence: Pair statistical pattern-recognition (journaling “meaningful coincidences”) with ethical evaluation (is this nudging me toward virtue and service?) and integrative coherence (does it harmonize body, mind, relationships, calling?). [4] [1]
  • Update rationally on revelation: Treat dreams, symbols, or timely encounters as soft information; weigh them alongside empirical data and revise credences gradually rather than absolutizing them. [3] [2]
  • Choose mechanisms you can live in: Join or build communities and habits whose “rules” make honesty, mutual aid, and stewardship the path of least resistance—practical mechanism design aligned with Synthemon. [4] [6]
  • Track prosperity with contour: Evaluate gains not just by volume but by moral contour—did this increase come with peace, service, and relational health? [6] [5]
  1. How this extends (rather than contradicts) standard theory
  • Game/decision theory is value-neutral and typically causal; Synthemon adds teleology (divine purpose) and lawful synchronicity as additional structure on top of the standard toolkit. This positions theory as a language to describe God’s integrative design, not as a replacement for it. [3] [1]
  • Perennial and integral lenses help justify why synchronic signals would be coherent and meaning-bearing across levels of reality, rather than noise—consistent with “the One” and attribute dualism. [2] [1]
  1. Examples that illustrate differences from human behavior
  • Prisoner’s Dilemma with synchronic cues: When two agents are on the fence, a timely, meaning-laden prompt (a shared symbol, an uncanny timing, a “word in season”) nudges both toward cooperation; over time, this produces a stable SynCE favoring trust and mutual uplift. [3] [4]
  • Signaling with selective revelation: God discloses “just-enough” information to elicit trust without erasing agency—think minimal but precise clues that preserve freedom while unlocking better equilibria. [3] [4]
  • Prosperity mechanisms: Practices that couple generosity, craftsmanship, and truth-telling with networks that reciprocate value creation, causing wealth to flow with character development rather than despite it. [6] [5]
  1. Research directions if you want to formalize Synthemon in these fields
  • Define axioms for SynCE and test for “coherent, acausal correlating signals” in longitudinal data from communities that intentionally practice discernment. [3] [1]
  • Design and evaluate virtue-compatible mechanisms—institutions where truthful signaling, reciprocity, and stewardship dominate—then compare outcomes to baseline mechanisms. [4] [6]
  • Model expanded utility with spiritual goods and estimate how revelation/intuition affects Bayesian updates and long-run welfare in repeated interactions. [3] [2]
  • Use AI as an aid to map synchronic patterns ethically and transparently, consistent with Synthemon’s updated summary that includes AI capacities in service of wisdom and alignment. [5]

Bottom line
Game theory and decision theory can be extended to express Synthemon’s core claims: God lovingly designs incentive structures, coordinates through lawful synchronicity, and orients choices toward infinite-horizon flourishing across material and spiritual dimensions. While these fields do not “prove” God, they offer precise scaffolding that aligns with and practically supports Synthemon’s holistic, teleological vision of the cosmos. [3] [4] [1] [2] [6] [5]


Sources

1
Synthemon: additions from Ken Wilber's Integral theory to make synthemon more universal and comprehensive https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/09/synthemon-additions-from-ken-wilbers.html


2
Synthemon: additions from Perennial Philosophy to make it more universal and complete https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/09/synthemon-additions-from-perennial.html


3
Synthemon: the nature of God's Cosmic Essence in the Synthemon worldview. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/05/synthemon-nature-of-gods-cosmic-essence.html


4
Synthemon: benefits of synthemon worldview. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/07/synthemon-benefits-of-synthemon.html


5
Synthemon: an updated bullet point summary that includes AI abilities https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/08/synthemonl-updated-bullet-point-summary.html


6
Synthemon: the integration of synthemon with the science of prosperity. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/10/synthemon-integration-of-synthemon-and.html



The Battle of Gettysburg and game theory

 Below is a game‑theoretic plan for Days 2 and 3 at Gettysburg. I model each day as a sequential, incomplete‑information game between the Army of Northern Virginia (Lee) and the Army of the Potomac (Meade), where each side’s best move depends on what the other is likely to do, how quickly they can shift reserves (interior lines), and the payoff trade‑off between ground gained and casualties incurred. I then translate the equilibrium logic into concrete strategy and tactics for each day. [1]

Model primitives (what matters in the game)

  • Payoffs: Attacker’s value of a breakthrough V must outweigh expected casualties C; attack is rational only if p·V − (1−p)·C > 0, where p is the probability of success given terrain, coordination, and surprise. Defenders maximize holding key terrain while minimizing risk of catastrophic rupture. [2]
  • Information and beliefs: Each side is uncertain about the other’s true strength at each sector and how rapidly reserves can be shifted; artillery preparation and feints act as signals that can be either noisy (cheap talk) or credible (costly to fake). [3]
  • Timing/coordination: Simultaneous pressure across multiple sectors can raise p by preventing the defender from massing at the true point of attack; mis‑timed, serial attacks let the defender redeploy and lower p. [4]
  • Repeated dynamic: Day 3 updates beliefs from Day 2 outcomes. If Day 2 shows the defender can absorb blows without collapsing, rational attackers pivot away from frontal, high‑loss actions and try to change the game (maneuver, threaten lines of communication, or disengage to entice pursuit). [5]

Day 2 (July 2): Recommended strategy and tactics

Confederate options and game‑theoretic recommendation

  • Strategic aim: Achieve a locally overwhelming, time‑coordinated shock at one flank while pinning elsewhere, raising p enough that the expected value of attack turns positive; avoid attritional, sequential assaults that let the Union shift reserves along interior lines. [2]
  • Mixed strategy across sectors: Allocate a majority of striking power to a single flank that promises steep payoff if rolled up (high V), but run credible, costly demonstrations on the opposite flank and limited pressure at the center to saturate Union decision‑making. The costliness (artillery ammunition, visible troop movement) turns the demonstrations into believable signals and reduces Union’s ability to tell where the real blow will fall. [3]
  • Coordination device: Time‑on‑target artillery and synchronized stepping‑off orders to create near‑simultaneity; if corps‑level delays or terrain friction raise the risk of desynchronization beyond a threshold (thus lowering p), the dominant play is to abort large‑scale attack rather than feed brigades piecemeal. This is a commitment rule that avoids getting stuck in a dominated, high‑casualty subgame. [4]
  • Screening and deception: Use cavalry and skirmish lines to blind Union reconnaissance at the true axis while allowing the demonstrations to be seen; this implements a separating equilibrium where the real attack is hidden and the false attack is observable. [1]
  • If no flank looks promising ex ante: Choose the “option value” move—maneuver to threaten Union lines of communication overnight (east/southeast approaches), trading immediate attack for a state change that may force the Union to attack on Day 3, flipping roles in a Stackelberg sense. [5]

Union best responses on Day 2

  • Interior‑lines doctrine: Keep a sizable central reserve under strict mobility discipline; pre‑commit to rapid lateral shifts along the ridge line so that Confederate simultaneity must be near‑perfect to succeed. This credible commitment deters deep Confederate pushes by lowering their p. [2]
  • Threshold defense rule: Establish a hard “no rupture” threshold—if any sector’s line integrity probability drops below θ, immediately reinforce with reserves and guns, even at the cost of thinning quiet sectors. This selects a robust equilibrium against Confederate mixed strategies. [3]
  • Counter‑signals: Conduct limited spoiling attacks and conspicuous artillery movements at threatened sectors to inflate Confederate beliefs about Union strength; cheap talk can be effective if it exploits the attacker’s coordination risk. [4]
  • Information systems: Push cavalry screens and signal stations to reduce uncertainty about Confederate massing; better information raises the marginal value of reserves and improves best‑response timing. [1]

Bottom line for Day 2

  • Confederates should attack only if they can generate near‑simultaneous pressure and true surprise at a single flank while pinning elsewhere; otherwise, the best response is to preserve strength and maneuver to change tomorrow’s game rather than accept sequential, high‑loss assaults. [4]
  • Union should bet on mobility and reserves, not on evenly strong lines everywhere; a centrally positioned reserve and rapid artillery shifts make most Confederate attack profiles unprofitable. [2]

Day 3 (July 3): Recommended strategy and tactics

Updated beliefs from Day 2

  • If Day 2 failed to achieve rupture and revealed strong Union lateral mobility, posterior beliefs imply a lower p for any daylight frontal assault across open ground; with unchanged or higher casualty costs C, the attack condition p·V − (1−p)·C > 0 is unlikely to hold. Rational play shifts from “assault to win now” to “change the state to win later.” [5]

Confederate options and game‑theoretic recommendation

  • Do not launch a massed, deterministic frontal assault against prepared center positions; with the defender’s artillery and interior lines, this is a dominated strategy given updated beliefs. Instead, choose among three higher‑EV plays: [3]
    1. Maneuver/turning movement: Before dawn, reposition to threaten the enemy’s supply/communication routes and compel Meade to attack or withdraw; this changes the leader–follower structure and can create a favorable counterattack opportunity. [1]
    2. Concentrated flank jab with real surprise: Only if reconnaissance shows a temporarily under‑defended flank and you can credibly synchronize fires and infantry; otherwise abstain. This is a contingent strategy with a hard stop‑loss if simultaneity fails. [4]
    3. Strategic disengagement to a prepared, defensible line: Invite pursuit on ground of your choosing; in repeated‑game terms, you convert a low‑probability knockout attempt into a higher long‑run payoff by preserving combat power and forcing the opponent into the attacker’s role. [2]
  • Signaling plan: Use heavy but inaccurate artillery demonstrations to pin while the true objective is maneuver, not breakthrough; by making the “assault” a costly signal without committing infantry, you mislead about intentions while avoiding the bad subgame of an actual frontal charge. [5]

Union best responses on Day 3

  • Commitment to defense-in-depth: Publicly signal readiness to absorb attacks at the center and punish crossing of open ground; this lowers Confederate expectations of success and can deter frontal options entirely. [3]
  • Anti‑maneuver posture: Protect lines of communication with mobile reserves and cavalry screens; avoid being lured into a hasty pursuit that flips the game to Confederate advantage. The dominant response to a Confederate feint‑and‑shift is patience plus reconnaissance. [1]
  • Limited, conditions‑based counterattack: Only after repulsing an enemy assault with clear disorder on their side, launch localized counterpunches to improve terrain; otherwise, maintain the high‑payoff equilibrium of strong defense rather than risking a role reversal. [4]

Why this differs from high‑loss frontal assaults

  • After a stalemated Day 2, a large, visible, center‑mass assault is predictable, gives the defender maximum time to concentrate fires, and produces a low p with very high C; game theory flags this as a dominated move once beliefs update. Maneuver, credible feints without commitment, or operational disengagement strictly improve expected value while preserving forces for later stages of the repeated campaign. [2]

Practical “if‑then” rules you could have issued as orders

For the Confederates

  • If artillery and infantry cannot strike within a 15–30 minute window across at least two sectors, cancel the assault; commit instead to a turning movement overnight. This avoids the bad subgame of serial, telegraphed attacks. [4]
  • Do not commit more than X% of total infantry mass to any action lacking flank surprise or artillery overmatch; preserve strength to change the game tomorrow. [5]

For the Union

  • Keep a central reserve ≥ Y brigades on wagons ready to shift within Z minutes to any threatened sector; prioritize artillery counter‑mass at the likely crossing point of open ground. [3]
  • Launch counterattacks only on evidence of enemy command/communication breakdown; otherwise accept the draw and conserve strength. [1]

Net assessment

  • Equilibrium on Day 2 favors the well‑positioned defender if reserves are mobile and coordination problems plague the attacker; rational attackers either create true simultaneity at a flank or avoid battle‑of‑attrition assaults. [2]
  • On Day 3, after observing resilient defense and failed coordination, the attacker’s best response is to refuse a frontal fight, maneuver to change constraints, or disengage to tempt a pursuit on favorable terms; the defender’s best response is to hold, scout, and punish only when the attacker hands them an exposed subgame. [5]

Sources

1
Game Theory 2nd Edition by Michael Maschler (Author), Eilon Solan (Author), Shmuel Zamir (Author)


2
The Art of Strategy: A Game Theorist's Guide to Success in Business and Life Illustrated Edition by Avinash K. Dixit (Author), Barry J. Nalebuff (Author)


3
Game Theory 101: The Complete Textbook Paperback – September 3, 2011 by William Spaniel (Author)


4
Algorithmic Game Theory 1st Edition by Noam Nisan (Editor), Tim Roughgarden (Editor), Eva Tardos (Editor), Vijay V. Vazirani (Editor)


5
Theory of Games and Economic Behavior by John Von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern | Dec 20, 2021

In addition:

Here are additional, more technical game‑theoretic details for Day 2 and Day 3 at Gettysburg, plus concrete decision rules you could have issued as orders.

  1. Formal decision model and thresholds
  • Attack decision: Commit to a major assault on sector i only if p_i·V_i − (1−p_i)·C_i ≥ 0, where p_i is the success probability given terrain, surprise, and coordination; V_i is the payoff from rupture (e.g., rolling a flank or cutting the enemy line); and C_i is expected casualties plus loss of maneuver options if the attack stalls. If uncertainty about p_i is large, use the robust rule p_i ≥ C_i/(V_i + C_i) with a safety margin ε; if the lower‑bound of your credible p_i interval is below this threshold, abort. This operationalizes “don’t feed the defender sequentially.” [2][4]
  • Interior vs. exterior lines: The defender’s interior lines increase dp_i/dt (the defender’s ability to raise their success probability over time) unless the attacker synchronizes pressure across multiple sectors; thus the attacker either creates simultaneity or cedes the advantage to time. This makes “piecemeal assaults” a dominated subgame for the attacker once the defender’s reserves start flowing. [2][4]
  • Value of information (VOI): Allocate cavalry/skirmishers to reconnaissance if VOI > opportunity cost, where VOI ≈ E[max_j EV(plan_j | better intel)] − max_j EV(plan_j | prior). If VOI is high on a suspected weak flank, delay to gain intel can strictly dominate a rushed attack. [1][3]
  1. Day 2 (July 2) – deeper recommendations
    Confederate play
  • Mixed strategy with credible demonstrations: Concentrate striking power on one flank with the highest V_i and plausible surprise while running costly demonstrations on the opposite flank and light pressure in the center; the costliness (ammunition, visible maneuver) turns the feints into believable signals and forces the Union to hedge, raising your focal p_i at the true axis. If demonstration costs start to cannibalize the main effort’s logistics or timing, pare them back—feints are useful only insofar as they raise p at the main blow. [3][4]
  • Synchronization/abort rule: Issue a standing order that if artillery preparation, flank jab, and fixing attacks cannot commence within a tight window (e.g., within one “step” of each other), the corps cancel and re‑set; this prevents sliding into the dominated subgame of serial, self‑disclosing assaults that let the defender reallocate reserves along interior lines. [4]
  • Screening and deception: Mask the real axis with cavalry and skirmish screens while allowing the demonstrations to be highly visible; by making the true attack hard to observe and the false attack easy to observe, you create a separating equilibrium that pushes the defender to misallocate initial reserves. [1][3]
  • Option value of maneuver: If pre‑assault reconnaissance lowers your p_i below the threshold, bank the option—march overnight to threaten the enemy’s communications and force them to either retreat or become the attacker on Day 3. Preserving combat power to change tomorrow’s game can strictly dominate a low‑EV assault today. [5]

Union play

  • Interior‑lines doctrine: Keep a mobile central reserve and pre‑arranged lateral routes so you can mass artillery and infantry faster than the attacker can exploit any local success; your rule is “do not defend all sectors equally—defend the rupture threshold everywhere, then surge where p_attack appears to rise.” This maximizes the marginal defensive value of each reserve brigade. [2]
  • Trigger policy: Define observable triggers (e.g., two enemy brigades seen forming beyond cover plus 10+ guns unlimbered) that automatically pull central reserves and counter‑battery assets toward that sector; formal triggers beat ad‑hoc judgment under fog of war and defeat the attacker’s timing game. [3][4]
  • Counter‑signals: Use limited spoiling attacks and conspicuous artillery movements to inflate Confederate beliefs about your local strength; judicious “cheap talk” can be effective when it increases the attacker’s coordination risk and delays their main effort. [4]
  1. Day 3 (July 3) – deeper recommendations
    Confederate play
  • Post‑update choice set: After Day 2 shows the defender can shift reserves quickly and absorb blows, the posterior p_center for a daylight frontal march across open ground falls while C rises; a massed frontal attack is dominated unless fresh intel reveals a transient weakness. Prefer one of three higher‑EV moves: (a) pre‑dawn flank maneuver to threaten lines of communication, (b) a tightly synchronized flank jab only if genuine surprise and artillery overmatch are attainable, or (c) strategic disengagement to a prepared line to invite pursuit on better ground. [2][5]
  • Signaling without commitment: Use artillery demonstrations to fix the defender while you maneuver; demonstrations should remain unaccompanied by massed infantry so you don’t get locked into the bad subgame of continuing a failing assault because of sunk costs. [3][5]

Union play

  • Commit to defense‑in‑depth at the center and patience everywhere else: Publicly signal a lethal reception for any frontal advance, maintain mobile reserves to counter a turning movement, and avoid being baited into an early pursuit that hands the attacker the choice of battlefield. [3][1]
  • Conditional counterpunch: Counterattack only after the enemy’s assault visibly disintegrates (loss of formation, ammunition exhaustion, broken command); otherwise, keep the high‑payoff equilibrium of strong defense rather than risking role reversal. [4]
  1. Command-and-control as mechanism design
  • Principal–agent problem: The army commander’s optimal plan can be degraded by timing frictions and local deviations at corps/division level. Solve with “mechanism design” style orders: (i) simple, binary go/no‑go triggers tied to observable cues; (ii) pre‑authorized aborts if simultaneity fails; (iii) reserve release rules that don’t require upstream micromanagement in the heat of battle. These rules align local incentives with the global equilibrium you want. [1][4]
  • Credible commitments: For the attacker, pre‑commit to canceling any major assault that loses surprise or timing; for the defender, pre‑commit to surge reserves even at the risk of thinning quiet sectors. Credible commitments reshape the opponent’s best response before contact. [2][4]
  1. Reconnaissance, deception, and the value of time
  • VOI thresholds: If an additional hour of reconnaissance raises p_i by more than Δp* = C_i/(V_i + C_i) − p_i(current), waiting dominates attacking now; if not, strike while the defender’s beliefs are still dispersed. Time helps the side with interior lines and good signaling; it hurts the side that relies on surprise and simultaneity. [1][3]
  • Deception portfolio: Mix cheap signals (false campfires, noisy troop movements) with at least one costly signal (a real artillery deployment you can later reposition) so the defender cannot cleanly separate truth from bluff; the aim is to keep them in a mixed response that dilutes their local strength. [3]
  1. Worked mini‑calculator (plug your own numbers)
  • Suppose a flank rupture would yield V = 8 (operational payoff units) and the casualty/attrition cost if it fails is C = 6. The attack threshold is p ≥ 6/(8+6) = 0.429. If synchronized pressure and surprise lift p to 0.48, attack; if desynchronization drops p to 0.35, abort and maneuver. Add a safety margin ε ≈ 0.05 against optimism bias. This turns staff estimates into a crisp go/no‑go. [2][4]

Actionable checklists you could issue as orders

  • For the Confederates (Day 2–3)

    • Only attack if two sectors can fix the enemy while the main blow steps off within one timing window; else cancel and pivot to a turning movement overnight. [4]
    • Keep feints costly enough to be believed but not so costly they starve the main effort; if ammunition for the main axis drops below a preset level, halt demonstrations first. [3]
    • Never commit more than a capped share of infantry mass to a daylight frontal advance without verified local artillery overmatch and temporary loss of enemy lateral mobility. [2]
  • For the Union (Day 2–3)

    • Maintain a central reserve on wheels with pre‑surveyed routes; move on triggers, not on pleas from sectors that merely face noise. [2][4]
    • Counter‑battery mass at any obvious assault corridor; rotate fresh brigades into threatened sectors to keep local p_attack depressed below threshold. [3]
    • Pursue only on evidence of enemy command breakdown; otherwise, hold ground and let the attacker pay the coordination tax. [1][4]

Net effect

  • Day 2 equilibrium favors the defender unless the attacker achieves genuine simultaneity and surprise at a flank; otherwise, the attacker should preserve force and change the game state for Day 3. [2][4]
  • Day 3, after negative learning from Day 2, makes a massed frontal assault a dominated option; maneuver, contingent flank probes with hard stop‑loss rules, or disengagement to invite pursuit all yield higher expected value. [3][5]

Sources

1
Game Theory 2nd Edition by Michael Maschler (Author), Eilon Solan (Author), Shmuel Zamir (Author)


2
The Art of Strategy: A Game Theorist's Guide to Success in Business and Life Illustrated Edition by Avinash K. Dixit (Author), Barry J. Nalebuff (Author)


3
Game Theory 101: The Complete Textbook Paperback – September 3, 2011 by William Spaniel (Author)


4
Algorithmic Game Theory 1st Edition by Noam Nisan (Editor), Tim Roughgarden (Editor), Eva Tardos (Editor), Vijay V. Vazirani (Editor)


5
Theory of Games and Economic Behavior by John Von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern | Dec 20, 2021



Thursday, April 23, 2026

Game theory and elections in the US

 What Republicans in the US can learn from game theory on how to win more elections:


From a game-theory perspective, presidential elections can be viewed as strategic interactions in which parties compete over voter coalitions, turnout, and positioning. Some core game-theoretic insights apply:

First, median voter dynamics matter. In a two-party system, both parties have incentives to move toward the preferences of the median voter to maximize votes. For Republicans, this suggests calibrating policy positions and messaging to appeal not just to their base, but to pivotal swing voters in key states—especially those who effectively determine Electoral College outcomes.

Second, coalition-building is a coordination game. Winning requires assembling a coalition of groups whose combined support exceeds that of the opponent. Game theory suggests focusing on groups where marginal gains are most efficient—i.e., voters who are persuadable or whose turnout can be increased at relatively low cost compared to trying to convert firmly opposing voters.

Third, turnout is a strategic complement. If one side successfully mobilizes its base, the other side must respond or risk falling behind. This creates a kind of “arms race” in voter mobilization. Republicans can improve outcomes by investing in turnout mechanisms (ground game, early voting strategies, etc.) in addition to persuasion.

Fourth, signaling and credibility are key. Voters interpret policy promises and candidate behavior as signals. Consistency and credible commitment can reduce uncertainty and increase trust, especially among undecided voters.

Finally, repeated-game dynamics matter. Elections are not one-shot games; reputation across election cycles influences future payoffs. Strategic moderation or consistency over time can shape long-term voter expectations and party brand.

In short, game theory would advise Republicans to (1) optimize positioning relative to the median voter, (2) efficiently expand and mobilize coalitions, (3) treat turnout as a strategic battleground, and (4) maintain credible, consistent signaling across repeated electoral cycles.

Sources

1
Algorithmic Game Theory 1st Edition by Noam Nisan (Editor), Tim Roughgarden (Editor), Eva Tardos (Editor), Vijay V. Vazirani (Editor)


2
Theory of Games and Economic Behavior by John Von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern | Dec 20, 2021


3
The Art of Strategy: A Game Theorist's Guide to Success in Business and Life Illustrated Edition by Avinash K. Dixit (Author), Barry J. Nalebuff (Author)


4
Game Theory 101: The Complete Textbook Paperback – September 3, 2011 by William Spaniel (Author)


5
Game Theory 2nd Edition by Michael Maschler (Author), Eilon Solan (Author), Shmuel Zamir (Author)


In addition:

Game theory can push the analysis further by treating U.S. presidential elections as a mix of coordination games, signaling games, and repeated games with incomplete information.

One deeper insight is strategic positioning under asymmetric information. Voters don’t fully know candidates’ true preferences or future actions, so campaigns act as signals. A Republican strategy, in game-theoretic terms, should avoid sending “noisy” or contradictory signals that fragment beliefs among swing voters. Clear, consistent positioning can function as a separating equilibrium, where persuadable voters can distinguish the party from its opponent without confusion.

Another key idea is primary vs. general election as a sequential game. The Republican Party first plays an internal game (the primary), then a national one. Strategies that are dominant in the primary (appealing strongly to the base) may be suboptimal in the general election. Game theory suggests designing mechanisms—such as candidate selection norms or messaging discipline—that reduce this misalignment, thereby smoothing the transition between the two stages.

There’s also the concept of pivotal voter targeting. Not all voters are equally important. In Electoral College terms, certain states and demographics act like “swing players” in a weighted voting game. Optimal strategy focuses resources where they shift the probability of winning the whole game, not just the popular vote. That means prioritizing marginal gains in competitive states rather than maximizing support in already-safe regions.

Turnout vs. persuasion tradeoffs can be modeled as a resource allocation game. Every dollar or unit of effort can either mobilize existing supporters or persuade undecided voters. Game theory suggests investing where the marginal payoff is highest—often turnout among loosely attached supporters can yield higher returns than trying to convert firmly opposed voters.

Another layer is coordination within the party. Factions within the Republican coalition (e.g., ideological groups, regional blocs) face a coordination problem. If they fail to align on a unified strategy, they risk a suboptimal equilibrium where internal conflict reduces overall competitiveness. Mechanisms that enforce coordination—shared messaging, credible commitments to coalition partners—can improve outcomes.

Finally, in a repeated-game framework, reputation and long-term strategy matter. Parties that frequently shift positions may gain short-term advantages but lose credibility over time. A stable, predictable “brand” can function as a long-run equilibrium strategy that builds voter trust and lowers uncertainty in future elections [3][5].

So overall, game theory doesn’t just say “move to the center”—it highlights timing (primaries vs. general), information (signaling), structure (Electoral College pivots), and internal coordination as critical strategic dimensions.


Sources

1
Algorithmic Game Theory 1st Edition by Noam Nisan (Editor), Tim Roughgarden (Editor), Eva Tardos (Editor), Vijay V. Vazirani (Editor)


2
Theory of Games and Economic Behavior by John Von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern | Dec 20, 2021


3
The Art of Strategy: A Game Theorist's Guide to Success in Business and Life Illustrated Edition by Avinash K. Dixit (Author), Barry J. Nalebuff (Author)


4
Game Theory 2nd Edition by Michael Maschler (Author), Eilon Solan (Author), Shmuel Zamir (Author)


5
Game Theory 101: The Complete Textbook Paperback – September 3, 2011 by William Spaniel (Author)


How to have a long and happy marriage

 Here’s a concise playbook for a long and happy marriage, grounded in the Science of a Long and Happy Marriage model.


How to have a long and happy marriage: tips for husbands

Core principles to live by

  • Treat marriage as a two-person peace system: your job is to keep empathy accuracy, inclusive decision-making, shared resource growth, asymmetry control, and shadow-awareness above critical thresholds so both partners’ core needs stay above dignity level and resentment/coercion stay at zero [1].
  • Non-zero-sum mindset: your well-being and hers are interdependent; raising her need-satisfaction usually raises yours too—opt for joint-gain moves over “who wins” moves [1].

What the husband should do (summary checklist)

  1. Map and balance needs to be updated monthly
  • Ask each other to rank the seven core needs (affection, security, autonomy, recognition, shared meaning, sexuality, growth) and compare; aim to keep both partners above threshold and the gap (Δ) small; if Δ > 1.5 for more than a few months, trigger an equity reset (redistribute time/chores/attention) [1].
  1. Practice structured empathy daily (10 minutes)
  • Do mirror listening: “I heard you say X… did I get that right?” No fixing, no rebuttal until your partner confirms accuracy; this alone reliably reduces arguments and perceived scarcity [1].
  1. Make big choices inclusively each week
  • For money, schedules, parenting, commitments, and sex, get explicit consent; track perceived fairness so both have real voice and durability rises [1].
  1. Expand shared resources (don’t just split chores)
  • Add weekly novelty/play (walk a new route, cook a new recipe, try a class), which boosts happiness more than chore equity alone; protect couple time on the calendar [1].
  1. Redesign your conflict loops
  • Name the recurring script (e.g., “pursue–withdraw”), insert a pause and a repair gesture (“I want to understand, can we slow down?”), and do a brief post-conflict debrief: trigger, meaning, prevention plan [1].
  1. Adapt deliberately
  • Quarterly: review which needs shifted (new jobs, kids, health) and re-negotiate roles; Yearly: reset goals, rituals, and budgets so the system stays in equilibrium [1].
  1. Map and tame shadow needs
  • Privately reflect on “what I’m really protecting or proving when I’m most hurt” (e.g., fear of inadequacy, need to be right); share only after full mirroring to reduce unconscious sabotage [1].

Daily/weekly routines that work

  • Daily: 10 minutes empathy; one gratitude specific to your partner; one small bid for connection (text, touch, in-joke) [1].
  • Weekly: 1 novelty date or shared project; 15-minute decision check-in (money, calendar, chores, intimacy); chore/time swap to keep equity visible [1].
  • Monthly: need-rank check and Δ review; if Δ > 1.5, schedule an equity reset conversation with concrete trades (time, tasks, attention) [1].
  • Quarterly/Yearly: system check and goal reset as above [1].

Husband micro-skills and scripts

  • Clarify needs: “Top two needs for you this week?” Then reflect back accurately before offering solutions [1].
  • Choice-making: “What would make this a yes for you?” “I can offer X; what would you need to feel it’s fair?” [1].
  • During conflict: “Do you want empathy, help, or both?” “The 10% truth I hear is…” “Let’s take 10 and come back with one repair each” [1].
  • After harm: “I see how my action led to your feeling X; the impact matters; here’s my plan to prevent a repeat—does that address what you need?” [1].

Measurable metrics to keep you honest

  • Empathy minutes: 70+ per week total [1].
  • Decision inclusivity: both can name their say in last five major choices [1].
  • Resource growth: at least four novelty/shared-play moments per month [1].
  • Asymmetry: monthly need-gap Δ ≤ 1.5; if above for 3–6 months, do a formal reset [1].
  • Conflict recovery: time-to-repair trending downward; no contempt, coercion, or aggression (V = 0) [1].

Common pitfalls and husband-specific resets

  • Defensiveness: prioritize accuracy over self-justification; mirror first, explain second [1].
  • Scarcity mindset: protect couple time like a standing medical appointment; reduce discretionary drains that crowd out attention and intimacy [1].
  • Hidden scorekeeping: replace with explicit trades and time banking; recalibrate weekly rather than letting resentment accrue [1].
  • Persistent Δ, contempt, or stonewalling: escalate to structured help (EFT-informed counseling) and re-run the seven-step cycle with a coach [1].

Bottom line
Show up as a systems steward: keep needs mapped and balanced, listen with precision, decide inclusively, grow shared resources, adapt on schedule, and surface shadow motives—do this consistently and peace becomes the natural “attractor state” of your marriage [1].



How to have a long and happy marriage: tips for wives

Core stance

  • Be a steward of a two-person peace system: keep empathy accuracy, inclusive decision-making, shared resource growth, asymmetry control, and shadow-awareness above critical thresholds so both partners’ core needs stay above dignity level and resentment/coercion stay at zero (V = 0) [1].
  • Non-zero-sum mindset: your well-being and his are interdependent—pursue joint-gain choices that raise both partners’ need-satisfaction rather than “who wins” outcomes [1].

What the wife should do (summary checklist)

  1. Map and balance needs monthly
  • Rank the seven core needs (affection, security, autonomy, recognition, shared meaning, sexuality, growth), compare lists, and keep the gap (Δ) small; if Δ > 1.5 for a few months, trigger an equity reset (redistribute time/chores/attention) [1].
  1. Practice structured empathy daily (10 minutes)
  • Use mirror listening: “I heard you say X… did I get that right?”—no rebuttal until he confirms accuracy; this reliably reduces arguments and perceived scarcity [1].
  1. Make big choices inclusively each week
  • For money, schedules, parenting, commitments, and sex, seek explicit consent and track perceived fairness so both have a real voice and durability rises [1].
  1. Expand shared resources (beyond chore equity)
  • Protect couple time and add weekly novelty/play (new walk, recipe, class, micro-adventure), which boosts happiness more than chore-splitting alone [1].
  1. Redesign conflict loops
  • Name your common script (e.g., pursue–withdraw), insert a pause and a repair (“I want to understand; can we slow down?”), then do a short post-conflict debrief: trigger, meaning, prevention plan [1].
  1. Adapt deliberately
  • Quarterly: review which needs shifted (work, kids, health) and re-negotiate roles; Yearly: reset goals, rituals, and budgets so the system stays in equilibrium [1].
  1. Map and tame shadow needs
  • Privately reflect on “what I’m really protecting or proving when I’m most hurt” (e.g., fear of invisibility, need to be right); share only after full mirroring to reduce unconscious sabotage [1].

Micro-skills and scripts that help

  • Clarify needs: “Top two needs for you this week?” Reflect back accurately before offering solutions [1].
  • Decision-making: “What would make this a yes for you?” “I can offer X; what would you need to feel it’s fair?” [1].
  • During conflict: “Do you want empathy, help, or both?” “The 10% truth I hear is…” “Let’s take 10 and return with one repair each” [1].
  • After harm: “I see how my action led to your feeling X; here’s my prevention plan—does that address what you need?” [1].

Measurable metrics to stay on track

  • Empathy minutes: 70+ per week total [1].
  • Decision inclusivity: both can name their say in the last five major choices [1].
  • Resource growth: at least four novelty/shared-play moments per month [1].
  • Asymmetry: monthly need-gap Δ ≤ 1.5; if above for 3–6 months, do a formal reset [1].
  • Conflict recovery: time-to-repair trending downward; no contempt, coercion, or aggression (V = 0) [1].

Common pitfalls and resets

  • Over-functioning or mind-reading: replace assumptions with explicit asks/offers and proportional voice in decisions [1].
  • Scarcity mindset: protect couple time like a standing appointment and reduce drains that crowd out attention and intimacy [1].
  • Hidden scorekeeping and silent resentment: use explicit trades/time banking and weekly fairness check-ins rather than letting imbalance accrue [1].
  • Persistent Δ, contempt, or stonewalling: seek structured help (e.g., EFT-informed counseling) and re-run the seven-step cycle with guidance [1].

Bottom line
Show up as a systems steward: map and balance needs, listen with precision, decide inclusively, grow shared resources, adapt on schedule, and surface shadow motives—do this consistently and peace becomes the natural “attractor state” of your marriage [1].

Sources

1
The "Science of a Long and Happy Marriage" Framework by Michael Perel, M.D. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/10/the-science-of-long-and-happy-marriage.html

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Producers vs parasites in a country

  I prize builders—people and teams who turn energy, ideas, and capital into solutions. In techno-libertarian terms, those are “producers.” Their mirror image are “parasites”—actors who extract value through coercion, political privilege, or regulatory moats rather than by voluntary exchange and useful output. The project of a free, high-trust, high-growth society is to align rewards with creation and make extraction costly. [1][2]

Core principles

  • Voluntary exchange over coercion: profits signal value creation; subsidies and protectionism signal extraction. [1][2]
  • Strong, simple property rights and liability: you keep what you create; you pay for what you harm. [1][2]
  • Permissionless innovation: default-allow with narrowly tailored, evidence-based constraints for real externalities. [1][2]
  • Radical transparency for state power; privacy and autonomy for individuals. [1][2]

How to encourage producers

  • Make the tax code pro-building:
    • Low, simple, predictable rates; bias toward taxing consumption rather than investment; immediate expensing for R&D and productive capital. [1][2]
  • Cut the time-cost of producing:
    • Fast-track, “default yes” permitting with shot clocks for housing, energy, biotech, and advanced manufacturing; if the agency misses the deadline, the permit is deemed approved. [1][2]
    • National preemption of purely local protectionism that blocks new entrants (e.g., zoning that bans housing, rules that block new clinics, certificate-of-need cartels). [1][2]
  • Open the frontier for talent and capital:
    • Builder visas, remote-first work recognition, and charter zones/cities with competitive governance where entrepreneurs can opt in to clear, minimal rules. [1][2]
    • Wider access to capital formation (crowdfunding, outcome-based prizes) with fraud accountability rather than paternalistic bans. [1][2]
  • Treat the state as a platform, not a monopolist:
    • Open data by default, API-based procurement, pay-for-performance contracts where government buys outcomes instead of writing blank checks. [1][2]
  • Abundance infrastructure:
    • Legalize next-gen energy (including advanced nuclear), liberalize spectrum, streamline rights-of-way for fiber and transit—because producers compound where energy, bandwidth, and mobility are cheap. [1][2]
  • Upgrade human capital:
    • Education freedom with portable funding (vouchers or education savings), competency-based credentials, apprenticeships, and outcome-linked financing—rewarding schools that actually boost earnings and mastery. [1][2]
  • A safety net that never punishes work:
    • Replace cliffs with smooth phase-outs (e.g., a negative income tax or targeted wage subsidy), portable benefits, and time-limited assistance tied to training and job search—compassion without dependency traps. [1][2]

How to discourage parasites

  • End legal privilege:
    • Eliminate corporate welfare, protectionist licensing, opaque tax carve-outs, and guaranteed bailouts; all subsidies auto-sunset unless re-justified with hard cost-benefit audits. [1][2]
  • Ruthless clarity on fraud and coercion:
    • Swift, predictable penalties with victim restitution for non-violent economic crimes; reserve prison for violence and serial predation. [1][2]
  • Anti-rent-seeking guardrails:
    • Mandatory transparency for lobbying and public contracts; independent cost-benefit review; rolling regulatory spring-cleaning with automatic expiration of rules lacking measured benefits. [1][2]
  • Liability over micromanagement:
    • Let people build, then hold them strictly liable for actual harms. This deters externalities without preemptively banning innovation. [1][2]
  • Align local incentives with growth:
    • Share upside from new housing and business formation with existing residents (e.g., local dividends or tax-sharing) so communities say “yes” to growth rather than blocking it. [1][2]

Measuring success (producer > parasite)

  • Builder metrics: new-firm formation, time-to-permit, TFP growth, R&D intensity, kilowatt-hours per capita, housing permits per capita, median commute times, and real wages for the median worker. [1][2]
  • Parasite pressure metrics: share of GDP in subsidies/mandates, concentration caused by regulation rather than scale economies, fraud losses recovered, and the fraction of rules that survive periodic audits. [1][2]

Transition playbook

  • Quick wins (0–12 months): publish a regulatory calendar with auto-sunsets; kill corporate tax expenditures; adopt permitting shot clocks; digitize licensing with clear SLAs. [1][2]
  • Medium moves (1–3 years): launch charter zones, builder visas, and energy/housing liberalization; switch procurement to pay-for-outcomes. [1][2]
  • Durable change (3–10 years): constitutional-level protections for property, speech, and due process in the digital realm; embed sunset-and-audit into law so rent-seeking can’t grow back. [1][2]

The north star is simple: reward those who solve problems at scale and remove the cushions that make extraction a safer bet than creation. Build more, transfer less, and hold everyone—public and private—to the same rules of voluntary exchange and accountability. [1][2]


Sources

1
Techno-libertarian manifesto, part 2 by Michael Perel, M.D. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2026/04/techno-libertarian-manifesto-part-2.html
A Techno-Libertarian Manifesto based on the science of politics by Michael Perel, M.D. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2026/03/a-techno-libertarian-manifesto-based-on.html



In addition:

I’ll go a layer deeper and turn principles into design patterns, playbooks, and measurable guardrails to reward producers and starve parasites—always anchored in voluntary exchange, property rights, permissionless innovation, and radical transparency. [1][2]

Strategic objectives

  • Align rewards tightly with value creation; compress the time from idea to deployment; internalize real harms via liability instead of preemptive bans; expose and unwind political privilege. [1][2]

Policy toolkit (concrete mechanisms)

  • Tax for building, not for lobbying:
    • Immediate expensing for productive capex and R&D; shift toward neutral consumption-based taxes with minimal carve-outs; sunset all preferential credits unless re-justified with measured, net social benefit. [1][2]
  • “Default-yes” governance:
    • Permitting shot-clocks with deemed approval if deadlines are missed; performance-based codes that specify outcomes (safety, emissions, reliability) not micromanaged methods; scalable fines/liability for actual harms. [1][2]
  • Regulatory spring-cleaning:
    • Rolling guillotine: rules expire unless reauthorized with data; regulatory budget caps so new mandates require retiring old ones of equal burden; independent cost-benefit review with public reproducible methods. [1][2]
  • Open frontiers for housing, energy, and compute:
    • As-of-right upzoning tied to infrastructure; one-stop, time-limited approvals for advanced energy (including nuclear) with strict ex post liability; accelerated rights-of-way for fiber and transit. [1][2]
  • Talent and capital mobility:
    • Builder visas and licensing reciprocity; broadened crowdfunding with anti-fraud enforcement; outcome-based prizes as a substitute for grants where feasible. [1][2]
  • Property rights where they’re murky:
    • Clear, tradable rights in spectrum, water, and land-use; “use-it-or-lose-it” cleanup of deadweight IP; personal data control with user-held keys and voluntary data sharing markets. [1][2]
  • Liability over preemption:
    • Mandatory insurance/bonds for activities with plausible externalities; swift, predictable restitution to victims; prison prioritized for violence and serial predation. [1][2]
  • A safety net that never punishes work:
    • Smooth benefit phase-outs, portable benefits, training vouchers, and earnings-contingent finance so people can take risks without being trapped. [1][2]
  • Procurement as a market, not a moat:
    • API-first government services; open, competitive solicitations; pay-for-outcomes contracts; transparent vendor performance dashboards. [1][2]

Radical transparency, asymmetrically applied

  • Privacy and autonomy for individuals; sunlight and auditability for institutions that wield power or spend public money. Publish machine-readable budgets, lobbying contacts, contract files, and regulatory analyses with version history and audit trails. [1][2]

Discouraging parasites (anti-rent-seeking architecture)

  • Kill legal privilege at the root:
    • Ban corporate welfare and opaque carve-outs; automatic sunsets for subsidies; clawbacks when promised outcomes aren’t delivered. [1][2]
  • Guardrails against capture:
    • Conflict-of-interest disclosures; cooling-off periods; independent citizens’ juries or panels to review concentrated-benefit, diffused-cost proposals; public comment with mandatory agency responses. [1][2]
  • Competition defaults:
    • Interoperability/portability where switching costs block entry; zero-protectionism rules that preempt local moats like certificate-of-need cartels. [1][2]

Institutional designs you can stand up

  • Charter zones/cities with opt-in, transparent, simple legal stacks; regulatory sandboxes with fast onboarding and clear harm thresholds; prize authorities that pay only on validated outcomes. [1][2]
  • Public ledger for state actions:
    • Open-contracting registry, lobby log, and permit tracker—each record time-stamped, searchable, and tied to responsible officials. [1][2]

Metrics that separate builders from extractors

  • Producer metrics: new-firm formation, time-to-permit, R&D intensity, TFP growth, energy produced per capita, housing permits per capita, median wage growth, export complexity. [1][2]
  • Parasite pressure metrics: subsidy share of GDP, number of active carve-outs, concentration traceable to regulation (not efficiency), fraud losses recovered, percent of rules that survive re-audit. [1][2]

Playbooks by actor

  • Legislators/executives:
    • Pass a Sunset and Audit Act; implement shot-clocks; mandate machine-readable transparency; switch selected grants to outcome prizes; preempt local protectionism that blocks entry. [1][2]
  • City mayors:
    • Codify by-right housing, publish permit dashboards, streamline rights-of-way, and share a slice of new-tax revenue with neighbors to flip NIMBY incentives. [1][2]
  • Agencies:
    • Convert prescriptive rules into performance standards; publish testable impact evaluations; adopt regulatory budgets; open APIs for all data. [1][2]
  • Civil society/funders:
    • Sponsor independent policy audits, legal defense for market entrants, and civic tech that exposes rent-seeking. [1][2]

Risk management without smothering innovation

  • Use pilot-to-scale ladders with predefined exit ramps; require bonds/insurance for edge cases; publish incident reports to create learning loops; keep bans narrow, time-limited, and evidence-based. [1][2]

Common objections, principled answers

  • “What about safety?” Strict liability, insurance, and post-hoc penalties address real harms more precisely than blanket preclearance that blocks beneficial innovation. [1][2]
  • “What about inequality?” Growth plus open entry, anti-privilege rules, portable benefits, and skill formation beats zero-sum redistribution that entrenches gatekeepers. [1][2]
  • “What about monopolies?” Target coercion, exclusionary conduct, and political privilege—preserve scale where it reflects genuine efficiency and user choice. [1][2]

90-day jumpstart checklist

  • Publish a regulatory calendar with automatic sunsets and a real-time permit dashboard.
  • Enact deemed-approval shot-clocks for key sectors and convert at least one grant program to an outcome prize.
  • Repeal one high-profile carve-out and preempt one local protectionist moat; publicly track consumer savings and time-to-market gains. [1][2]

North star

  • Make creation the easiest path and extraction the hardest. Maximize the surface area for voluntary exchange, protect property and privacy, force transparency on power, and punish coercion and fraud quickly and predictably. That’s how producers thrive and parasites wither. [1][2]

Sources

1
Techno-libertarian manifesto, part 2 by Michael Perel, M.D. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2026/04/techno-libertarian-manifesto-part-2.html
2
A Techno-Libertarian Manifesto based on the science of politics by Michael Perel, M.D. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2026/03/a-techno-libertarian-manifesto-based-on.html




Synthemon: game theory. and synthemon

 Game theory and decision theory support the synthemon worldview Here is a concise synthesis, from the vantage of synchronistic theistic mon...