•  46
    Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has long been criticized for ignoring human well‑being, but its deeper limitation is teleological: GDP optimizes for monetary throughput rather than the conditions that enable human flourishing. By treating all monetized activity as positive output, it obscures what this paper terms the attentional cost of abstraction—the systemic displacement of human and ecological realities by symbolic representations such as prices, metrics, and algorithmic scores. This cost gene…Read more
  •  68
    The dollar‑centric financial order entrenches asymmetry, externalises ecological costs, and records defensive load as growth. This paper proposes a counter‑model: a Global Commonwealth built on four structural invariants — Visibility, Symmetry, Contestability, and Repair — extended to the planetary scale. At its core is a Neutral Clearing Union with a Bancor unit of account, whose exchange rates are determined not by speculation but by each nation's value efficiency (nF/TPE), measured through Du…Read more
  •  36
    Trust is often treated as a psychological or cultural phenomenon – a product of familiarity, repeated interaction, or shared norms. This paper argues that in modern societies of strangers, trust cannot be explained by these situational accounts alone. Instead, trust becomes rational only when institutional architectures systematically prevent three specific modes of failure: unseen costs, unchallengeable costs, and inescapable costs. We define trust as the rational expectation that others will n…Read more
  •  92
    Standard accounts of freedom focus on negative liberty (non‑interference) or positive liberty (rational self‑direction). Both neglect a crucial dimension: epistemic scaffolding. A person may be legally uncoerced yet remain structurally disoriented – acting within architectures that obscure consequences, displace burdens, and prevent intelligible action. This paper proposes a third conception: freedom as the absence of systemic ignorance and the presence of intelligible action within revealing‑fo…Read more
  •  170
    The Loom of Vow and Memory: A Companion to Golden Phoenix is a philosophical companion to Golden Phoenix: An Epic of Silence and Threads, a contemporary mythopoetic epic exploring suffering, compassion, interdependence, and human flourishing through narrative and symbolic form. Combining literary commentary, comparative philosophy, contemplative ethics, and moral psychology, the work investigates how myth and poetic imagination can function as vehicles for moral cultivation and philosophical ref…Read more
  •  60
    Democratic legitimacy is often grounded in procedural consent – voting, representation, majority rule. This paper argues that procedural consent is insufficient. Drawing on a structural account of trust and flourishing developed in previous work, we propose four conditions – Visibility, Contestability, Repair, and Symmetry – as prerequisites for meaningful consent. A government that conceals consequences, forecloses challenge, defers repair, or decouples benefits from burdens does not govern by …Read more
  •  80
    This chapter reclaims teleological ethics, arguing that the proper aim of moral thought and action is human flourishing. Building on Aristotle’s concept of eudaimonia, it extends classical virtue ethics in three ways: (1) grounding flourishing in empirical evidence from developmental psychology and archaeology; (2) shifting from merely individual excellence to excellence within systemic interdependence; and (3) moving from civic friendship in the polis to trust and the vow‑motive in complex soci…Read more
  •  86
    Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has long been criticized for ignoring human well‑being, but its deeper limitation is teleological: GDP optimizes for monetary throughput rather than the conditions that enable human flourishing. By treating all monetized activity as positive output, it obscures what this paper terms the attentional cost of abstraction—the systemic displacement of human and ecological realities by symbolic representations such as prices, metrics, and algorithmic scores. This cost gene…Read more
  •  55
    Trust is not sentiment but structure: the rational expectation that others will not impose unseen, unchallengeable, or inescapable costs. In societies of strangers, where most interactions occur without familiarity or shared norms, trust cannot rest on character or culture alone. It must be produced by institutional design. This paper develops an architectural account of trust, identifying four structural conditions—Visibility, Symmetry, Contestability, and Repair—that make reliance rational und…Read more