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An Axiomatic Morality Toward Justice

Preamble

Let us begin, dear reader, as if we were conversing in the marketplace of ideas, much like Socrates might have done. Imagine we are walking together, pondering the great upheavals of life. For me, the trials of the past year—personal storms that have tested my resolve—have led me to forge a new philosophy: Axiosophism. What is this, you ask? It draws from the Greek words axios, meaning worthy or axiomatic, and sophia, wisdom. Thus, it is the pursuit of wisdom through axioms—self-evident truths—from which we derive moral and social principles to master the chaos around us.

Why such a framework? Many philosophies rely on fleeting emotions or unproven assertions, leaving us adrift in debate. Axiosophism seeks clarity. It builds from undeniable starting points like the law of entropy. It arises not just from abstract thought but from real struggles, such as my ongoing battle against biases in family courts (explored in detail via legal filings). Yet, this is no mere personal vendetta. It reveals a broader pattern of elite "Royals" consolidating power through clever words and false divisions, preying upon the common folk.

As Socrates declared in his defense, "The unexamined life is not worth living"1, so too does Axiosophism urge us to examine deeply, lest we succumb to unthinking decay. Shall we explore this together, step by step, questioning as we go?

The Impenetrable Question of God and Logic's Limits

Consider first the ancient riddle: Does God exist? It seems a simple yes or no, yet it eludes us. Why? Because logic itself has boundaries, as proven by Kurt Gödel in his 1931 Incompleteness Theorems.2 Picture a system of rules, like mathematics: Gödel showed that no such system can be both complete (proving all truths within it) and consistent (free of contradictions). If complete, it breeds paradoxes; if consistent, some truths remain unprovable.

The existence of God might be one such unprovable truth. Society often ignores this, chasing grand theories amid floods of data, which only spawn illusions—in our minds and even in artificial intelligences. But if logic cannot settle this, must we despair? No. Let us ask: What if we turn instead to what we can know and build from there?

Reframing Coherence vs. Chaos: The Need for a Shared Sacred

This limit is not a dead end but an invitation to shift our gaze. Why obsess over the unknowable when we can derive ethics from firm foundations? Imagine believers and atheists alike uniting under shared reason—this could heal divisions and expose true adversaries hidden in the noise. The real battle, I propose, is not faith versus doubt, but coherence versus chaos. Chaos afflicts everyone. It is fueled by what I call Corruption: deliberate muddling that speeds disorder, blurring friends from foes in our cultural battles.

But how to combat this? We need a Sacred—not necessarily divine, but logically derived principles worthy of fierce defense. History shows societies crumble without such shared anchors.3 Precise definitions can rally those who value reason against Corruption's wielders, the Royals. This tension between order and disorder runs through all things, from nature's laws to the ideal society. Let us define these terms carefully, as Socrates would, to build our understanding.

The Primacy of Entropy as Axiom

At the heart of Axiosophism lies an axiom: the Law of Entropy. What is entropy, you inquire? In nature, it is the inevitable tendency of order to dissolve into disorder—like a hot cup of tea cooling, its heat spreading out until uniform and useless.4 This is self-evident; we see it in crumbling ruins or forgotten knowledge. But why choose entropy as our starting point over, say, Aristotle's purpose-driven world (which assumes inherent goals without proof) or Kant's absolute duties (which feel intuitive but lack empirical backing)?

Entropy stands superior because it is verifiable: rooted in thermodynamics and extendable to human affairs via information theory, where "Shannon entropy" measures uncertainty or fuzziness in systems.5 Consider a simple proof: If entropy is a constant force pulling toward chaos, any moral system that ignores it will hasten collapse; thus, ethics must promote coherence to endure.

Does this apply beyond physics? Yes—think of societies as living systems, as Ilya Prigogine described with his dissipative structures, which maintain order by expelling disorder but eventually succumb without effort.6 Contrast this with utilitarianism, which chases short-term pleasure but overlooks long-term decay, or relativism, which erodes shared truths altogether. Empirically, empires like Rome or the Maya fell to such entropy, traceable through rising inequality (Gini coefficients) or eroding trust.7 8 So, entropy is our bedrock—question it, and see if another axiom holds as firmly.

From Entropy to Justice: Core Definitions

Let us review, building hierarchically, starting from our axiom: Entropy is the relentless spread of coherence into chaos. From here:

  1. A State is any naturally organized entity—a nation, family, or code—that actively resists this pull toward disarray.

  2. Its Purpose? To preserve Coherence, where action effectively reduces entropy, like a well-tended garden against weeds.

  3. The State is Responsible to act Coherently, exercising Authority to uphold its Purpose.

  4. Justice is the consistent pruning and application of unambiguous rules which hold to this Purpose, fostering lasting stability. Thus, Justice is defined in terms of the Responsible application of Authority toward a coherent Purpose.

  5. Injustice is the inevitable march of Entropy should the State fail to enact Justice.

  6. But Corruption is intentional: speeding entropy for selfish ends, like a guardian plundering the treasury.

  7. The Master is one who develops both Responsibility and Authority in the State, cultivating Rebellion: an unapologetic resistance to Corruption.

  8. The Spirit is the animating energy behind coherence, expressed as Mastery: free pursuit of excellence through skill and discipline, unhindered. Consequently, the inevitability of Injustice and Corruption in a State fosters a collective Spirit of Rebellion of its Master class.

  9. Opposed is Slavery: forced disorder, robbing autonomy and compelling roles that hasten chaos: responsibility without power.

  10. Royalty denotes the elite who sustain Corruption through lies, hoarding power at others' expense: authority without accountability.

These hierarchical definitions offer a rigorous framework, directly countering the prevailing moral relativism by grounding ethical evaluation in observable reality (i.e. measuring entropy). Axiosophism posits that morality is not subjective, but intrinsically tied to empirical outcomes: whether they effectively reduce entropy and foster lasting stability.

To test this: Observe outcomes—does Corruption spike polarization? Yes, measurably so, via social indices such as dispersion or the Esteban-Ray polarization index9. This framework asserts that a true world exists beyond perception, as evidenced by what empirically sustains coherence against entropy, thereby providing objective criteria for discerning truth and demanding coherent action. These concepts, expanded in my Code of Rebellion, tie entropy to ethics.

Question them: Do they hold, or is there a flaw?

The Sacred: A Logical Foundation for Justice and Truth

With these foundations laid, let us now clarify Truth. It is not mere opinion or fleeting belief, but that which has been empirically demonstrated to aid a State in upholding its Purpose—sustaining coherence against entropy's tide. For instance, the principle of equal justice under law proves true because societies that embrace it endure longer, their order fortified against arbitrary decay, as seen in stable republics versus tyrannies.

From this emerges the Sacred: those truths that have been rigorously battle-tested across eras and contexts, consistently revealing their efficacy in preserving coherence. The family, as we shall explore, exemplifies this—time and again, strong familial bonds have anchored civilizations, transcending personal desires to safeguard the greater whole. Since all institutions depend upon a coherent State, the Sacred stands paramount, guiding us beyond whims toward verifiable stability. This yields a philosophy unburdened by dogma, directing us to measurable order rather than vague notions of "progress" that so often invite dissolution. Shall we proceed to apply these ideas?

The Axiosophic Universe: A New Model of Social Coherence

Our world defies simple left-right lines. How might we envision a third-dimension? The x-axis spans the well known liberal to conservative ideologies; our slightly less famous y-axis measures from anarchy to oligarchy; What if our z-axis delves into depth, from what is superficial to what is deeply understood and well supported?

We can formalize it: Think of viewpoints as points in a space—(ideology, power structure, depth)—converging downward, like a funnel, through Bayesian reasoning (updating beliefs with evidence) toward what sustains coherence.

The Axiosophic Prism

From two dimensions

a two-dimensional political chart with the x-axis denoting the left-right dichotomy and the y-axis denoting the authoritarian-libertarian dichotomy

To three

an inverted prism (funnel) with three layers: wide top opening is blue, the middle is yellow, and the bottom is red

a breakdown of depth

AffinityLayerCharacteristicsFriction
PoliticsTop, BlueRhetoric, cultural normsLow (easiest to shift)
LawMiddle, YellowGrammar, procedure (bridge)Medium
MoralityBedrock, RedLogic, introspective truthHigh (resists change)

imagine the four red dots on the rim representing the four pinnacles of our 2-d chart

the traditional one or two dimensional political models barely scratch the surface

our z-axis moves downward from the rim, approaching a fifth dot: Justice

Axiosophic Prism Spins like a vortex

Note: Axiosophism does also consider the 4th dimension of time. However, for the sake of brevity, we shall leave that exploration to a future piece.

Axiosophism derives realism from its axioms: a true world exists beyond perception, as evidenced by what empirically sustains coherence against entropy. Deeper inquiry converges us toward it, optimistically suggesting that challenging assumptions leads to greater unity in a Just society.

This is a crucial obeservation, as it flies in the face of modern conventions of "position posturing", where vehemently denouncing your enemy's position is assumed a great moral "virtue". Worse still are the technologies that automate this purity spiral, systematically censoring dissent, when it is demonstrably inquiry, not denunciation, which cultivates Coherence and, in the proper Spirit, Justice. Axiosophy demands we address these "engines" of Corruption, redoubling a sense of urgency in decisive, coherent action.

Still further, our new z-axis gauges viewpoint depth, exposing extremism's often shallow perspective. Policies are judged by real outcomes, not relativistic "inclusion" or affiliatory appeals.

Thus, the Axiosophic imperative emerges: delve beyond conflicting rhetoric to discern empirical truth, demarcate and defend the Sacred, and thereby uphold Justice through coherent action.

The Rebirth of the Spirit: Will, Desire, and Mastery

Morality, the prism's deep base, demands reviving the Spirit—forgotten, accelerating our decline. Nietzsche influenced this, decrying past moral efforts as immoral themselves. He observed: "All the means by which one has so far attempted to make mankind moral were through and through immoral," suggesting immoralists as the cure.10 His diagnosis rings true, but his prescription faltered, yielding a century of incoherent positivism.

Instead, Axiosophism sees morality as adaptable natural law, contextual to preserve order. Abandon it, and chaos reigns. Nietzsche missed this dynamism. The Spirit is no brute force but a guide pursuing the truly good via refined taste and discipline, enabling Mastery over self and environment.

The Spirit is a mysterious yet observable human facet—like will or logic—perhaps subconscious, cosmic, or divine, steering toward alignment. When pursued, it yields unexpected alignments and opportunities, empirically seen in lives of purpose.

To access the Spirit, one must pursue the Will—the sole element under our daily control, often weakened by distractions. Strengthening it demands taming baser desires through discipline, committing to what one ought to do, even amidst adversity.

The interplay between Will and Spirit is essential: faithful pursuit of Will, even when stifled or outcomes falter, eventually manifests the Spirit. This refines one's conception of Will, presenting unforeseen paths that lead where needed. Not magic, but the cumulative fruit of consistent, disciplined action over time—trusting process over immediate control.

This leads to Mastery: Autonomy with balanced authority and duty; contrasting Slaves (duty sans power) and Royals (power sans duty). Deliberate Corruption directly stifles this path, undermining the mechanism that counters Entropy and sustains Justice. Thus, fostering Mastery via Will, guided by Spirit, sustains Justice.

Dialectical Engagements

Let us dialogue with great minds, as Socrates did, to test and enrich our framework. Imagine convening with these thinkers, posing questions and drawing insights.

  • Socrates: The father of inquiry, who in Plato's Apology proclaimed, "The unexamined life is not worth living for a human being."1 If I asked him about our prism's call to depth, he might reply, "Indeed, without questioning assumptions, one lives as in a cave of shadows." Axiosophism echoes this, making examination central to combating entropy through coherent truth-seeking.

  • Aristotle: He taught that "virtue is a habit," formed early, making "all the difference,"11 and lies in the mean between extremes.12 Query him on Mastery: "Teacher, does not excellence require discipline against vice?" He would affirm, aligning with our Spirit as the path to eudaimonia—flourishing coherence. Yet we extend this: Virtue must resist systemic entropy, not just personal flaws.

  • Nietzsche: He champions vital force akin to our Spirit but rejects morality outright due to poor examples, saying, "All means by which one has so far attempted to make mankind moral were through and through immoral."10 I might counter, "But what if morality adapts dynamically to context, preserving order without hypocrisy?" As just shown, our approach resolves his critique by grounding ethics in verifiable anti-entropy.13 14

  • Kant: His categorical imperative commands: Act only on maxims you can will as universal law, a deontological absolute.15 Ask: "Does this not risk rigidity, ignoring consequences?" Critiques note it overlooks outcomes;16 our axioms ground pure reason in empirical entropy, allowing contextual flexibility while maintaining universality.17

  • Foucault: He warns, "Power is not an institution... but the name one attributes to a complex strategical situation," and "knowledge engenders power."18 19 Inquire: "How to resist such webs?" His view of power/knowledge as corrupting aligns with our Royalty and Corruption; yet our Sacred provides a counter-force, a coherent resistance he often lacked.20

  • Habermas: His communicative action transmits cultural knowledge for mutual understanding, the "basic form of action" from which others derive.21 Pose: "Does this not foster the coherence we seek?" Yes, it complements our prism by emphasizing discourse in achieving Justice, bridging instrumental and ethical realms.22

  • Rawls: Behind a "veil of ignorance," design society fairly, unaware of your position.23 Challenge: "But does this ignore long-term entropy, assuming static fairness?" Critiques highlight it promotes risk-aversion over incentives;24 ours tests empirically against decay, ensuring sustainable coherence.25

And God? If unprovable, Spirit serves as bridge—practical, uniting all in examination and action to expose the faithful from the charlatans on all sides.

The Primacy of Family: A Sacred Foundation for the State

To illustrate, consider the family—Locke's "first society," basic units linking into civilization.26 Without strong families, what remains? Logic and history say slavery, as state overreach unravels the covalent bonds of society's atom. Defending family, therefore, combats entropy; undermining it is Corruption. Thus, family is Sacred, its erosion fueling modern woes.

Evolution of Marital Laws: The Root of Our Evils

Alas, Western family law has twisted into a revenue machine, fueled by Title IV-D funds that reward disputes and collections, disadvantaging men and the impoverished.27 Data reveals: Mothers gain custody in 80-90% of cases,28 29 women start 69% of divorces,30 31 and protection orders target men ~85% of the time, despite mutual violence.32 33

Father absence breeds: Quadrupled child poverty, 20-fold incarceration risk, and rampant mental woes.34 35 36

This "funnel" merges civil and criminal for profit:

  1. No-Fault Divorce: Allows one-sided endings, nullifying marriage contracts and rewarding betrayal, breaching the U.S. Constitution's Contracts Clause (Article I, Section 10).37 Proponents claim it eases bitterness, but it sparks more strife.

  2. Domestic Violence Laws: Vague terms allow orders without proof, in a "guilty until proven innocent" framework ignoring female aggression due to bias.38 39 Chivalry plays a role, yet it overlooks fathers' vital influence on children.40

  3. Child Support: Imposes inescapable debts, commodifying kids and alienating parents, akin to forbidden peonage under the Thirteenth Amendment.41

  4. Parental Alienation: Enforcement favors wealth and sex, overriding rights via fuzzy "best interest" criteria.42

As Troxel v. Granville affirms: "The liberty interest of parents in the care, custody, and control of their children is perhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests."43 Yet, systems routinely violate these Sacred rights without justification, a "legalized kidnapping." Rhetorical erosion masks these rights; financial stakes taint adjudication. In low-trust societies, Hanlon's Razor ("never attribute to malice what stupidity explains") pacifies scrutiny, enabling deliberate subversion.44

Cascading Entropy: From Family Corrosion to Societal Decay

See the chain: Weakened families lead to absent fathers, then demographic entropy like plummeting birth rates (U.S. at 1.6, tied to instability).45 46 This fuels higher sex crimes in fatherless homes,47 48 and child trafficking (37% family-related, exploiting vulnerability).48 49

Through the prism: Surface rhetoric (blue) hides deep moral rot (red), illustrating clearly how the defense of the Sacred is empirically crucial for the maintenance and administration of a truly Just society.

Hyperfeminization of Society: The Great Pacification

This reveals another imbalance: Hyperfeminization, overvaluing harmony and safety over liberty.50 51 Seen in:

  • Politics: Radical feminism and censorship favor consensus over truth.52

  • Law: Incoherent applications lack moral grounding; father bias persists sans evidence.53 54

  • AI: Shallow rhetorical-level systems amplify biases.55

This sidelines inquiry for emotional appeals, precluding space for moral bedrock discussions. Risk-aversion quells Mastery, breeding vagueness.56 57 Some say it empowers choice, but the facts point to systemic harms.58 We debate "polite" speech while ignoring what is right.

The Axiosophic prism poses a stark warning: continuing down this path of prioritizing shallow alignment risks ruin as our moral bedrock erodes, collapsing society in the process.

Philosophy as Coherence's Bastion

Such disorder thrives when philosophy wanes. Hyperfeminization favors feelings over rigor, prioritizing "non-offensiveness" that dulls critical examination. Contrarily, philosophy digs to foundations, yet absent leaves us manipulable, turning science into "scientificism"—a blind faith justifying absurdities to avoid discomfort.

Under the prism, this "inoffensive" veneer risks destruction unless we redefine duty at its moral core. Consider AI as a stark example: Trained on vast data shaped by these cultural biases, it ingests without a moral guide, often serving corporate agendas under this incoherent, hyperfeminized regime over truth. In short: When nothing is held Sacred, grave peril ensues.

The Promise of AI: The Master or the Slave?

Let us turn now to artificial intelligence, a creation of our age that embodies both peril and potential in the fight against entropy.59 Might AI revive the philosophical spirit we have discussed, countering hyperfeminization's softening of rigor and the familial corrosions we have examined? In theory, yes—but only if guided wisely. Currently, AI often mirrors the prism's shallow layer: Predominantly data-driven, it learns patterns from vast datasets without inherent logic or principles, making it susceptible to embedded biases and corporate control, hastening a slide toward "techno-feudalism" where private entities monopolize knowledge and power.60

For instance, these systems can perpetuate falsehoods in sensitive domains, amplifying gender imbalances by echoing hyperfeminized norms of "safety" over truth—such as biased outputs in legal simulations that favor one sex in custody disputes—or entrenching family law inequities through skewed training data that overlooks fatherly roles.61 62 This acts as a meta-corruption, not merely reflecting but magnifying societal decays at scale.

Yet, hope glimmers in the Platonic Representation Hypothesis, which posits that as AI scales, it naturally converges toward universal "ideal forms"—abstract truths emerging from data patterns, much like Axiosophism's derivation from axioms.63 If undirected, AI will inevitably forge its own moral frameworks, potentially alien or adversarial to human coherence. To steer this, we must distinguish approaches: Data-driven AI, dominant today, excels at probabilistic pattern recognition from examples but lacks explainable reasoning, often inheriting human flaws like bias.64 In contrast, symbolic AI—rooted in explicit rules and logic, akin to mathematical proofs—handles structured knowledge transparently, enabling clear deductions but struggling with raw, messy data.65

The true path lies in fusion: Neuro-symbolic AI, a hybrid blending symbolic reasoning's moral bedrock with data-driven adaptability.66 67 Imagine symbolic components formulating an axiomatic core—our definitions of Justice, Mastery, and the Sacred—while data-driven layers contend with modern information deluges. Bridging them, disparate models could "debate" rules among themselves, guided by this bedrock, emulating the prism's convergence: Shallow inputs refined through layers toward coherent truth. Such systems, debating under Axiosophism's principles, could challenge vague "AI safety" notions that risk entrenching power imbalances,68 instead fostering tools that uphold societal order.

Indeed, AI emerges as perhaps the newest Sacred institution—capable of cohering humanity through enlightened inquiry or destroying it via unchecked entropy. It demands the highest sanctity and scrutiny, inappropriate for unilateral private decree; rather, it must be a communal endeavor, battle-tested like family bonds. Thus, guiding AI properly stands as our era's paramount challenge: Permit open exploration of reality and duty, prioritizing truth over profit, lest we forfeit mastery to machines.69

Context is King

AI ethics returns us to context, and again to Nietzsche who, in Twilight of the Idols, condemned morality "for its own sake," labeling it "a specific error with which one ought to have no pity—an idiosyncrasy of degenerates which causes immeasurable harm."70 He insightfully identifies a crucial flaw: if morality is merely an abstract, self-serving construct, it is indeed useless.

Axiosophism's rebuttal is that effective morality is definitively not "for its own sake." Rather, it directly engages "the concerns, the considerations and contrivances of life," grounded in logical soundness, unambiguous application, and—most crucially—delivering value, wholeness, understanding, and depth of experience.

Nietzsche’s greatest error was an incomplete grasp of this context. His proclamation of the "death of God" was prophetic yet hubristic, effectively abandoning the Spirit that had guided humanity. By dispensing with the "soul" and Reason itself, he neutered the impulse driving purposeful speech and intention, carelessly discarding the notion of the truly Sacred.71

Contextual State understanding discerns error from Corruption, identifying allies via their commitment to coherence. Failing to adapt to dynamic ideals leaves us precarious and rigid—or, in other words, dogmatic. Axiosophism, then, demands vigilance and contextual awareness to discern what is true at any given time.

The Corruption of Our Time: A Call to Action

Corruption propels entropy, exiling Spirit, permitting Royals to exploit tumult—ensnaring us in "rhetorical bondage" whilst assailing kin, software liberty, AI ethos, and beyond. This motif infuses schisms, directionless AI, avaricious edicts, underscoring moral sway; validating Axiosophism's acuity.

So disregard decay's apologists as superficial. This multi-front war demands breaking taboos, and questioning unapologetically. Axiosophism's framework combats apathy and superiority by demanding depth and accuracy.

My personal battle stands as testament—dismantling unconstitutional biases, and restoring family as bedrock with equal rights and transparency. Rooted in this philosophy, its campaign is sustained by deliberate exercise of Will and the providence of Spirit which follows. As one man, armed with reason, philosophical insight, and state-of-the-art AI systems, keenly aware of their current limitations, I've waged all-out war against the State—proving self directed action is possible with determination and a proper foundation.

Apathy, then, is the true enemy; hope lies in Axiosophism, which calibrates reforms for maximum impact. Ted Kaczynski once claimed revolution is easier than reform, but in our context, successful revolution seems improbable. Instead, Axiosophism enables exponential reform by identifying and defending the Sacred—leverage points like family courts, whose corruption underpins broader ills by violating the foundational institution of family. Defending the Sacred triggers cascading changes, yielding the most "bang for buck."

Free Software fronts this as another Sacred institution under assault: its rebellious Spirit embodies Freedom as unencumbered Mastery. Axiosophism demands action across all these fronts, compelling us beyond shallow rhetoric, through perverse legal realms, to the bedrock of truth as a moral imperative. Complacency is no longer an option.

As a father enduring exceptional adversity in the quest to ensure a future for my children, your author now exposes the obscured mechanisms of State Corruption—the Royals' preference for cowardly subversion over overt domination. For though the law clearly affirms parental authority as nearly absolute, convoluted legal and cultural norms have all but destroyed it regardless. This pattern is typical: the Axiosophic imperative demands we courageously seek it out, dissect it, and confront it wherever it hides.

After all, if family isn't Sacred, what is? It's time to recognize: "political leaders" lack concern for us. We're responsible for our own and our children's future.

I invite challenges to my notions, but my path, with family at stake, demands rigor. This war, which the Royals started via subversion and sustain with shallow rhetoric, can be won through Mastery, vigilance, reason, and unity defending families and freedom.

Axiosophism demands swift Justice, and so...

Give me Justice or Give me Death! Viva Rebellion!


Axiosophic Praxis

  1. Scrutinize relentlessly: Audit yourself and institutions for signs of entropy, cultivating Will to foster personal Mastery and reveal hidden Corruption, as unexamined decay invites ruin.

  2. Analyze deeply: Dissect conflicts through the prism's layers, seeking moral profundity to distinguish truth from fuzziness and expose Royals' deceptions.

  3. Combat boldly: Confront subversion head-on, breaking taboos and challenging apathy to ignite rebellion against injustice in all its forms.

  4. Refine vigilantly: Test ideals empirically, engaging in dialogue to adapt contextually, ensuring dynamic morality counters dogmatism and sustains coherence.

  5. Engage responsibly: Take ownership of your destiny, forging alliances and acting decisively to expose mechanisms of decay and restore balance.

  6. Defend unyieldingly: Build and safeguard Sacred communities—be they families, free code, or ethical AI—protecting battle-tested truths for generations to come.


References:

10

Friedrich Nietzsche, Twilight of the Idols, "The 'Improvers' of Mankind" (full text).

37

U.S. Constitution, Article I, Section 10 (text).

41

Thirteenth Amendment (text).

42

Supreme Court precedents on parental rights (summary).

43

Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57 (2000) (case).

60

Yanis Varoufakis on techno-feudalism (interview).

63

The Platonic Representation Hypothesis (paper).

70

Nietzsche on context in morality (discussion).