The Matheo Study Series — a map#

The Matheo Study Series is large — thirty-two individual papers across eleven studies (b11-b21), running to hundreds of thousands of words, building a cumulative argument from formal axioms to a call to action. This page is the short map: what each paper does, how they depend on one another, and where to start — so you do not have to read all of it to know what you are looking at.

Note

This is the about-the-series overview. For the full, step-by-step reading routes (Express / Standard / Deep paths for five reader profiles), see the Learning Path through the Matheo Study Series.

How big is this — and do I have to read it all?#

No. Each of the eleven studies has a formal paper plus companion versions for different audiences (general, mathematical, theological, economic, and so on) — which is how eleven studies become thirty-two papers. And the series is built so you can stop at any point with a coherent picture of what you have read so far. A general reader can get the whole core argument from the six short introductions in about 90 minutes; a specialist can go as deep as the formal proofs and the adversarial reviews. The point of this page is to let you choose your depth on purpose.

The studies at a glance#

Code

Title

What it does

b11

PET: Formal Panentheism

14 axioms formalising “all is in God, but God exceeds all,” with convergence across six traditions. The foundation.

b12

e7Day: Self-Correcting Construction

The BABL / ZION / OSCR framework for systems that either self-correct or self-destroy.

b13

e7He: Anti-BABL Inoculation

The Hero Journey as inoculation against BABL; the Supervillain theorem.

b14

JUB: Innovation Theodicy

The Jubilee System as self-stabilising economics — why suffering is, in part, a system-design problem.

b15

Structural Deadlock

A formal proof that Divine Simplicity deadlocks with PET’s relational axioms.

b16

RiskyMAD: Existential Risk

The stochastic forecast: nuclear winter is effectively certain under MAD over long horizons. MAD → MAP.

b17

h* Theorem: a Public Test

The causal-concentration theorem and eight transparency criteria for testing it — with a falsification protocol.

b18

Call to Action: MAD → MAP

Integrates b11-b17 into a call to action for averting accidental nuclear winter.

b19

SGIR: Pandemic Modelling

A constructive existence-proof that modest, coordinated action could have cut pandemic deaths by an order of magnitude — full model open to audit.

b20

WorkLogic

The work-logic cascades behind scaling up ResearchCity (a former SGIR appendix, now standalone).

b21

AI Co-Authorship

A framework for honestly crediting AI and human contributions in long-term research.

How the papers depend on one another#

Dependency graph of the Matheo Study Series (b11-b18).

Textual summary:

b11 (PET) ──────────────→ b14 (JUB, extends PET)
                               ↑
b12 (e7Day, independent) ──────┘  (BABL/ZION framework)
     ↓
b13 (e7He)        b15 ← b11        b16 ← b12, b14
b17 ← b11, b13, b14               b18 ← ALL (b11-b17)

The graph shows the core b11-b18 backbone. Three later studies extend it: b19 (the SGIR pandemic model), b20 (work-logic), and b21 (AI co-authorship).

Where should I start?#

  • Just want the argument? Read the six short intros (b11, b12, b14, b16, b17, b18) — about 90 minutes.

  • Mathematician, theologian, economist, or skeptic? The full learning path has a tailored Express / Standard / Deep route for each.

  • Want to help test it? That is the whole point — Audit the Math.