LLog: b14-polsci MMv2 Revision Session (2026m04d09)#
dv_ClaOp46_MMv2_b14polsci_2026m04d09Verbatim Prompt#
Please read and execute: /matheology/hell/ll/study/b/14/b14-prompt-revise-polsci-mmv2
The prompt file (b14-prompt-revise-polsci-mmv2.rst, VVN
dv_ClaOp46_v1_2026m04d09) specified:
Purpose: Revise b14-polsci from MMv1 to MMv2 integrating all 26 BREACHes from the 8-reviewer adversarial review.
Four LLoL Decisions: (1) Section 7 rewrite (remove Rolex); (2) dual framing (scheduled critical junctures + Jubilee System); (3) zaibatsu case study + Shemita citation; (4) POAATAD + keep Chenoweth/Stephan strong.
All 26 BREACH fixes: organized by reviewer (R1–R8).
Constraints: Language Rules, epistemic register, tone, RST quality, new references.
Output: Revised paper + LLog.
Files Read#
All files specified in the prompt’s Step 1 were read completely:
.claude/CLAUDE.md— project rules, EDEN system, Language Rules (loaded via system context).b14-jub-polsci_mmv1_2026m04d09.rst— the base text (full read, ~9,500 words, all 9 sections + abstract + conclusion + references + appendix).review_b14-polsci_2026m04d09.rst— the adversarial review (full read, all 8 reviewers, synthesis, EDEN classification).study_ll_2026m04d09_b14-polsci-review-llog.rst— the review llog including LLoL’s point-by-point reply (full read, all proposed fixes).b14-jub-math_mmv1_2026m04d08.rst— formal paper (read Sections 1–2, consulted for th8 derivation, periodicity argument).all-transwarpkey-stadia-overview.rst— 12 Stadia overview (full read, STa1-EVX through STb12-FUN).sd3/index.rst— SD3 POAATAD mechanism (full read).aipto/index.rst— AIPTO draft overview (full read).
Audience Re-Assessment#
Primary audiences (unchanged from MMv1):
Political scientists (comparative politics, institutional analysis)
Institutional economists
Constitutional designers
Nonviolent resistance scholars
IR theorists
Audience-specific changes in MMv2:
For political scientists: Dual framing (scheduled critical junctures as concept, Jubilee System as implementation) makes the contribution recognizable as institutional theory. Section 7 rewrite removes the Rolex analogy that alienated methodologists. Falsification criteria (Section 8.9) meet standard methodological expectations.
For institutional economists: Zaibatsu case study (Section 3.5) provides empirical grounding. 5-Whys expansion (Section 3.2) strengthens the common-root argument. Developmental state counter-examples (Section 8.7) engage the strongest challenges.
For constitutional designers: Ackerman clarified as descriptive. Enforcement timeline addressed. Bootstrapping mechanism (Section 6.1) replaces the aspirational nuclear nations paragraph.
For NVR scholars: POAATAD coordination mechanism specified. Chenoweth/Stephan success conditions analyzed. STa5-CAN/AIPTO cited. Sharp attribution for levy removed.
For IR realists: Security dilemma engaged explicitly. Transparency reframed as mutual monitoring by outside party. Crisis management vs. structural reform distinguished (Section 8.8).
Word count estimate: ~13,500 words (vs. ~9,500 MMv1). All additions are substantively necessary per the review.
Changes Made — Organized by Reviewer#
Reviewer 1: Acemoglu/Robinson Institutionalist#
R1(a) — “Missing mechanism” |rarr| “candidate mechanism.” Changed throughout. Added endogeneity objection paragraph in Section 2.1. Case 1 response: elites cannot extract from a civilization that no longer exists.
R1(b) — Comparison table reframed as alternative futures. Replaced the Critical Junctures vs. Jubilee Cycles table with a Future A (Emergent Rebalancing) vs. Future B (Chartered Rebalancing) table. Added footnote on ex post vs. ex ante. Eliminated category error.
R1(c) — Path dependence as sequential stages. Replaced “describe the same phenomenon in different vocabularies” with “describe sequential stages of the same process.” Added explicit 4-stage causal chain in Section 2.2.
R1(d) — Olson connected to Chenoweth and Sharp. Added new Section 2.3 connecting Olson’s collective-action problem to Case 1 via Chenoweth and Stephan (2011): 3.5% active participation threshold. Links Sharp (Section 4.1) back to Olson (Section 2.2).
Reviewer 2: Scheidel-Aligned Historical Sociologist#
R2(a) — “Consistent with”: HELD. No change needed (retained).
R2(b) — “Why not?” distinction [MUST FIX]. Added constitutional vs. revolutionary “Why not?” distinction in Section 3.1. Explained OSCR death-trifecta of violent revolutions. Referenced HEAVEN series adversarial review architecture as model of incremental tested development. Referenced Federalist Papers vs. Communist Manifesto.
R2(c) — Wirtschaftswunder scaled back. Replaced “greater success” with analysis of conditions present and absent. Added: preserved infrastructure, growing workforce seeking meaningful work, AI augmentation, ResearchCity coordination. Reframed as “comparable renewal” with explicit testability statement.
R2(d) — 5-Whys expansion [MAJOR ADDITION]. Expanded Section 3.2 with three full 5-Whys chains: AI risk, arms control, pandemic preparedness. Each traces to concentrated economic power resisting investment in the common good. Added connecting principle: “Why should I be my siblings’ keeper?” inversion.
Reviewer 3: Ostrom Commons Scholar#
R3(a) P1 — Commons defined. Added explicit commons definition: “aggregate stock of structural economic advantage.” Referenced first 12 Stadia as integrated nucleus. Assessment changed to “Partially HELD.”
R3(a) P3 — FiShFus, not 7TrackRole rotation. Replaced 7TrackRole reference with FiShFus governance function for collective-choice. 7TrackRole retained separately for preventing elite capture.
R3(a) P5 — Safeguard #5 redefined. Changed “no coercive capacity” to “no violent coercive capacity (no monopoly on force)” throughout the paper (Sections 5.2, 5.3, 5.4). Acknowledged: “The economic levy IS a graduated sanction.” Assessment changed from TENSION to HELD.
R3(b) — Missing Ostrom concepts cited. Added paragraph citing Ostrom (2005), IAD/SES frameworks. Noted full IAD analysis as future work.
R3(c) — Polycentricity demonstrated. Added detailed analysis of all four conditions in Section 5.4: (1) 1,600 Stadia; (2) overlapping jurisdictions via inter-woven problems (STa1-EVX/STa2-WWV example); (3) Great Jubilee Race + $8/yr contribution competition; (4) epiocracy coordination with transparent decision trails. Concluded: “satisfies formal conditions with qualification that epiocracy is untested.”
Reviewer 4: Constitutional Law Scholar#
R4(a) — Democratic analogy: HELD. No change needed.
R4(b) — Enforcement timeline. Added enforcement timeline paragraph in Section 5.1: ~19 years is a statistical midpoint; ~4.7 years of rigorous evolutionary iteration via ResearchCity’s 7-stage model.
R4(c) — Ackerman descriptive, not prescriptive. Added clarification in Section 5.2: “Ackerman’s theory is descriptive, not prescriptive.”
R4(d) — Nuclear nations bootstrapping [MAJOR REWRITE]. Complete rewrite of adoption mechanism in new Section 6.1. Replaced “if they see the checkmate” with bootstrapping from outside all established systems. Maximum transparency as mutual monitoring. Nuclear nations as mutual adversarial reviewers. Assurance Game transformation via #AuditTheMath. Referenced IAEA, Open Skies Treaty as precedents.
Reviewer 5: Gene Sharp / Nonviolent Resistance Scholar#
R5(a) — POAATAD coordination mechanism [Decision 4]. Added POAATAD paragraph in Section 4.1: targeting problem, coordinated advocacy, $8/yr/person, Limited Liability Charitable Company model.
R5(b) — Levy: Sharp attribution removed. Levy is now presented as standard democratic taxation throughout. Sharp’s methods reserved for Case 1 defense.
R5(c) — Chenoweth/Stephan + STa5-CAN + AIPTO. Added Chenoweth/Stephan success conditions analysis in Section 4.1: 3.5% threshold, security forces defect translation, movement discipline via adversarial review. Added STa5-CAN and AIPTO references. Added Chenoweth and Stephan (2011) to References.
R5(d) — Case 1/Case 2 coherence: HELD. No change needed.
Reviewer 6: IR Realist#
R6(a) — Transparency-as-mutual-monitoring. Reframed in Section 6.1 as transparency-as-mutual-monitoring by an outside party, not transparency-as-trust. Added IAEA, Open Skies Treaty references.
R6(b) — Security dilemma engaged. Added explicit security dilemma paragraph in Section 6.1: (a) Case 2 differential growth; (b) POAATAD coalition eliminates sole first-mover cost; (c) timeline tension acknowledged.
R6(c) — Developmental state counter-examples. Added Section 8.7 engaging China, Singapore/South Korea, Zimbabwe. Each with th8 response.
R6(d) — Crisis management vs. structural reform. Added Section 8.8 distinguishing crisis management from structural reform. Aggregate risk exceeds single-dimension historical precedent. Connected to 5-Whys root-cause analysis.
Reviewer 7: Hostile Methodologist#
R7(e) — Section 7 rewrite [Decision 1, PRIORITY #1]. Complete rewrite. Removed Rolex analogy entirely. Replaced with “Improbable Does Not Mean Impossible” framing. Three historical examples (democratic constitutions pre-1688, federal republics pre-1787, EU pre-Coal and Steel Community). Expected-value argument for engagement. No insult to probabilistic methodology.
R7(a) — Falsification criteria. Added Section 8.9 with four specific, observable, time-bounded predictions: ResearchCity Stage 3 growth, competitive advantage over full cycle, concentration dynamics, recalibration mechanism.
R7(b) — Analogical reasoning: differences that matter. Added “Differences that matter” analysis for Federalist Papers analogy in Section 5.2. Democratic analogy already had binary-vs-continuous (retained). Wirtschaftswunder conditions analysis expanded in Section 3.3.
R7(c) — Zaibatsu case study [Decision 3]. Added Section 3.5 (~500 words): Mitsui/Mitsubishi/Sumitomo/Yasuda dissolution by SCAP/MacArthur. Measurable outcomes (Japan’s post-war growth). Counter-evidence (keiretsu reconstitution). Brief Shemita citation (~2 sentences). Added Hadley (1970) and Yamamura (1967) to References.
R7(d) — Selection on DV: two counter-examples. Added in Section 8.7: China (metastable growth, current difficulties as early BABL) and Zimbabwe land reform (violated stable and extensible cords of ax24, confirming life-trifecta requirement).
Reviewer 8: Sympathetic Comparativist#
R8(a) — Dual framing [Decision 2]. Restructured abstract and Section 1 per Decision 2. Title now includes “Scheduled Critical Junctures.” New Section 1.1 introduces the concept; Section 1.2 identifies the Jubilee System as implementation. Neither subordinated.
R8(b) — Section 7 rewrite. See R7(e).
R8(c) — Publishability requirements. All 8 requirements addressed (listed above).
R8(d) — #AuditTheMath. The conclusion now delivers the target argument: “formally derived, adversarially tested, honestly limited institutional design proposal organized around the concept of scheduled critical junctures.”
New References Added#
Chenoweth, E. and Stephan, M.J. (2011). Why Civil Resistance Works.
Ostrom, E. (2005). Understanding Institutional Diversity.
Ostrom, V. (1999). Polycentricity.
Ohno, T. (1988). Toyota Production System.
Hadley, E.M. (1970). Antitrust in Japan.
Yamamura, K. (1967). Economic Policy in Postwar Japan.
Internal references: SD3 POAATAD (gnp/mmv3), AIPTO draft (gnp/mmv3), Transwarp Key overview (gnp/mmv3).
EDEN Classification#
Green Meadow #1: The revision strategy. The 26 BREACH fixes + 4 LLoL Decisions + substantive additions (5-Whys chains, POAATAD, bootstrapping, polycentricity, zaibatsu case study, falsification criteria) provide a substantially stronger paper. All additions are consistent with each other and with the MMv1 foundation. count = 26 fixes integrated; no conflicts between fixes.
Knife Edge #1: Section 7 rewrite. There was exactly one viable path: remove the Rolex analogy and replace with improbable-vs-impossible framing. Any attempt to defend the Rolex analogy would have deepened the damage. The content of LLoL’s insight (probability is not reality) is preserved; only the delivery changed. Path taken successfully.
Green Meadow #2: The dual framing. Scheduled critical junctures as concept + Jubilee System as implementation is a robust framing. Multiple formulations were available. The chosen version (separate subsections 1.1 and 1.2, with “neither subordinated” statement) makes the contribution immediately recognizable as institutional theory while preserving practical force. count = ~4 viable framings; chosen framing is the most balanced.
Knife Edge #2: The #AuditTheMath argument. The target argument (“formally derived, adversarially tested, honestly limited, the cost of checking is low, the cost of not checking is potentially catastrophic”) is now delivered cleanly in the conclusion. This is the single sentence that determines whether political scientists engage or dismiss. The MMv2 delivers it without the unforced errors that prevented MMv1 from reaching this point.
Notes for b18 (Call to Action)#
The following elements from b14-polsci MMv2 feed directly into b18:
The “scheduled critical junctures” concept is the contribution to comparative politics. b18 should reference it as the institutional innovation that the HEAVEN series proposes.
The 5-Whys chains (AI risk, arms control, pandemic preparedness) demonstrate that diverse existential risks share a common root in concentrated economic power. b18 can cite these as diagnostic tools showing why the Jubilee System addresses root causes, not symptoms.
The bootstrapping mechanism (Section 6.1) explains HOW trust is built among distrustful nuclear nations. b18 should use this as the operational pathway.
The falsification criteria (Section 8.9) provide concrete, testable predictions. b18’s call to action can point to these as evidence that the proposal is falsifiable, not unfalsifiable.
The POAATAD mechanism (Section 4.1) provides the coordination pathway from individual commitment to collective action. b18 should present this as the specific action individuals can take.
The expected-value argument (Section 7): probability low, cost of auditing low, cost of not auditing potentially catastrophic. b18 should use this as its closing argument.
Summary and Recommendations#
What was accomplished:
Revised paper produced at
source/matheology/hell/mm/b/14/mmv2/b14-jub-polsci_mmv2_2026m04d09.rst. All 26 BREACHes addressed. All 4 LLoL Decisions implemented. New content: zaibatsu case study, 5-Whys expansion, POAATAD mechanism, polycentricity demonstration, falsification criteria, nuclear nations bootstrapping rewrite, Section 7 complete rewrite. 6 new references added.LLog (this file) at
source/matheology/hell/ll/study/b/14/study_ll_2026m04d09_b14-polsci-revision-llog.rst. Includes verbatim prompt, audience re-assessment, all changes by reviewer, EDEN classification, b18 notes.
Recommendations for next steps:
LLoL review of MMv2. Check all changes against the original prompt directions. Key items: Section 7 rewrite tone, dual framing balance, zaibatsu case study accuracy, bootstrapping mechanism wording.
AAA QuickRef update needed to register the MMv2 paper and this llog. — DONE (2026m04d09).
Build test (
make dev) to check RST quality and cross-references.b18 integration. The notes above identify 6 elements from b14-polsci MMv2 that feed directly into the Call to Action.
Post-Revision Exchange: Full Re-Review Decision (2026m04d09)#
What is there still to do here that is best done in this session? Is this paper complete? Does it need another round of adversarial review?
Claude’s assessment: The MMv2 is complete as a revision draft, but it has NOT been adversarially tested in this form. Standard practice in this project is Write → Review → Revise → Recheck. The paper is at step 3 (Revise); step 4 (Recheck) is missing. Recommended a focused 3–4 reviewer recheck.
This paper saw the most breaches of papers I remember. What would be the problem in doing a full re-review by the 8 reviewer panel? Wouldn’t it make the paper more rigorous?
Claude’s assessment: LLoL is right. The case for a full 8-reviewer re-review is strong:
26 BREACHes (1 Fatal, 18 Major) was the worst result in the entire HEAVEN series. The repair surface is the largest.
The revisions are massive: ~4,000 new words, restructured architecture (dual framing), 5 entirely new sections.
Each reviewer’s domain expertise is irreplaceable for judging whether their concerns landed — only the Ostrom scholar can judge the polycentricity fix, only the IR realist can judge the bootstrapping mechanism, only the hostile methodologist can judge whether Section 7 and the falsification criteria meet standards.
A 3–4 reviewer recheck would risk declaring victory on a spot-check where a full audit is warranted.
Decision: Full 8-reviewer re-review. The “problem” is only practical (more context and time), which is a poor reason to cut corners on the paper that needed the most work.
Please write the review prompt. I will then execute it in a different context. Make sure all this is added to the llog, so this isn’t lost
Action taken: Re-review prompt written at
source/matheology/hell/ll/study/b/14/b14-prompt-review-polsci-mmv2.rst
(VVN dv_ClaOp46_v1_2026m04d09).
The prompt uses the same 8 reviewers as the MMv1 review but with a re-review structure:
For each reviewer: status check on their original BREACHes (RESOLVED / PARTIALLY RESOLVED / NOT RESOLVED / NEW PROBLEM), new concerns, strongest improvement, remaining weakest link, overall verdict compared with MMv1.
Critical checks on: polycentricity/epiocracy (R3), bootstrapping credibility (R4), POAATAD as advocacy-vs-resistance (R5), security dilemma resolution (R6), falsification timeframes (R7), Section 7 tone (R7), dual framing separability (R8).
Synthesis: scorecard table, consensus, remaining repairs, #AuditTheMath verdict change assessment, EDEN classification, comparison with MMv1 aggregate (26 BREACHes baseline).
AAA QuickRef updated with the re-review prompt (prompts table + toctree).