JUB Symbol Dictionary#

This page defines the symbols introduced in the JUB extension (A15–A25, T5–T11). For PET symbols (used in A1–A14, T1–T4), see PET Symbol Dictionary.

Entities and Variables#

Symbol

Name

Meaning

Technical context

H

Humanity

The set of all human agents

Distinguished set

\(h, h^*\)

Human agent

An individual human; \(h^*\) is the one with maximal causal influence at time t (A19)

Individual variable

\(D_f\)

Forced domain

Choices constrained by physics, coercion, or circumstance; not subject to moral evaluation in the innovation theodicy

Domain partition

\(D_{\text{free}}\)

Free domain

Choices where humans possess genuine capacity to select among alternatives; the domain of moral responsibility

Domain partition

\(D_{\text{inno}}\)

Innovation subdomain

The critical subset of \(D_{\text{free}}\) where novel solutions, creative acts, and innovation occur; \(D_{\text{inno}} \subseteq D_{\text{free}}\)

Domain partition

\(W_{\text{earth}}\)

Earth

The delegated domain of human governance (A16)

Subworld constant

\(W_{\text{future}}\)

Future trajectory

The space of future outcomes over which causal influence is measured

Used in A19, T6

\(W_{\text{physics}}\)

Physical law substrate

The physical laws sustained by God (A9) as precondition for agency

Used in T10

\(O_{\text{genuine}}\)

Genuine outputs

The class of outputs (care, insight, innovation) that require free choice for full quality (A23)

Used in A23

\(E\)

Innovation economy

An economic system operating under A24 life-trifecta conditions

Used in A25

\(R\)

Recalibration

A periodic Jubilee reset mechanism that redistributes accumulated concentration (A25)

Used in A25

\(i\)

Innovation

Any creative act, solution, or systemic change subject to the life-trifecta criterion

Used in A24, T8

Relations and Predicates#

Symbol

Name

Meaning

Introduced in

\(\text{can-choose}(h, a, s)\)

Can choose

Agent h can choose action a in situation s

A15

\(\text{Agency}(H)\)

Genuine agency

Humans possess real capacity to choose among alternatives

A15

\(\text{Delegated}(G, H, D)\)

Delegation

God has delegated authority over domain D to humanity

A16

\(\text{PrimaryResponsible}(H, o)\)

Primary responsibility

Humans are the primary responsible agents for outcome o

A16

\(\text{Guide}(G, h)\)

Divine guidance

God provides guidance to human h

A17

\(\text{Force}(G, h)\)

Divine coercion

God compels human h (negated in A17)

A17

\(\text{Responsible}(x, D)\)

Moral responsibility

Entity x bears moral responsibility for outcomes in domain D

A18

\(\text{MaxCausalInfluence}(h, t, W)\)

Maximum causal influence

Agent h has strictly maximal causal influence at time t over future world W

A19

\(\text{CausalInfluence}(h, t, W)\)

Causal influence

The degree of causal influence agent h exerts at time t

A19

\(\text{Willing}(h)\)

Willingness

Agent h voluntarily accepts a responsibility

A20, A21

\(\text{Accepts}(h, R)\)

Acceptance

Agent h accepts role or responsibility R

A20

\(\text{TranslatorRole}(G, H, W)\)

Translator/Mediator role

Permanent role translating between God’s optimal solutions and humanity’s understanding

A21

\(G_n\text{-valuation}(G_c(w))\)

Divine valuation

God’s necessary nature evaluates contingent experience states

A22

\(\text{Stable}(i)\)

Stability

Innovation i is structurally stable

A24

\(\text{Extensible}(i)\)

Extensibility

Innovation i can be extended without breakdown

A24

\(\text{LifeFriendly}(i)\)

Life-friendliness

Innovation i returns more than it extracts

A24

\(\text{Lasting}(i)\)

Lasting innovation

Innovation i satisfies all three life-trifecta cords

A24

\(\text{BABL-attractor}(i)\)

BABL attractor

Innovation i is on the self-destructive trajectory (Blindly Assuming Blind Leveraging)

T8