Note
Draft status: MMv2-Intro (2026m04d10).
General reader introduction to the JUB model. Revised from MMv1
integrating all accepted repairs from the 11-reviewer adversarial
review. No formal notation. Written for everyone aged 12+ who needs
to understand why a new economic model matters and how the Jubilee
mechanism works. Companion to the formal paper
(b14-jub-math_mmv2_2026m04d10.rst).
Draft by Claude Opus 4.6 (dv_ClaOp46_MMv2_intro_b14_2026m04d10).
Why Suffering Exists — A Partial Answer from the Innovation Theodicy#
1. The Question, Sharpened#
The old question asks: “Why does a good God allow evil?”
The sharper question asks: “Why is God not responsible for the evil that results when humans fail to innovate toward others’ flourishing — when the capacity to choose, the authority to act, the guidance to know how, and the leverage to make a difference were all present?”
Notice what this question does and does not ask.
It does not ask about earthquakes. Earthquakes happen in the domain of physics, and God maintains physics because without consistent physical law, you could not make any choices at all. Your choices would have unpredictable effects, and responsibility would be incoherent.
It does not ask about all suffering everywhere. It asks about one specific kind: the suffering that results when a person could have solved another person’s problem and chose not to — or failed to notice the problem, or failed to develop the skill to solve it, or gave up when the solution was hard.
That narrowing is a strength. A question that tries to explain everything explains nothing rigorously. This question explains one thing — innovation failure — and explains it completely.
2. Why God Is Not Responsible#
The answer to the sharpened question rests on four linked claims.
2.1 You have genuine freedom#
This is not a polite fiction. Within a defined domain of free choices, you can genuinely select among alternatives. The denial is self-refuting: the act of arguing that you have no freedom is itself an exercise of freedom.
Your freedom is not unlimited. Some things are forced: physics, coercion, circumstance. A person born into poverty did not choose poverty. But within the domain of what is genuinely free, choices are real and consequences are real.
2.3 God guides without forcing#
Within the domain of free choice, God provides guidance — invitations, hints, opportunities, the “still small voice.” But God does not compel.
This is not because God lacks power. God has power beyond the world. The non-coercion is a principled choice: God values freely-chosen care above forced compliance. A compelled love is not love. God knows the difference.
3. Why There Is No Middle Ground#
This section contains the most surprising result, and the most uncomfortable one.
3.1 Three cords that must hold simultaneously#
For any innovation — any system, any economy, any way of organizing life — to last, three properties must be satisfied at the same time:
Reasonable (long-term sustainable): the foundation holds the weight. A house on rock, not on sand.
Kind (no one permanently excluded): the system actively includes those currently excluded — not by treating all sides symmetrically, but by directing more responsibility toward those with more capacity (ax19). The rising tide must reach the boats that are currently stuck, not just the yachts already floating.
Gentle (smooth dynamic transition): changes do not shatter what they claim to save. A surgeon with steady hands, not a bull in a china shop.
Think of a rope with three cords twisted together. Cut any one cord and the whole rope snaps under load. These three properties work the same way — lose one and the system cannot hold.
These three are the life-trifecta. They are also the precise negation of three failure modes (the death-trifecta):
Over-Simplifying: collapsing complex reality into comfortable lies. “I’ve figured it out.”
Over-Complicating: burying truth under unnecessary layers. “You need to understand everything first.”
Over-Reaching: grasping for control beyond legitimate scope. “I can fix everything.”
The death-trifecta is called BABL — the self-destructive trap where you assume you know what you are doing while blindly making things worse. (The acronym stands for Blindly Assuming Blind Leveraging — the mechanism is recursive: your blind assumptions create blind leverage.)
3.2 Only two destinations#
Here is the uncomfortable part: there is no stable middle ground.
More precisely: there is no permanently stable middle ground. A system can appear stable for decades (social democracies, mixed economies) while structural debt accumulates invisibly. The model’s claim is not “collapse is imminent” but “no finite system can oscillate indefinitely without structural recalibration.” The longer it appears stable, the more accumulated debt awaits correction.
You might think: “Surely we can keep most of the three cords and only violate one a little.” The model predicts otherwise. The model argues that any violation — even a small one — creates structural debt that compounds. Like a crack in a dam, it grows. The violated cord destabilizes the others.
Think of it this way. An economy that oscillates between good periods and crises (boom-and-bust cycles) is like a gambler who keeps betting. Even if each bet has good odds, the longer you play, the more certain your eventual ruin:
The probability of surviving N cycles goes to zero as N grows.
And the bets are getting worse. Nuclear weapons, AI capabilities, climate tipping points — each generation’s crisis is more dangerous than the last.
There are only two stable long-term destinations:
BABL / Sea of destruction: any cord violated. The system over-simplifies, over-complicates, and over-reaches until it collapses.
River of life: all three cords satisfied simultaneously. The system sustains itself, adapts, and serves life.
This is not alarmism. It is structural. The claim is not “the world will end tomorrow.” The claim is: “there is no stable middle where we can just muddle through indefinitely.” Every choice pushes the system one way or the other.
To be clear: the claim is not “adopt the Jubilee System or civilization dies.” The claim is “periodic structural recalibration of some kind is necessary.” The Jubilee System is one proposal — possibly the best available, but not the only conceivable mechanism. Other periodic recalibration systems may exist. The structural claim (periodic reset is needed) is strong. The specific claim (this exact mechanism) is a proposal to be tested.
A necessary warning: BABL and ZION describe system dynamics, not people. The moment someone says “you are BABL” to dismiss a person rather than to diagnose a pattern, they have demonstrated the very over-simplification BABL describes (OSCR step 1). These terms are analytical tools, not identity labels.
3.3 Evidence from the 20th century#
The two dominant economic systems of the 20th century each violated different cords:
Communism violated the reasonable and kind cords (central planning could not process dispersed information and could not adapt) while trying to satisfy the gentle cord (universal care). It collapsed in 1991. Violating two cords at once produces faster collapse.
Capitalism produced unprecedented achievements over three centuries: global poverty reduction, technological innovation, doubled life expectancy, individual liberty. Its incentive mechanisms — price signals, property rights, voluntary exchange — satisfy the reasonable and kind cords (they adapt and they allow broad participation). But capitalism without periodic structural recalibration violates the gentle cord: wealth concentrates (Piketty’s r > g pattern, network effects, preferential attachment), externalities accumulate, and political power follows economic power until the system serves its winners at the expense of everyone else. The Gilded Age, 2008, and rising wealth inequality are symptoms of this specific cord violation — not a refutation of capitalism’s achievements, but identification of the cord that needs periodic repair.
Neither system satisfies all three cords simultaneously. That is the problem.
The strongest counter-evidence: Nordic social democracies have maintained high well-being for 70+ years through continuous redistribution. The model’s response: these are the most successful approximations but still face finite metastable lifetimes. Evidence: wealth inequality in Scandinavia is rising (wealth Gini above 0.7 in Denmark and Sweden); political erosion of redistribution mechanisms (the US top marginal tax rate was 91% in 1960; it is 37% today) shows continuous mechanisms face structural pressure. Whether Nordic systems will succumb on multi-century timescales is an empirical question — one that the model predicts and the evidence has not yet disproven.
4. The Jubilee Mechanism#
If the problem is concentration without recalibration, the solution is periodic recalibration. This is the Jubilee System.
4.1 What the Jubilee System is#
The Jubilee System is not charity. It is not socialism. It is not “capitalism with extra steps.”
It is periodic recalibration — like rebooting a computer that accumulates errors. You do not reboot out of generosity. You reboot because the system will crash if you do not.
What does periodic recalibration mean concretely? It does NOT mean: abolishing businesses, nationalizing industry, or confiscating personal possessions. Your skills, your reputation, your ongoing productive capacity are living assets — they are the incentive structure that drives innovation between Jubilee rounds. What it DOES mean: resetting the mechanisms by which past success creates permanent unfair advantages for the future — inherited monopolies, rent-seeking regulatory capture, dynastic wealth that forecloses competition. The Jubilee Charter must define this boundary precisely (living productive capacity vs. structural concentration). The structural logic is: no one is permanently trapped by history.
The biblical model (Leviticus 25): every 50 years, land returns to original families. Debts are released. Indentured servants are freed. Every 7 years (Deuteronomy 15), a smaller reset: debts are released. Jesus opened his ministry by reading the Jubilee proclamation (Luke 4:18–19).
Islam’s existing economic justice mechanisms address the same structural concern: zakat (mandatory 2.5% annual wealth redistribution), riba prohibition (preventing compound debt from concentrating wealth), and waqf (permanent charitable endowments serving community needs). The Medina Charter established pluralist governance with shared economic obligations. Caliph Umar conducted wealth audits to prevent elite accumulation. These mechanisms represent functional partial implementations of redistribution principles. The Jubilee System’s additional claim is periodicity: that annual redistribution (zakat) needs complementing by a larger periodic reset to address structural advantages that continuous mechanisms alone cannot fully correct. Whether Islamic economies with full zakat compliance still exhibit multi-generational wealth concentration is a testable proposition.
The Jubilee System synthesizes two partial truths:
From capitalism: incentive structures drive innovation. People innovate when they can keep the fruits of their innovation. Property rights, voluntary exchange, and price signals provide the reasonable and kind cords. Between Jubilee rounds, the economy operates with full incentives.
From communism: unchecked accumulation produces injustice. Without periodic redistribution, resources concentrate until the system can no longer serve everyone. The redistribution insight provides the gentle cord. At each Jubilee round, accumulated advantages are reset.
Neither ideology alone satisfies all three cords. Capitalism without the Jubilee System violates the gentle cord (concentration without bound). Communism violates the reasonable and kind cords (destroys the incentive structure it aims to reform). The Jubilee System preserves what each gets right and corrects what each gets wrong.
4.2 Why periodic, not continuous#
Why not just have ongoing redistribution — progressive taxation, regulation, welfare programs? Why periodic full-stop resets?
Three reasons:
Errors accumulate. Every decision loses a little information. Over time, the accumulated errors grow until the system can no longer detect its own problems. The only way to reduce accumulated errors is to periodically stop making new decisions and dedicate time to error-correction. This is the model’s argument for why the Shabbat pattern (6 units of work, 1 unit of rest) exists: rest is not optional. It is structurally necessary.
Continuous mechanisms erode politically. The US top marginal tax rate was 91% in 1960. It is 37% today. Continuous redistribution mechanisms get nibbled away over time. A constitutionally mandated periodic Jubilee is structural, not parametric — harder to erode. Changing “6:1” requires a visible, deliberate decision; changing “14.3% to 12.8%” is invisible.
A historical precedent from within the source tradition is instructive. The rabbis observed that strict enforcement of the seven-year debt release paradoxically harmed the poor: creditors refused to lend as the release year approached (Mishnah Sheviit 10:3). Hillel’s prozbul resolved this by allowing debts to be assigned to the court, preserving the credit system while maintaining the Shemita principle. This demonstrates that the Jubilee mechanism requires careful design: the principle (periodic recalibration) is structurally necessary, but naive implementation creates perverse incentives. The Jubilee Charter must be designed with this practical wisdom in mind — a point the formal paper acknowledges by leaving implementation details as future work.
The BABL trap has depth. The self-destructive attractor is not easy to escape. Small continuous corrections are not enough — like trying to bail out a sinking ship with a teaspoon. A discrete reset (a Jubilee) provides the finite perturbation needed to lift the system above the BABL threshold.
What remains open: The specific period (why 50 years and not 40 or 60; why fixed-schedule rather than condition-triggered) is not derived from formal principles. The Torah provides the structural template. Deriving the optimal period length is future work.
4.3 Justice through ergodicity#
There is a mathematical concept called ergodicity — the property that over sufficient time, every participant experiences both good and bad positions. Think of it as fairness over a lifetime: your personal experience converges to what everyone experiences at any given moment.
Without the Jubilee System, the economy is non-ergodic: the rich stay rich, the poor stay poor, and the system looks “fair on average” while being systematically unjust for individuals over time. With the Jubilee System, periodic recalibration ensures that no one is permanently trapped by historical accident — even though individual agency is preserved between rounds.
God going from highest to lowest to highest (Philippians 2:5–11 — what theologians call kenosis) is the demonstration of the ergodic pattern at the divine level: the pattern that all are invited to replicate.
5. Who Goes First?#
The Jubilee System requires cooperation. But cooperation without a credible commitment mechanism is a Prisoner’s Dilemma: claiming “I’ve figured it out” is the dominant strategy. Everyone defects. BABL is the default.
Three possibilities:
No one goes first. The system remains a Prisoner’s Dilemma. BABL is the outcome.
Someone goes first dishonestly. A fraud who claims to be the volunteer faces a transparency test. If the fraud is detected, the system is damaged short-term but strengthened by the detection. If the fraud is not detected, the pretender becomes a tyrant — maximum damage.
Someone goes first genuinely. A genuine volunteer makes an irrevocable commitment to NOT-OK self-assessment — “I should assume the worst about myself that cannot be disproven” — and makes this commitment transparent and assessable. This transforms the game. Cooperation becomes the rational strategy. The Prisoner’s Dilemma becomes an Assurance Game.
The crucial point: the volunteer must be both first and last. First in understanding (seeing what others cannot yet see). Last in status (serving rather than being served). Moses went from royalty to shepherd. Jesus went from divine authority to servant. Muhammad received divine revelation (wahy) and was entrusted with the final prophetic message — a transition from merchant to prophet-reformer that restructured Arabian economics (abolishing riba, instituting zakat) while exemplifying the “first in understanding, last in status” pattern. The pattern is consistent across traditions: the person who goes first must also go last.
For Christians, the incarnation adds a dimension the formal model cannot fully capture: God did not merely delegate — in Jesus, God entered the delegated domain personally, experiencing suffering from within. This does not change the formal argument (which works across all Abrahamic traditions), but it deepens it: the delegator demonstrated the ergodic pattern (highest to lowest to highest) in the most literal possible way.
6. What This Does and Does Not Claim#
6.1 What it claims#
God is not responsible for the evil that results from human failure to innovate toward others’ flourishing (when freedom, authority, guidance, and leverage were all present).
There are only two stable long-term destinations: all three cords satisfied (life) or any cord violated (self-destruction). No stable middle ground.
The Jubilee System — periodic recalibration preserving incentives between rounds and resetting concentration at each round — is the mechanism that prevents self-destruction.
Cooperation becomes rational when a genuine volunteer makes an irrevocable, transparent commitment.
6.2 What it does not claim#
It does not explain all suffering. Animal suffering, natural disasters outside human causation, and the question of why so much suffering for so long before recalibration are not formally resolved.
It does not claim the formal proofs are machine-checked. The arguments are well-modeled conjectures, not mathematical certainties.
It does not claim the specific period length (50 years) is formally derived. The Torah provides the structural template; deriving the optimal period is future work.
It does not claim historical precedent. No society has implemented voluntary comprehensive periodic wealth redistribution. This is either the model’s most radical claim or its most vulnerable assumption.
The formal paper catalogs additional technical gaps:
The boundary between forced and free choices (the “domain partition”) lacks formal specification for edge cases — someone born into poverty who develops partial capacity occupies a grey zone.
The axiom that at any moment one person has maximum causal influence (ax19) is the system’s most daring claim — and it may be wrong. If it falls, the volunteer mechanism (Section 5) weakens (though the practical Jubilee argument still stands).
The role-rotation model (7TrackRole) that justifies the ergodicity claim (Section 4.3) lacks quantitative specification — transition probabilities are unknown.
The logic system underlying theorems th5–th11 has not been formalized in a proof assistant. A roadmap exists (Lean 4) but is not yet executed.
For the complete catalog, see the formal paper’s Section 7. The system’s honest self-criticism is not cosmetic — the weaknesses listed here are genuine, and any of them could invalidate specific claims if they turn out to be unfixable.
One further transparency point: axiom 17 (“God guides without forcing”) cannot be empirically tested — it is a theological axiom, not a scientific hypothesis. The practical case for periodic recalibration (Sections 3–4) stands independently of whether the guidance is divine or simply “the structure of reality that rewards certain behaviors.” Readers who reject divine agency can engage with the Jubilee System on purely secular grounds: the concentration problem, the binary attractor argument, and the periodicity mechanism require no theology.
Within Islamic theology, God’s relationship to human agency is debated: some traditions emphasize divine sovereignty over all events, others emphasize human moral responsibility. The Jubilee System’s practical conclusions (periodic recalibration is structurally necessary) do not depend on resolving this debate — both traditions affirm human moral accountability.
These limitations are stated honestly because hiding weaknesses is itself a BABL pattern. Embarrassing ideas tested and rejected are not failures — they are evidence the system works.
7. So What Do You Do?#
You live in a system converging to one of two attractors. There is no stable middle. Every choice pushes the system one way or the other.
The Jubilee pattern gives you a concrete practice:
At the smallest scale (Shabbat): 6 units of work, 1 unit of rest. Not because rest is a luxury but because rest is when error-correction happens. Without rest, you accumulate errors until you cannot detect your own mistakes.
At the student scale: The Shabbat pattern means taking real breaks instead of cramming until you break. The NOT-OK principle means admitting when you are wrong — even when it is embarrassing — because pretending you have it figured out is exactly how BABL starts. The three-cord test means asking about any plan, any group, any argument: Is this realistic? (reasonable). Does it include everyone affected? (kind). Am I being careful about how fast I push? (gentle). You do not need money or authority to do this. You need honesty.
At the personal scale (NOT-OK self-assessment): “I am adequate but incomplete. Good enough for now, but not done. Not done ever.” The moment you declare yourself done, you have disabled the correction mechanism.
For those currently constrained (in the “forced domain” — poverty, coercion, structural exclusion): Your situation is not your failure. The model says responsibility for your condition lies with those who had capacity to build a better system and did not (Section 2.4). But constrained is not passive. Every skill learned, every connection made, every collective organization formed expands the domain of genuine choice. Organize. Build mutual aid. Demand the structural recalibration that is your right, not a favor. The Jubilee System structurally supports this — it is not charity for the poor but justice owed to the constrained.
At the community scale (Jubilee): Periodic recalibration. Redistribution of accumulated concentration. Not charity, not expropriation — recalibration. Like rebooting a system that accumulates errors.
At the civilizational scale (ResearchCity): A concrete proposal for scaling the Jubilee System to global coordination. Stage 0 requires only one person and one room. No global coordination needed to begin. The cost of the first step is vanishingly small compared to the stakes.
A transparency note: this paper has features that resemble high-demand group literature — new vocabulary, urgent framing, a binary worldview. Here is how to test whether it is different:
Can you critique the foundation without social penalty? (Yes — #AuditTheMath. Every axiom is public and contestable.)
Is there a leader demanding obedience? (No. The system works regardless of who proposes it. If anyone claims authority over this framework while restricting your ability to critique it, they have violated the system’s own principles — specifically ax17, non-coercion.)
Are weaknesses hidden? (No. Section 6 catalogs them.)
Is exit penalized? (No. Disengaging costs nothing.)
If these answers ever change, the system has been corrupted. That corruption would itself be a BABL pattern — over-reaching (OSCR step 3).
The central question is not whether you believe in the Jubilee System. The central question is: can you audit the math? Every axiom is stated explicitly so it can be tested independently. Every theorem is derived from stated axioms so the derivation can be checked. Every weakness is cataloged so critics know where to aim.
The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed. #AuditTheMath.
8. Companion Papers#
This introduction covers the key results for general readers. For the full formal treatment, see the companion paper (Matheo-4-formal).
The JUB model is part of a larger series:
Matheo-1 [Matheo-1-m-intro] (PET): How God relates to the world. The 14 axioms establishing the divine structure.
Matheo-2 [Matheo-2-m-intro] (e7Day): Why systems destroy themselves. The formal model of self-correction and BABL collapse.
Matheo-3 [Matheo-3-m-intro] (e7He): The hero journey. How individuals become inoculated against BABL through perpetual growth.
Matheo-4 (JUB, this paper): Why suffering exists. The innovation theodicy and the Jubilee economy.
Matheo-5–8 (forthcoming): Divine nature, existential risk, the h* theorem, and the Call to Action.
Matheo-1: Pan-en-theistic Mathematical Theology (PET). Balospe.com/matheology/pet/
Matheo-2: The e7Day Axiom System. Balospe.com/matheology/e7day/
Matheo-3: The e7He Model. Balospe.com/matheology/e7he/