The Innovation Theodicy: Why God Is Not Responsible for Human Innovation Failure#
If God contains the world (ax1), sustains it (ax9), is present to every part of it (ax8), and experiences what happens in it (ax11/th4) – then why does God permit the evil that results when humans fail to innovate toward the flourishing of others? The PET axiom system’s Group VI extension (ax15–ax25) provides a formal answer. This page tells the argument as a connected story rather than a list of axioms.
Note
Group VI (ax15–ax25) and theorems th5–th11 are proposed and in development. They have not undergone the same iterative poster-review process as ax1–ax14 (iv_LLoL_PPv1r1p1). The argument below is intellectually complete but should be treated as a working draft pending that review.
The Question#
The classical theodicy question asks: why does a good, powerful God permit evil? The PET system’s innovation theodicy sharpens this to a specific form:
Why is God not responsible for the evil that results from human failure to innovate toward others’ flourishing – when the capacity to choose (ax15), delegated authority over the Earth (ax16), non-coercive divine guidance (ax17), and causal leverage (ax19) were all present?
This is not a question about earthquakes or animal suffering. It is a question about the evil that follows when a human who could have acted to solve another’s problem – and who had divine guidance pointing toward the solution – chose not to. The failure to innovate when innovation was available is the specific evil this theodicy addresses.
The Foundation: Delegation and Genuine Agency#
The argument begins with four interlocking claims about the relationship between God and human agents.
Humans possess genuine agency (ax15). Within a defined domain of free choices (D_free), humans can genuinely choose among alternatives. This is not a polite fiction – it is the load-bearing axiom of the entire theodicy. If human agency is illusory, responsibility cannot be localized to humans, and the theodicy collapses. The denial of ax15 is performatively self-refuting: the act of arguing against genuine agency is itself an exercise of genuine agency.
God delegated governance of Earth to humans (ax16). Humans are not instruments wielded by a divine carpenter. They are delegated authorities – more like a governor to whom a sovereign has genuinely entrusted a province. The delegation is real: God does not routinely override human decisions within the delegated domain.
God guides without forcing (ax17). Within D_free and its critical innovation subdomain D_inno, God provides guidance – invitations, hints, opportunities, the “still small voice” (1 Kings 19:12) – but does not compel. This non-coercion is not a limitation of divine power (ax3 and ax5 establish that God has power beyond the world). It is a principled choice, explained by ax22: God values freely-chosen care above forced compliance. A compelled love is not love; God knows the difference.
Responsibility localizes to the agent (ax18). When a genuinely free agent has been delegated authority over a domain and has access to guidance, moral responsibility for outcomes in that domain rests with the agent, not the delegator. This may be derivable as a theorem from ax15–ax17 (pending formal grounding of the responsibility predicate), but the logical structure is clear: delegation (ax16) + genuine agency (ax15) + non-coercive guidance (ax17) + no divine forcing (ax17) implies that the human agent bears responsibility for outcomes within the delegated domain, and God does not.
The formal result is th5 – Divine Non-Responsibility: God is exonerated for the evil that results from human failure to pursue life-trifecta-compliant innovation in D_inno. God remained present (ax8), sustaining (ax9), affected by outcomes (ax11/th4), and offering guidance (ax17). The human agent – genuinely free, genuinely delegated, genuinely guided – chose otherwise.
Who Bears the Responsibility: The Leviathan Chain#
th5 distributes responsibility to humanity collectively. But responsibility is not distributed equally. ax19 – Probabilistic Causal Concentration asserts that at any moment t, there exists a unique individual h* whose causal influence over humanity’s future strictly exceeds that of every other person.
This is a bold claim, stated as the null hypothesis: exact equivalence in effect between any two humans (identical probability distributions over all future outcomes) is a measure-zero event in any realistic causal network. The burden of proof lies with anyone claiming exact equivalence, not with the uniqueness claim. Two people may pursue identical strategies, but the probability that their total downstream effects are exactly equal is vanishingly small – especially in the innovation domain, where invisible combinatorial epistemic reach (what a person can see that others cannot) produces more divergence than visible network power.
Three critical nuances about h*:
h* need not know they are h*. Judas at the moment of betrayal was arguably h* without knowing the cosmic significance of his choice.
h* is not permanent. The Peter/Judas transition in the Gospels shows rapid shift of the maximal-causal-influence position from one person to another.
h* need not hold visible power. A person with deep cross-domain understanding who makes a single key connection may have more causal influence than a visible leader with a large organization.
The Abraham/Sodom negotiation (Gen 18:22–33) is the most illuminating illustration. God did not stop the negotiation at 10 righteous people. Abraham stopped. The possibility that Sodom could have been saved if Abraham had pressed to 1 – possibly discovering that the condition for saving the city was himself – is hard to refute. This is the innovation gap hidden by nothing: the next step was available, was not taken, and the consequences cascaded.
th6 – Causal Concentration formalizes this: at each moment, h* bears maximum causal responsibility whether or not they are aware of it.
God’s Posture: Urgent Invitation#
If God cares about outcomes (ax9 + ax11 + th4), cannot and will not compel (ax17), and a uniquely positioned h* exists at each moment (ax19) – what is God doing?
th7 – God Seeks a Volunteer derives the answer: God’s posture is necessarily one of urgent non-coercive invitation. God is seeking a human willing to voluntarily accept the innovation responsibility that would change the world’s trajectory.
This seeking takes two forms:
Transient volunteers (ax20): God seeks humans who will voluntarily take up specific D_inno responsibilities at specific moments. Moses at the burning bush (Exod 3:4–10) is the archetype – called, not conscripted. The key moment is Moses turning aside to look (Exod 3:3): the turning aside is the moment of voluntary acceptance that ax20 describes.
A permanent mediator (ax21): God seeks one human willing to permanently translate between God’s optimal solutions and humanity’s current understanding – a role whose output quality depends entirely on it being freely chosen. The mediator must be willing to go first (having the epistemic reach to see optimal solutions before others) while willing to go last (serving rather than being served – Mk 10:45, “the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve”).
The combination of urgency (God is affected by outcomes and is actively sustaining a world where suffering continues) with non-coercion (God will not override genuine agency) produces the characteristic posture of the biblical God: a God who calls, invites, pleads, warns, demonstrates – but does not compel.
What Right Innovation Looks Like: The Life-Trifecta#
If the theodicy question is about failure to innovate rightly, what does right innovation look like?
ax24 – Life-Trifecta of Lasting Innovation provides the criterion. Innovation lasts if and only if it simultaneously satisfies three properties:
Stable (not oversimplifying): the foundation is robust enough to bear the weight of what is built upon it.
Extensible (not overcomplicating): the design can adapt to new conditions without requiring a complete rebuild.
Life-friendly (not overreaching): the innovation serves life rather than extracting from it.
Three formulations of the same trifecta capture its scope: ethical (gentle / kind / reasonable), engineering (stable / extensible / life-friendly), and negative (not oversimplifying / not overcomplicating / not overreaching).
Violating any one cord places the innovation on the BABL attractor – Blindly Assuming Blind Leveraging. BABL is the self-destructive state where agents blindly assume their leverage is benign while blindly leveraging their assumptions. The violated cord creates compounding structural debt that destabilizes the remaining cords.
th8 – Binary Attractors (informal alias: T-Inno) formalizes the consequence: innovation exists in exactly two long-term states, with no stable middle ground:
River of life (all three cords satisfied): the self-stabilizing attractor. Ezek 47, Rev 22:1–2, Jn 7:38.
BABL / Sea of destruction (any cord violated): the self-destructive attractor. Mt 18:6 – the millstone around the neck that drags the system into the sea.
th8 is the first empirically testable theorem in the PET system. Soviet communism violated the stable and extensible cords (central planning could not process dispersed information, could not adapt) and collapsed in 1991. Unregulated capitalism violates the life-friendly cord (Gilded Age labor conditions, 2008 financial crisis, accelerating wealth concentration) and is accumulating structural debt toward BABL cascade. No historical example of a system violating one cord indefinitely without collapse has been identified.
Bezalel (Exod 31:2–5) is the positive Torah archetype: filled with wisdom (stable foundation), understanding (extensible application), and knowledge (life-friendly execution) – three qualities simultaneously, matching the three cords.
Keeping the Engine Running: Jubilee Recalibration#
Even initially life-trifecta-compliant innovation economies accumulate concentration over time: winners reinvest advantages, opportunity drifts toward those who already have it, and the innovation frontier becomes inaccessible to those without accumulated resources.
ax25 – Jubilee Recalibration addresses this: innovation economies need periodic recalibration to redistribute concentration, reset opportunity access, and prevent structural debt from compounding to BABL-cascade threshold. The biblical Jubilee (Lev 25: every 50 years, land returns to original families, debts are released) and the nested Shemita cycle (Deut 15: every 7 years, debts are released) provide the Torah instantiation. Jesus opens his ministry by reading the Jubilee proclamation (Lk 4:18–19, citing Isa 61).
The Jubilee is the synthesis point between two partial truths that the 20th century’s dominant economic ideologies each captured:
Capitalism’s insight: incentive structures drive innovation. The game between Jubilee rounds rewards effort and creativity, preserving the stable and extensible cords.
Communism’s insight: unchecked accumulation produces injustice. Periodic redistribution prevents permanent concentration, preserving the life-friendly cord.
Neither ideology alone satisfies the life-trifecta. Capitalism without Jubilee violates life-friendly; communism violates stable and extensible by destroying the incentive structure it aims to reform. For the full analysis, see Jubilee: Beyond Capitalism and Communism.
th9 – Social Ergodicity (informal alias: T-Ergodicity) derives the justice consequence: God ensures universal justice through system-level ergodicity enforcement – the property that over sufficient time, every participant visits both highest and lowest positions in the causal hierarchy – without overriding individual agency at any moment. Jubilee recalibration (ax25) is the mechanism; the divine kenosis (Phil 2:5–11, God going from highest to lowest to highest) is the demonstration that the pattern works from every starting point.
What This Theodicy Does and Does Not Claim#
What it claims:
God is not responsible for the evil that results from human failure to innovate toward others’ flourishing within D_inno, when genuine agency, delegated authority, non-coercive guidance, and causal leverage were all present (th5).
At each moment, a unique individual (h*) bears maximal causal responsibility for the trajectory of the future, as a null hypothesis (th6).
God’s posture toward humanity is one of urgent non-coercive invitation, seeking willing volunteers for both transient and permanent roles (th7).
Right innovation requires simultaneously satisfying the life-trifecta; all other trajectories converge to BABL (th8).
System-level justice is achieved through Jubilee recalibration without overriding individual agency (th9).
God’s sustaining of physical law is a precondition for agency, not a cause of harm when physics is weaponized by an agent (th10, informal alias: T-Physics).
Genuine stakes are provided by temporal irreversibility and Jubilee windows; biological death is sufficient but not necessary (th11, informal alias: T-Finitude).
What it does not claim:
It does not address animal suffering. ax15–ax25 concern human agency and human choices. Animal suffering falls outside D_free/D_inno and is not addressed by the current framework. This is a genuine gap.
It does not address natural evil outside human causation (earthquakes, disease) except to note that ax6 (contingency of the world) establishes temporal finitude, and that an increasing range of natural evils becomes addressable through innovation as human capacity grows.
It does not fully resolve the question of suffering duration and intensity. th9 (T-Ergodicity) establishes that no one is permanently trapped, and the Jubilee mechanism ensures eventual recalibration. But the question of why so much suffering for so long before recalibration is not formally closed.
It does not claim that ax15–ax25 have been reviewed to the same standard as ax1–ax14. The poster review process (iv_LLoL_PPv1r1p1) covered ax1–ax14; the Group VI extension is proposed and in development.
The innovation theodicy is specific by design. It addresses one form of evil – the form that results from human failure to use available capacity, guidance, and leverage to innovate toward the flourishing of others – and addresses it completely within its scope. Other forms of evil require other arguments, some of which may build on the same axiom system but are not yet developed.
Cross-Reference Table: Inline Formulations to Canonical Sources#
Note
Phase 1b readiness note (2026-03-21): This page tells the innovation theodicy as a connected narrative. The inline axiom/theorem formulations below are narrative summaries, not canonical statements. The canonical formal versions live in the source files listed in this table. During Phase 2, revisions to axioms/theorems in response to critiques will be made only in the canonical sources. This page will be rewritten at the end of Phase 3/4 to reflect all insights gained, but until then, readers should treat the canonical sources as authoritative.
Decision needed (LLoL): Some narrative formulations below contain substantive claims (marked with [N]) that go slightly beyond or differ from the canonical formal statements. LLoL to decide during the final rewrite whether these elaborations should be back-ported to the canonical sources or simplified to match.
Item |
Narrative Formulation (this page) |
Canonical Source |
Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
ax1 |
“God contains the world” (line 1) |
Brief reference only; no drift risk |
|
ax3, ax5 |
“God has power beyond the world” (lines 68–69) |
Brief reference only |
|
ax6 |
“contingency of the world” (line 287) |
Brief reference only |
|
ax8 |
“present to every part of it” (line 5) |
Brief reference only |
|
ax9 |
“sustains it” (line 4) |
Brief reference only |
|
ax11/th4 |
“experiences what happens in it” (line 5) |
Brief reference only |
|
ax15 [N] |
Full paragraph: “genuine agency” + “performatively self-refuting” argument (lines 51–57) |
Narrative adds “performatively self-refuting” argument not in formal axiom |
|
ax16 [N] |
“delegated authorities – more like a governor” analogy (lines 59–63) |
Narrative adds governor analogy; canonical uses formal delegation predicate |
|
ax17 [N] |
“still small voice” + “compelled love is not love” (lines 65–71) |
Narrative weaves in ax22 rationale; canonical ax17 is standalone |
|
ax18 [N] |
“may be derivable as a theorem from ax15–ax17” (lines 73–79) |
Narrative questions axiom vs. theorem status; canonical treats as axiom |
|
ax19 [N] |
Extensive null-hypothesis framing + Abraham/Sodom illustration (lines 93–124) |
Narrative is significantly more detailed than formal statement |
|
ax20 |
“transient volunteers” + Moses at burning bush (lines 144–148) |
Narrative aligns with canonical; adds Exodus reference |
|
ax21 [N] |
“permanent mediator” + “go first/go last” + Mk 10:45 (lines 151–156) |
Narrative adds directional paradox not in formal statement |
|
ax22 |
“God values freely-chosen care above forced compliance” (line 69) |
Brief reference embedded in ax17 discussion |
|
ax24 [N] |
Life-trifecta: stable/extensible/life-friendly + three formulations (lines 171–183) |
Narrative adds “ethical” formulation (gentle/kind/reasonable) |
|
ax25 [N] |
Jubilee + capitalism/communism synthesis (lines 222–244) |
Narrative extensively develops economic argument; canonical is formal |
|
th5 |
“Divine Non-Responsibility” (lines 82–86) |
Summary aligns with canonical |
|
th6 |
“Causal Concentration” (lines 126–127) |
Brief; aligns |
|
th7 |
“God Seeks a Volunteer” (lines 137–139) |
Aligns |
|
th8 [N] |
“Binary Attractors” + BABL description + empirical examples (lines 191–207) |
Narrative includes empirical claims (Soviet, Gilded Age) subject to C2 critique |
|
th9 |
“Social Ergodicity” + divine kenosis link (lines 247–254) |
Narrative adds Phil 2:5–11 theological connection |
|
th10 |
One-line summary (lines 275–276) |
Brief; aligns |
|
th11 |
One-line summary (lines 277–279) |
Brief; aligns |
Items marked with [N] contain narrative elaborations that go beyond the canonical formal statement. These are flagged for LLoL’s review when this page is rewritten after Phase 3/4. No information should be lost in the rewrite — the elaborations should either be (a) incorporated into the canonical source or (b) retained in the narrative with explicit cross-references.