Matheo-b14 — JUB, innovation theodicy & the Jubilee economy#
JUB extends PET into innovation dynamics: why one kind of suffering rests with free agents rather than God, why economies tend toward one of two attractors, and how periodic recalibration (a Jubilee System) offers an escape.
How to use: The files below are MockupModels = MM. Their maturity approximates that of a newborn baby that still has a lot of growing up and surviving to do before it can leave its current helpless state by growing into someone who can do “useful” things. This baby feeds on constructive criticism; flattery is like sugar: nice but mostly useless; killing a baby is easy, raising it to become a responsible adult is hard. LLoL got these files so far. Now LLoL has to pass on the baton in this global race. To raise a responsible mathematical theology takes a world. Nowadays it takes a global village to raise a responsible child. Neither can succeed without the other. Hence, LLoL calls to #AuditTheMath, either as a participant or expert contributor or by buying in as a Select Stadion Backer to support those who work on this monumental task.
The JUB Model: Innovation Theodicy and the Jubilee Economy#
Broader Significance
The JUB model is a formal axiom system that ties together two old questions: why suffering exists if God is good, and why economies destroy themselves. It adds 11 axioms (JUB.ax15–ax25) to the PET panentheistic foundation, partitions human action into forced, free, and innovation domains, and builds from them a formal innovation theodicy together with a Jubilee-System recalibration mechanism.
From these axioms it derives 7 theorems. Among them: a theodicy that localizes responsibility for innovation failure to human agents rather than to God; a (conjectured) claim that innovation trajectories converge to one of two attractors — self-destruction (BABL) or a river of life — with no stable middle ground; a Jubilee-System mechanism (ax25) that attempts to combine capitalism’s incentives with communism’s redistribution insight; and a game-theoretic shift from a Prisoner’s Dilemma to an Assurance Game. The derivations are semi-formal, not machine-checked.
The model addresses only evil arising from human innovation failure — roughly 20–30% of the evidential challenge; natural evil and animal suffering are explicitly out of scope. The period length (50) is taken from the Torah, not derived. The authors register the whole as well-modeled empirical conjecture and catalog its weaknesses so critics know where to aim. The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed.
Abstract
Why does suffering exist if God is good? Why do economic systems destroy themselves? This paper presents the JUB model — 11 axioms (JUB.ax15–JUB.ax25) extending the PET panentheistic foundation Matheo-b11 through a domain partition of human action (D_f / D_free / D_inno), a formal innovation theodicy, and a Jubilee-System economic recalibration mechanism.
The system yields 7 theorems (JUB.th5–JUB.th11). The principal results are: (1) a formal theodicy localizing responsibility for innovation failure to human agents, not God (JUB.th5, Divine Non-Responsibility); (2) a proof that innovation trajectories converge to exactly one of two attractors — BABL (self-destruction) or river of life (all three life-trifecta cords satisfied) — with no stable middle ground (JUB.th8, Binary Attractors, conjecture); (3) a Jubilee-System recalibration mechanism (JUB.ax25) that synthesizes capitalism’s incentive structures with communism’s redistribution insight; (4) a social ergodicity guarantee through periodic recalibration without overriding individual agency (JUB.th9); and (5) a game-theoretic derivation transforming a Prisoner’s Dilemma into an Assurance Game through irrevocable NOT-OK commitment (via Matheo-b13 e7He.th6, Commitment Trichotomy).
The periodicity argument for JUB.ax25 draws on error-accumulation dynamics from Matheo-b12 (e7Day.th5 Rest Necessity: cumulative noise grows without bound; only periodic full-stop consolidation reduces it below threshold) and Schelling-point coordination theory (discrete ratios resist erosion under political pressure). The specific period length (7 × 7 + 1 = 50) is not formally derived; it is the Torah’s structural template, and deriving optimal periodicity is future work.
This paper addresses evil arising from human innovation failure — approximately 20–30% of the evidential challenge. Natural evil, animal suffering, and non-innovation-related human suffering are explicitly outside this paper’s scope (see Known Weaknesses, Section 7).
Epistemic register: well-modeled empirical conjecture. Resolution grading: 0% Proven, 26% Semi-formal, 63% Plausible, 11% Asserted. The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed. #AuditTheMath.
For a non-technical introduction, see the companion introductory paper Matheo-b14. For the Call to Action, see Matheo-b18.
Why Suffering Exists — A Partial Answer from the Innovation Theodicy#
Broader Significance
Why does suffering exist? This paper offers a partial answer in plain language. It does not ask the comfortable, mysterious version of the question — it asks the sharp one: why is God not responsible for the harm that follows when humans, given genuine freedom, delegated authority, non-coercive guidance, and real causal leverage, fail to innovate toward the flourishing of others? The proposed answer is uncomfortable: suffering of this kind exists because humanity has genuine freedom and is not yet using it well enough. God guides, invites, and sustains, but does not force — and responsibility follows freedom.
The paper then argues a structural claim: no economy can oscillate indefinitely. The system converges toward one of exactly two destinations — self-destruction when any one of three cords (reasonable, kind, gentle) is violated, or sustained life when all three hold at once. Capitalism and communism each cut a different cord. The Jubilee System is offered as a recalibration mechanism — periodic resets that preserve incentives between rounds and release accumulated concentration at each round — so that no one stays permanently trapped by historical accident.
Written for everyone aged 12 and up, this is the general-reader introduction to the formal JUB paper (Matheo-b14). It deliberately explains only one kind of suffering and presents a well-modeled conjecture, not a proof; the formal paper catalogs its own weaknesses. The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed.
Abstract
Suffering has a partial, actionable explanation. For one specific kind of suffering — the harm that follows when humans fail to innovate toward others’ flourishing despite having genuine freedom, delegated authority, non-coercive guidance, and real leverage — the responsibility rests with the free agent, not with the One who guided. This is the innovation theodicy. It deliberately does not explain all suffering (earthquakes, animal suffering, and more are out of scope, by design).
There is no stable middle ground. Any lasting system must hold three cords at once — reasonable (long-term sustainable), kind (no one permanently excluded), and gentle (smooth transitions). Cut any one and structural debt compounds until collapse (BABL). The system converges toward one of exactly two destinations: self-destruction, or sustained life. Capitalism and communism each violated a different cord.
Periodic recalibration is the proposed escape. The Jubilee System keeps full incentives between rounds and releases accumulated concentration at each round, so no one is permanently trapped by historical accident. Cooperation becomes rational when a genuine volunteer makes an irrevocable, transparent commitment. This is presented as a well-modeled conjecture for everyone aged 12+, not a machine-checked proof; the formal version is Matheo-b14, and every axiom is offered to be audited. #AuditTheMath
The Innovation Theodicy: A Formal Analysis of Evil from Human Innovation Failure#
Broader Significance
The problem of evil is the oldest and hardest challenge to belief in a good and powerful God. This paper offers the innovation theodicy — a formal proposal, derived from the JUB model (Matheo-b14) and extending the PET panentheistic framework (Matheo-b11), that locates one specific kind of evil. The claim is narrow on purpose: when genuine agency, delegated authority, non-coercive divine guidance, and real causal leverage were all present, God is not responsible for the evil that follows from human failure to innovate toward the flourishing of others. Animal suffering, natural evil, and why suffering lasts so long are left openly outside its scope.
The proposal is offered in conversation, not conquest. It engages four major Western theodicies (Plantinga, Hick, process theology, and classical theism) and seven traditions (Christian, Islamic, Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist, secular, and liberation), leaving each tradition’s practitioners to judge the result. The Jubilee System is read as theological ethics, not merely economics. Two ideas are new here: a Type/Item distinction that aims to hold divine necessity and divine responsiveness together, and a claim that the theodicy can be stated three equivalent ways — Love God, Love Neighbor, Love Systems.
Known theological weaknesses are listed plainly rather than hidden, and the hardest cases (such as the Shoah) are marked as possibly beyond what any formal system can answer. The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed.
Abstract
The problem of evil remains the most formidable intellectual challenge to theism. This paper presents the innovation theodicy — a formal theodicy derived from the JUB model (11 axioms, 7 theorems) extending the PET panentheistic framework Matheo-b11 — and positions it within the landscape of existing theodicies and the cross-traditional resources of seven major theological traditions.
The innovation theodicy claims that God is not responsible for the evil that results from human failure to innovate toward others’ flourishing, when genuine agency (ax15), delegated authority (ax16), non-coercive divine guidance (ax17), and causal leverage (ax19) were all present (th5, Divine Non-Responsibility). It is deliberately narrow: it addresses one specific form of evil — human innovation failure — and addresses it formally within its scope. Animal suffering, natural evil, and the question of suffering duration remain outside the current framework.
The paper attempts to engage four dominant Western theodicies (Plantinga’s Free Will Defense, Hick’s soul-making theodicy, process theodicy, and classical theism’s privatio boni) and seven cross-traditional perspectives (Christian, Islamic, Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist, secular, and liberation theology). Whether these engagements succeed is for each tradition’s practitioners to judge. The Jubilee System (ax25) is examined as theological ethics, not merely an economic mechanism.
Two contributions are new in this revision. First, the Type/Item resolution of the ax11/ax5 tension: Types (eternal plans, ideal trajectories) exist in G_n — necessary and unchanging; Items (selective realizations, actual choices) constitute G_c — contingent but not threatening to divine necessity. Second, the three-formulation computational equivalence: the innovation theodicy can be stated as Love God (theistic, solves motivation), Love Neighbor (humanistic, solves accessibility), or Love Systems (engineering, solves implementation) — three formulations as computationally equivalent as Turing machines and Lambda calculus, each making a different problem class tractable.
Known theological weaknesses are cataloged honestly. The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed.
The Jubilee Economy: An Economic and Game-Theoretic Analysis#
Broader Significance
Why do economies destroy themselves, and why does wealth keep concentrating despite centuries of redistribution policy? This paper reads the JUB model — 11 axioms extending a formal panentheistic foundation (Matheo-b11) — through an economic and game-theoretic lens. Its central structural argument is that innovation economies drift toward exactly one of two attractors: self-destructive concentration when any life-trifecta condition (stable, extensible, life-friendly) is violated, or self-sustaining growth when all three hold, with no stable middle ground.
The analysis is comparative and deliberately modest in method. It uses a finite-state Markov mixing argument for social ergodicity, a structural incentive analysis (not formal mechanism design) resting on a Jubilee-as-Democracy analogy, a principle-by-principle comparison with Elinor Ostrom’s eight design principles for enduring commons, a governance sketch with four anti-capture layers, and a Global South engagement in which periodic debt release is treated as constitutive rather than optional. It engages Piketty and his critics (Rognlie, Mankiw), Peters, Schelling, Buchanan and Tullock, and Olson.
The claims are bounded carefully. Periodic recalibration is argued to be structurally necessary; the specific 50-year period is not derived; no historical precedent for voluntary comprehensive redistribution is claimed. Five testable predictions with disconfirmation criteria are offered, and ten known weaknesses are cataloged with the same rigor as the claims. The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed.
Abstract
Why do economies destroy themselves? Why does wealth concentrate despite centuries of redistribution policy? This paper presents the economic implications of the JUB model — 11 axioms (ax15–ax25) extending a formal panentheistic foundation (Matheo-b11) through innovation dynamics, binary attractor analysis, and a Jubilee-System recalibration mechanism.
The principal economic results are: (1) a structural argument that innovation economies converge to exactly one of two attractors — self-destructive concentration (any life-trifecta condition violated) or self-sustaining growth (all three conditions satisfied) — with no stable middle ground (th8, Binary Attractors); (2) a mixing perturbation on a finite-state Markov chain that achieves irreducibility, a necessary condition for social ergodicity (th9); (3) a structural incentive analysis showing that the Jubilee System satisfies individual rationality under existential risk conditions and is structurally analogous to democratic periodic power-transfer; (4) a systematic comparison with Elinor Ostrom’s 8 design principles for long-enduring commons institutions; (5) a governance specification identifying who designs the Jubilee Charter and four anti-capture mechanisms; (6) a Global South engagement establishing the Jubilee cycle’s alternating structure and debt release as constitutive features.
The paper engages Piketty’s \(r > g\) thesis and its critics (Rognlie 2015, Mankiw 2015), Ole Peters’ ergodicity economics, Ostrom’s design principles and polycentric governance (1990, 2005, 2009), Schelling’s coordination theory, Buchanan and Tullock’s constitutional political economy, and Olson’s collective action theory. Five testable predictions with disconfirmation criteria are provided. Known weaknesses — including the periodicity gap, unparameterized Markov model, absence of historical precedent, partially specified governance mechanism, Western-centric scope, and limited Ostrom engagement — are cataloged honestly.
The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed. #AuditTheMath.
Scheduled Critical Junctures: The Jubilee System as Institutional Design for Periodic Economic Recalibration#
Broader Significance
Societies that most need to rebalance concentrated wealth and power are, by that very concentration, least able to do so — the redistribution paradox. This paper offers an institutional-design reading of the Jubilee System as a way to address it: instead of waiting for the wars, revolutions, and plagues that history shows have been the usual levellers, it asks whether economic recalibration could be a scheduled critical juncture — constitutionally mandated, periodic, and designed to be nonviolent.
The argument engages the comparative-politics literature honestly: Acemoglu and Robinson on extractive versus inclusive institutions, Scheidel’s evidence that only violence has levelled before, Ostrom’s commons-governance principles for a possible Jubilee Charter, and Sharp’s nonviolent-resistance methods. LLoL’s two-case resolution separates a first reset (motivated by existential threat) from later ones (sustained, if at all, by competitive advantage). A zaibatsu dissolution case is examined as the closest historical analogue.
The proposal is offered, not asserted. It has no precedent for voluntary comprehensive redistribution, its enforcement is underdeveloped, and a real gap separates the formal model from any implementable policy — all stated plainly, with falsification criteria. The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed.
Abstract
Societies that need redistribution most are least able to achieve it, because those who benefit from concentration control the institutions that would mandate redistribution. This is the redistribution paradox — the central unsolved problem of comparative political economy.
This paper introduces the concept of scheduled critical junctures — the idea that institutional resets can be constitutionally mandated rather than left to exogenous shocks — and presents the Jubilee System as the proposed implementation. The concept is the contribution to comparative politics; the Jubilee System is the specific mechanism designed to make scheduled critical junctures politically viable. The Jubilee System is not new: its structural template has been a central text of all Abrahamic faiths for approximately 3,500 years (Lev 25), albeit ignored for almost 70 Jubilee cycles. What is new is the formal derivation of its necessity and the institutional design framework for its implementation.
Drawing on the formal JUB axiom system Matheo-b14 — which derives from first principles that innovation economies without periodic recalibration converge to self-destruction (th8, Binary Attractors) — this paper translates the formal results into the language of institutional analysis.
The argument engages four literatures: (1) Acemoglu and Robinson’s theory of extractive versus inclusive institutions, where the Jubilee System provides a candidate mechanism for engineering inclusive institutions rather than waiting for unpredictable critical junctures; (2) Scheidel’s Great Leveler thesis that only violence equalizes, where the existential threat of nuclear roulette changes the historical calculation for the first time; (3) Ostrom’s commons governance principles, which provide the design framework for a Jubilee Charter; and (4) Sharp’s nonviolent resistance methods, supplemented by Chenoweth and Stephan’s (2011) empirical analysis, which provide the defense and coordination toolkit.
The paper presents LLoL’s two-case resolution of the voluntary-vs-coercive tension: the first Jubilee is forced by existential threat (no viable alternatives); subsequent Jubilees are sustained by competitive advantage (the Great Jubilee Race). A zaibatsu dissolution case study provides the closest historical analogue to a designed periodic economic reset. Known weaknesses are cataloged honestly, including specific falsification criteria: no historical precedent for voluntary comprehensive redistribution, underdeveloped enforcement mechanisms, and the irreducible gap between formal derivation and implementable policy.
The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed. #AuditTheMath.