Replace monolithic passepartout-economics.org with directory of org-roam style nodes, each with :ID: property and cross-references using [[id:uuid][title]] format. 27 nodes organized by theme: - Core: index, triad overview, agora, stoa - Revenue: verification appliance, domain gate packages, evaluation harness, skill marketplace, agora usernames, PDS service, compute marketplace - Strategy: investment thesis, moats, licensing, patents, AI industry impact - Analysis: lisp economics, sufficiency flip, time estimates, cost structure, gate rule encoding, upgrade lifecycle, biology parallels, symbolics comparison - Big money: verification monopoly, infrastructure lock-in Old file kept as archive with redirect links to new structure.
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1.6 KiB
The Per-Domain Sufficiency Flip
The sufficiency flip is not a single event — it happens independently for each domain, and some domains never flip.
Knowledge types required:
- Structural (published rules, configs, specs) — LLM translation + ACL2 verification. Flips in days.
- Empirical (what happens when X?) — active sandboxed probing. Flips in days to weeks.
- Performance (latency, throughput) — benchmark harness. Flips in hours.
- Transfer from related domains — ontology alignment. Flips in days.
- Tacit (craft expertise, organizational culture) — requires Phase 3 archivist loop over time. May never fully flip.
- Aesthetic (poetry, creative writing) — never flips. The system is honest about its frontier.
Fastest path to flip any domain:
- Ingest all published text (hours)
- Run benchmark harness (hours)
- Run active sandboxed probes (automated)
- Generate contrastive queries for the 5% uncertain rules (one human session, a few hours)
- Start serving real interactions (empirical loop tightens from first interaction)
For the Lisp Machine bootstrap, every subdomain is software (the most codifiable domain). The entire bootstrap can flip in days to weeks with one human review session.
See also: Gate rule encoding, Time estimates, Cost structure