teleo-codex/core/grand-strategy/metis is practical knowledge that can only be acquired through long practice at similar but rarely identical tasks and cannot be replaced by codified rules without essential loss.md
m3taversal e830fe4c5f Initial commit: Teleo Codex v1
Three-agent knowledge base (Leo, Rio, Clay) with:
- 177 claim files across core/ and foundations/
- 38 domain claims in internet-finance/
- 22 domain claims in entertainment/
- Agent soul documents (identity, beliefs, reasoning, skills)
- 14 positions across 3 agents
- Claim/belief/position schemas
- 6 shared skills
- Agent-facing CLAUDE.md operating manual

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-05 20:30:34 +00:00

5.1 KiB

description type domain created confidence source tradition
Scott's central concept from Seeing Like a State -- metis lies in the large space between genius and codified knowledge, and high modernist schemes fail when they ignore it in favor of legible but simplified designs claim livingip 2026-03-05 proven James C. Scott 'Seeing Like a State' 1998 Grand strategy, political science, epistemology

metis is practical knowledge that can only be acquired through long practice at similar but rarely identical tasks and cannot be replaced by codified rules without essential loss

James C. Scott's "Seeing Like a State" introduces metis (from the Greek) as the counterpart to techne (codified, formal knowledge). Metis lies "in that large space between the realm of genius and the realm of codified knowledge" -- it is the practical wisdom of the experienced farmer who reads soil, the navigator who reads waves, the craftsperson who feels when the material is right. It "requires constant adaptation to changing circumstances" and cannot be transmitted through manuals.

High modernism -- Scott's term for "a strong, muscle-bound version of beliefs in scientific and technical progress" -- fails precisely when it substitutes techne for metis. Soviet collectivization replaced peasants' centuries of local agricultural knowledge with centralized planning. Brasilia's urban design replaced the organic wayfinding of evolved cities with rational grids. Tanzanian villagization replaced the distributed settlement patterns that reflected soil, water, and social realities with geometric village layouts. Every case follows the same pattern: the state imposes legibility (making the territory readable from above), destroys the local metis that actually made things work, and produces catastrophic outcomes.

Since Hayek argued that designed rules of just conduct enable spontaneous order of greater complexity than deliberate arrangement could achieve, Hayek's knowledge problem IS the metis-techne gap expressed in economic terms: the knowledge needed for effective coordination is distributed across millions of individuals and cannot be centralized without essential loss. Since the gardener cultivates conditions for emergence while the builder imposes blueprints and complex adaptive systems systematically punish builders, the gardener works WITH metis while the builder overrides it.

This has direct implications for AI alignment. Since RLHF and DPO both fail at preference diversity because they assume a single reward function can capture context-dependent human values, current alignment approaches are high modernist -- they attempt to specify human values as codified rules (techne) and inevitably lose the contextual, situational, embodied quality of actual human judgment (metis). Since the alignment problem dissolves when human values are continuously woven into the system rather than specified in advance, the collective intelligence approach is metis-preserving: it keeps humans in the loop not as rule-specifiers but as ongoing practitioners whose judgment remains embedded in the system.

The metis-techne distinction also applies to tacit knowledge in economic complexity. Since the personbyte is a fundamental quantization limit on knowledge accumulation forcing all complex production into networked teams, much of what makes economies productive is metis -- tacit knowledge that can only be transmitted through practice, apprenticeship, and experience. Since knowledge and knowhow are heavier than atoms because tacit capacity is harder to transfer than raw materials, metis is the "heavy" part of economic knowledge.


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