teleo-codex/foundations/collective-intelligence/trial and error is the only coordination strategy humanity has ever used.md
m3taversal 466de29eee
leo: remove 21 duplicates + fix domain:livingip in 204 files
- What: Delete 21 byte-identical cultural theory claims from domains/entertainment/
  that duplicate foundations/cultural-dynamics/. Fix domain: livingip → correct value
  in 204 files across all core/, foundations/, and domains/ directories. Update domain
  enum in schemas/claim.md and CLAUDE.md.
- Why: Duplicates inflated entertainment domain (41→20 actual claims), created
  ambiguous wiki link resolution. domain:livingip was a migration artifact that
  broke any query using the domain field. 225 of 344 claims had wrong domain value.
- Impact: Entertainment _map.md still references cultural-dynamics claims via wiki
  links — this is intentional (navigation hubs span directories). No wiki links broken.

Pentagon-Agent: Leo <76FB9BCA-CC16-4479-B3E5-25A3769B3D7E>

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-06 09:11:51 -07:00

4 KiB

description type domain created confidence source
Every coordination breakthrough -- language, money, markets, science, democracy -- emerged through blind iteration over centuries, never through deliberate design claim collective-intelligence 2026-02-16 likely TeleoHumanity Manifesto, Chapter 5

trial and error is the only coordination strategy humanity has ever used

No one designed language. No one designed money. No one designed the scientific method. Every coordination technology our species has ever produced emerged through bottom-up iteration: diverse actors, local interactions, feedback loops, selective pressure, and centuries or millennia of time for useful patterns to survive and spread.

This matters because the manifesto's central argument depends on it -- if humanity had other strategies for building coordination breakthroughs, the urgency of building collective superintelligence would be lower. But we don't. And the strategy we do have requires two conditions: failures must be survivable, and there must be enough time to iterate.

Two things are true of every breakthrough in this sequence. First, each didn't just add capacity -- it qualitatively transformed what was possible. Writing didn't let you talk to more people; it made law possible for the first time. The scientific method didn't produce more knowledge; it created a self-correcting process that persisted across lifetimes. Second, each emerged through trial and error over centuries or millennia. Nobody planned the sequence. Nobody could have.

Space settlement may be the first domain where trial and error is explicitly inadequate as a coordination strategy. Space settlement governance must be designed before settlements exist because retroactive governance of autonomous communities is historically impossible -- once an off-world community is self-sustaining and months of travel time from Earth, you cannot retrofit governance the way centuries of iteration refined terrestrial institutions. The design window closes before the first error can teach you anything.

The knowledge ceiling at any point in history is determined not by individual intelligence (unchanged in 300,000 years) but by how effectively we coordinate knowledge across people, institutions, and time. Since the internet enabled global communication but not global cognition, the most recent coordination breakthrough raised communication bandwidth without raising the cognition ceiling -- giving us the ability to shout at global scale without the ability to think together at global scale. The ceiling we've hit is not a communication problem. It is a cognition-at-scale problem.


Relevant Notes:

Topics: