teleo-codex/core/mechanisms/coin price is the fairest objective function for asset futarchy.md
m3taversal 79396f54dc leo: remove 21 entertainment/cultural-dynamics 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 16:11:17 +00:00

2.5 KiB

description type domain created source confidence tradition
Using token price as the futarchy objective elegantly aligns all holders and avoids the impossible task of specifying complex multi-dimensional goals claim mechanisms 2026-02-16 Heavey, Futarchy as Trustless Joint Ownership (2024) likely futarchy, mechanism design, DAO governance

Vitalik Buterin once noted that "pure futarchy has proven difficult to introduce, because in practice objective functions are very difficult to define (it's not just coin price that people want!)." For asset futarchy governing valuable holdings, this objection misses the point. Coin price is not merely acceptable—it is the fairest and most elegant objective function, and probably the only acceptable one for DAOs holding valuable assets.

The elegance comes from alignment: every token holder, regardless of size, shares the same objective. Using coin price sidesteps the impossible problem of aggregating complex, multi-dimensional preferences into a single metric. It prevents the majority from defining "success" in ways that benefit them at minority expense—the market continuously arbitrates what "good for the token" actually means.

This clarity becomes crucial when combined with decision markets make majority theft unprofitable through conditional token arbitrage. The objective function must be something all holders genuinely share for the arbitrage protection to work. Any multi-dimensional objective creates room for majority holders to claim their preferred action serves some dimension while actually extracting value.

The contrast with other governance domains matters. For government policy futarchy, choosing objective functions remains genuinely difficult—citizens want fairness, prosperity, security, and other goods that trade off. But for asset futarchy, the shared financial interest provides natural alignment. This connects to ownership alignment turns network effects from extractive to generative—the simple, shared objective function is what enables the alignment.


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