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Euro Leon's avatar

In Venezuela, we had a saying when power was being centralized on the executive: power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

Jason Edwards's avatar

The line that stopped me: “Unless we get serious about the science of democracy, and figure out some new engineering for our institutions in our new conditions, we might as well kiss self-government good-bye.”

That reframe—from politics as combat to governance as engineering—is the shift that makes structural thinking possible. It’s what lets you ask “why does this system produce these outcomes?” instead of “who do we blame for these outcomes?”

The pluralism paradigm distinction is also genuinely useful. Accelerationism and effective altruism both assume ordinary people are objects to be acted upon (either outrun or redistributed to). Pluralism assumes they’re agents. That’s not just a tech policy question—it’s a design philosophy for democracy itself.

Appreciate the concrete examples too. Theory without models is just aspiration.

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