| Institution
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What It Is
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Key Ethical Properties
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Failure Mode if Absent
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Civilizational Function
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| Moral-Ethical Culture
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The shared norms about what a good human and good society are
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Human dignity; non-harm; truthfulness; contribution; reciprocity; stewardship; moral education; courage against unethical authority
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Society normalizes manipulation, cowardice, opportunism, and obedience to harmful systems
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Defines the moral operating system for all other institutions
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| Family and Child Development
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The primary environment for early attachment, trust, and value formation
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Stable attachment; nonviolent upbringing; emotional attunement; responsibility; intergenerational care; ethical modeling
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Trauma reproduction, distrust, emotional dysregulation, weak conscience formation
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Produces baseline human character and social trust capacity
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| Education
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The system for forming capable, ethical, literate, and productive people
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Universal access; hands-on competence; critical thinking; collaborative literacy; ethical reasoning; practical production skill; historical literacy; anti-propaganda training
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Credentialism, dependency, obedience training, shallow expertise, manipulable population
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Produces capable and morally awake citizens and builders
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| Public Knowledge and Media
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The institutions that produce and transmit information, narratives, and cultural memory
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Truth-seeking; open access; transparency of funding; epistemic rigor; anti-propaganda norms; public archives; pluralism without nihilism
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Mass delusion, manufactured consent, polarization, propaganda, attention capture
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Maintains reality contact and shared understanding
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| Science and Research
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Organized knowledge production about nature, society, health, and technology
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Open science; reproducibility; public-interest orientation; data transparency; low-barrier participation; anti-rent extraction; ethical review
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Knowledge enclosure, fraud, prestige games, science serving narrow profit or power
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Expands civilization’s reliable understanding of reality
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| Technology and Engineering
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The design of tools, machines, systems, and infrastructure
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Open design where possible; safety; repairability; modularity; interoperability; lifetime design; ecological responsibility; user sovereignty
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Black-box dependency, planned obsolescence, technofeudal control, unsafe systems
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Converts knowledge into material capability
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| Economy
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The system of production, distribution, exchange, investment, and livelihood
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Non-extractive value flows; fair compensation; productive participation; open market entry; anti-monopoly; transparent accounting; distributive ownership; internalization of harms
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Rent-seeking, labor exploitation, artificial scarcity, monopolization, wealth concentration, structural freeloading
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Organizes material livelihood and incentive structure
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| Money and Finance
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The allocation of capital, credit, savings, and investment
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Productive rather than extractive finance; transparency; low usury; mission-aligned investment; broad access to capital; anti-speculation bias; real-value accounting
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Debt peonage, speculative bubbles, financial capture of production, permanent dependency
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Directs long-term resource allocation
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| Property and Commons
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The rules for ownership, stewardship, access, and exclusion
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Personal property protected; productive assets broadly accessible; commons governed responsibly; anti-enclosure of foundational knowledge; stewardship duties attached to ownership
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Oligarchy, enclosure, tragedy through poor governance, dispossession, exclusion from productive capacity
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Determines who can act and build in the world
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| Law and Justice
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The system for rules, dispute resolution, rights protection, and accountability
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Equality before law; restorative justice where possible; due process; clear rights; low-cost access; anti-corruption; proportionality; institutional accountability
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Rule by force, selective enforcement, corruption, impunity for the powerful, fear of the system
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Maintains fairness, predictability, and recourse
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| Governance and the State
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Collective decision-making and administration at local to national scale
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Subsidiarity; transparency; public participation; anti-corruption; limited but competent administration; measurable outcomes; public-service ethos; constitutional restraint
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Bureaucratic capture, tyranny, incompetence, opacity, alienation, permanent elite rule
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Coordinates shared action at scale
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| Defense and Public Safety
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Protection from violence, disaster, sabotage, and external attack
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Strict ethical doctrine; civilian oversight; defensive rather than predatory orientation; de-escalation; resilience; professionalism; rights protection
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Militarism, police abuse, authoritarian drift, predation by force institutions, citizen fear
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Protects civilization without becoming its master
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| Health and Care
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Systems for physical health, mental health, disability support, and caregiving
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Universal basic access; prevention-first; open medical knowledge where possible; whole-person care; dignity; affordability; public health competence
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Preventable suffering, medical debt, abandonment, productivity collapse, fear-based survivalism
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Preserves human capability and reduces chronic threat
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| Food and Agriculture
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The production and distribution of food and ecological fertility
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Nutritional sufficiency; regenerative methods; land stewardship; resilient local capacity; seed sovereignty; anti-toxin standards; farmer viability
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Food insecurity, ecological depletion, dependency, malnutrition, rural collapse
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Secures biological survival and ecological continuity
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| Energy
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The generation, storage, and distribution of usable power
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Abundance-oriented provision; resilience; distributed generation; affordability; repairability; clean externalities; public accountability for critical grids
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Energy poverty, centralized coercive dependence, fragility, polluted survival
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Powers all productive and domestic systems
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| Water and Sanitation
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Systems for clean water, sewage, drainage, and hygiene
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Universal access; safety; watershed stewardship; resilient treatment; public accountability; low contamination
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Disease, contamination, ecosystem collapse, humiliation through infrastructural neglect
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Maintains health and basic dignity
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| Housing and Built Environment
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Shelter, public space, workshops, community facilities, and settlement design
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Affordability; durability; beauty; mixed-use livability; accessibility; climatic performance; local producibility; repairability; commons balance with privacy
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Homelessness, alienation, unhealthy environments, high costs, sprawl, social fragmentation
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Provides the spatial container for civilized life
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| Transportation and Logistics
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Movement of people, goods, materials, and waste
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Safety; efficiency; universal access; low externalities; interoperability; decentralized resilience; support for productive trade
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Isolation, waste, accidents, high cost of participation, brittle supply systems
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Connects the whole civilization into a functioning network
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| Communications Infrastructure
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Internet, telecom, knowledge networks, and digital coordination systems
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Universal access; neutrality; privacy; interoperability; user control; resilience; anti-surveillance default
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Information feudalism, censorship, dependency, behavioral manipulation, exclusion from coordination
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Enables large-scale collaboration and knowledge flow
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| Work and Industry
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The organization of labor, enterprise, apprenticeship, and production
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Meaningful work; skill development; fair pay; worker agency; contribution norms; transparent metrics; low bullshit-work ratio; safety
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Alienation, useless labor, workplace domination, deskilling, low trust, underproduction
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Converts human capacity into real goods and services
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| Culture and Arts
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Meaning-making, beauty, ceremony, identity, imagination, and shared aspiration
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Beauty; truthfulness; plural expression; civilizational aspiration; anti-decadence; connection to production and place; moral imagination
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Nihilism, ugliness, fragmentation, spectacle addiction, loss of meaning
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Gives civilization a soul and an attractor state
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| Spiritual and Philosophical Life
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Practices and traditions that cultivate self-mastery, purpose, and ethical depth
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Non-coercion; contemplative development; conscience formation; humility; service; universality of dignity; resistance to domination
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Moral emptiness, fanaticism, cult capture, egoic power-seeking, despair
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Forms higher-order motivation and ethical character
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| Community and Civic Life
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Associations, mutual aid, local governance, and day-to-day social participation
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High trust; local participation; mutual aid; inclusion through contribution; conflict repair; hospitality; intergenerational integration
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Atomization, loneliness, social brittleness, inability to self-organize
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Creates real social fabric between household and state
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| Environment and Ecology
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Stewardship of land, water, air, biodiversity, and long-term habitability
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Regeneration; stewardship obligations; closed-loop design where possible; intergenerational responsibility; carrying-capacity awareness
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Ecological overshoot, pollution, collapse of natural support systems, extractive short-termism
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Maintains the substrate on which civilization depends
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| Reproduction of Leadership
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How leaders are identified, trained, selected, and removed
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Merit plus ethics; transparency; service orientation; rotation where appropriate; accountability; anti-charisma bias; demonstrated competence
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Narcissistic capture, gerontocracy, mediocrity, permanent political class, cults of personality
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Ensures that power does not decay institutional quality
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| Conflict Resolution and Social Repair
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Mediation, reconciliation, arbitration, and recovery from harm
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Early intervention; low-cost mediation; restorative pathways; truth processes; trauma awareness; principled boundaries
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Escalation, factionalism, revenge cycles, institutional brittleness
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Preserves cohesion under stress
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| Civilizational Memory
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Archives, libraries, standards, documentation, and intergenerational knowledge transfer
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Open archives; durable documentation; version control; public memory; preservation of practical know-how; anti-forgetting design
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Repeated reinvention, historical amnesia, fragility, dependency on gurus
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Allows cumulative progress across generations
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