asemic net
Monday, March 16, 2026
plum / EZE, 2026
Sunday, March 15, 2026
An Asemics of Government as an Obligatory Favor Market / EZE, 2026
AI:
Government as an Obligatory Favor Market
Viewing government through the lens of an obligatory favor market reframes political power as a high-stakes exchange of "debts" rather than a system of neutral administration.
In this model, the government isn't just a provider of services; it is a clearinghouse for coerced reciprocity.
1. The Currency: Political Capital
In a traditional market, you use cash. In the "favor market," the currency is support (votes, campaign funds, or literal compliance).
The "Favor": A politician passes a tax break or a regulation that benefits a specific group.
The "Obligation": The group is now "indebted" to that politician, obligated to provide the votes or funding necessary to keep them in power.
2. "Tit for Tat" Governance
Legislative bodies often function on logrolling—the ultimate "tit for tat" system.
"I’ll vote for your bridge (favor) if you vote for my subsidy (reciprocation)."
If a representative breaks this unwritten contract, they face the Grim Trigger: other lawmakers will permanently refuse to support their future bills, effectively "killing" their political career.
3. The "Sovereign" as the Ultimate Creditor
From a citizen's perspective, the government provides "favors" that feel like obligations:
Infrastructure & Safety: The state provides roads and police (the favor).
Taxes & Laws: In exchange, you are obligated to pay and obey.
The Twist: Unlike a voluntary market where you can decline a favor, the government’s "favor" is non-optional. You are born into a state of "pre-indebtedness" to the system.
4. Rent-Seeking: Buying Favors
When the market becomes corrupt, it turns into rent-seeking.
Special interest groups "buy" favors (subsidies, tariffs on competitors) that they haven't earned through productivity.
This creates a distortion where the government stops serving the public good and starts managing a private ledger of who owes whom.
5. The "Grim Trigger" of Revolution
On a macro scale, the social contract itself is a "Tit for Tat" game.
The People cooperate (obey laws) as long as The Government cooperates (provides order and rights).
If the government defects too many times (tyranny or total failure), the public may pull the Grim Trigger—a revolution or total collapse of legitimacy where the "market" of cooperation is permanently closed.
Do you want to look at how lobbying specifically acts as the "broker" in this market?
FAVOR Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
Mar 11, 2026 — noun * b. : partiality. The students naturally showed favor toward their own team. * c. archaic : leniency. * d. archaic : permiss...
Merriam-Webster Dictionary
Favor in Legal Terms: Meaning, Implications, and Context
Favor in Legal Terms: Meaning, Implications, and Context * Favor in Legal Terms: Meaning, Implications, and Context. Definition & ...
US Legal Forms
FAVOR Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.com
noun * something done or granted out of goodwill, rather than from justice or for remuneration; a kind act. to ask a favor.
Favor
A favor is primarily a kind or helpful act performed for someone out of goodwill rather than obligation or payment. It can also refer to a general attitude of approval or the state of being liked or preferred.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary
Common Meanings of "Favor"
A Helpful Act: Doing something for another person that you are not required to do.
Example: Giving a friend a ride to the airport.
Approval or Support: A feeling of favorable regard toward an idea, person, or group.
Example: The city council voted in favor of the new housing project.
Preferential Treatment: Partiality or bias shown toward one side over another.
Example: A teacher who clearly favors one student over the others.
A Small Gift: A token or decorative item given to guests at a social event, often called a party favor.
Example: Small boxes of candy handed out at a wedding.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary
Formal and Legal Contexts
Legal Verdicts: A court may rule in favor of a party, meaning it has approved their claims or arguments based on provided evidence.
Bias in Law: In legal proceedings, "favor" can refer to an unfair prejudice or partiality that compromises a person's neutrality, such as a juror being "challenged for favor".
Divine Favor: In religious contexts, it often refers to divine approval, blessing, or "heaven's endorsement".
YouTube
The Verb "To Favor"
When used as an action, to favor can mean:
Preferring one choice over others (e.g., favoring coffee over tea).
Resembling a relative in appearance (e.g., "He favors his father").
Treating gently, such as "favoring" a sore leg by not putting weight on it.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary
What Is an Obligatory Favor?
An obligatory favor is a paradoxical term that describes an action presented as a "kindness" or "favor," even though the person performing it is actually required to do it.
Vocabulary.com
In healthy social dynamics, a favor is voluntary, while an obligation is a duty. When these blur, it often indicates a specific psychological or social pressure:
1. The "Entitled" Obligation
This occurs when someone fulfills a basic responsibility—such as a parent providing food or an employer paying a salary—but frames it as an extraordinary favor to demand extra gratitude or leverage.
The Power Dynamic: By calling an obligation a "favor," the person shifts the relationship from one of mutual respect to a hierarchy where the recipient is now "indebted".
Wikipedia
2. The Norm of Reciprocity
In social psychology, this refers to the "web of indebtedness". When someone does something nice for you, you feel an "obligatory" need to return the favor.
Taylor & Francis Online
Taylor & Francis Online
+2
Forced Reciprocity: Salespeople or fundraisers often give "unsolicited favors" (like a free sample or a small gift) to trigger this sense of obligation, making you more likely to comply with a later request.
Social Survival: Anthropologists argue that this "honored network of obligation" is what allowed human societies to survive by ensuring mutual aid.
Wikipedia
3. Cultural and Social Expectations
In many cultures, certain actions are "obligatory" because they are required by convention or etiquette, even if they aren't legal requirements.
Vocabulary.com
Examples: Sending a thank-you note, returning a holiday card, or making "obligatory apologies" after a social gaffe.
Noblesse Oblige: The social concept that those with wealth or power have an "obligatory" duty to act with generosity toward others.
Wikipedia
Summary Comparison
Feature True Favor Obligation "Obligatory Favor"
Motivation Goodwill / Choice Duty / Rule Social Pressure / Manipulation
Expectation None (ideally) Fulfilling a role Repayment or specific gratitude
Feeling Appreciation Responsibility Indebtedness or resentment
Reciprocity (social psychology) - Wikipedia
Richard Leakey and Roger Lewin attribute the very nature of humans to reciprocity. They claim humans survived because our ancestor...
Full article: Reciprocal favor exchange and compliance
Feb 17, 2007 — Numerous studies find that compliance to requests can be affected by the norm of reciprocity (Cialdini & Goldstein, 2004). The nor...
Taylor & Francis Online
Giving and Reciprocity: The Fast Track to Gaining Influence ...
Dec 17, 2012 — Have you ever been approached for a favor and felt put off by the request? Professional favors do not come cheap, especially conne...
WordPress.com
What Is Tit for Tat?
"Tit for tat" is an English idiom meaning "equivalent retaliation" or responding in kind to another's action. While it often refers to negative exchanges—like a "blow for a blow"—it can also describe reciprocating kindness or cooperation.
Wikipedia
1. Origin of the Phrase
The term is a mid-1500s corruption of the older expression "tip for tap," where both "tip" and "tap" meant a light strike or blow.
Michigan Public
"Tit" comes from an old Germanic word for a light strike.
"Tat" likely developed for alliteration or as an onomatopoeic sound.
Michigan Public
2. Game Theory Strategy
In game theory, tit for tat is a highly successful strategy for repeated interactions, such as the Prisoner's Dilemma. It follows three simple steps:
Wikipedia
Cooperate on the first move.
Mirror whatever the opponent did in the previous round (cooperate if they did, defect if they did).
Forgive immediately by returning to cooperation as soon as the opponent does.
Wikipedia
3. Real-World Applications
The strategy is observed across many fields:
International Relations: Countries may use it for trade tariffs or diplomatic expulsions to maintain a balance of power.
Biology: It explains "reciprocal altruism" in animals, where individuals help others expecting future reciprocation.
Computing: The BitTorrent protocol uses a tit-for-tat variant to reward users who upload data to others.
Psychology: It describes a reciprocity mindset where people match the "energy" of others to build trust or protect themselves from exploitation.
Wikipedia
4. Potential Risks
A major drawback of this strategy is the "death spiral" or "retaliatory rut". If two parties both use tit for tat and one makes a mistake (a "noisy" interaction), they may get stuck in an endless cycle of mutual defection. To counter this, variants like "Generous Tit for Tat" occasionally cooperate even after a defection to "reset" the relationship.
Wikipedia
Would you like to see how this strategy compares to other game theory models, like the "Grim Trigger"?
Tit for tat - Wikipedia
Tit for tat is an English saying meaning "equivalent retaliation". It is an alternation of tip for tap "blow for blow", first reco...
The meaning behind "tit for tat" - Michigan Public
Feb 11, 2018 — If you take my eye, I'll take your eye. If you make that move, I'll make this move. But what about "tit for tat?" One of English p...
t for Tat Strategy: Game Theory & Economics - Vaia
Nov 8, 2024 — Tit for Tat Strategy Definition. Tit for Tat strategy is a concept often utilized in game theory. It involves two or more players ...
www.vaia.com
Grim Trigger
The Grim Trigger (also called the "Sucker’s Payoff" or "Permanent Retaliation") is the most unforgiving strategy in game theory. It is the polar opposite of the "forgiving" nature of Tit for Tat.
How it Works
Start with Cooperation: You begin by cooperating and being "nice."
The Trigger: You continue to cooperate as long as the other player does.
Permanent Defection: If the other player cheats or defects even once, you "pull the trigger" and defect for the rest of the game.
Key Characteristics
Zero Forgiveness: There is no way for the opponent to earn back your trust. Once the relationship is broken, it stays broken forever.
Maximum Deterrence: It serves as a massive threat. The message is: "If you betray me once, we both lose forever."
High Sensitivity: It is extremely vulnerable to "noise" or accidents. If a simple misunderstanding occurs, the Grim Trigger strategy forces a permanent "war," even if both parties would prefer to go back to cooperating.
Comparison: Tit for Tat vs. Grim Trigger
Feature Tit for Tat Grim Trigger
Initial Move Cooperate Cooperate
Reaction to Betrayal Retaliate once Retaliate forever
Forgiveness High (forgives after 1 round) None
Goal Maintain mutual benefit Prevent any exploitation
Real-World Example: MAD
The best example of Grim Trigger is Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD) in nuclear deterrence. If one country launches a nuclear strike, the other responds with a full-scale attack, resulting in total destruction for both sides with no possibility of "going back" to peace.
Do you want to see how these strategies play out in a simulated scenario, like a business price war?
Friday, March 13, 2026
Asemic Theories of War / EZE, 2026
War without End
The Maintenance Department
The Enemy as an Undifferentiated Target
Just Testing the Equipment / Improving the Technology
Continuation / Discontinuation
Sunday, March 8, 2026
fare / EZE, 2026
Thursday, March 5, 2026
xuxa / EZE, 2026
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Asemic Theory ~ Rhizomatic Stochastics / EZE, 2026
From Microsoft Copilot:
Rhizomatic stochastics isn’t an established term in mathematics or philosophy, but its two components — rhizomatic and stochastics — each have rich conceptual histories. When combined, they gesture toward a way of thinking about randomness that is decentralized, non‑hierarchical, and multiply connected.
🌱 Rhizomatic Foundations
The word rhizomatic comes from the philosophical work of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, who use the rhizome as a metaphor for systems without a central root, hierarchy, or linear structure. A rhizome “connects any point to any other point” and can be entered from any direction. It emphasizes heterogeneity, multiplicity, and continual transformation.
Key features of rhizomatic structures include:
Non-hierarchical organization — no privileged starting point or governing center.
Multiple, shifting connections — elements link in many directions.
Decentralized growth — expansion occurs unpredictably, like roots spreading underground.
Open-endedness — no fixed boundaries or final form.
These ideas have influenced learning theory, media theory, and literary analysis.
🎲 Stochastics
Stochastics refers to systems governed by randomness, probability, or uncertainty. In mathematics, stochastic processes model phenomena that evolve unpredictably over time — Brownian motion, Markov chains, random walks, and so on.
🔗 Putting them together: What “rhizomatic stochastics” would mean
Although not a standard term, rhizomatic stochastics naturally suggests a conceptual framework where random processes evolve in a rhizome-like manner:
Nonlinear randomness — instead of a single probabilistic path, many branching, reconnecting, and diverging trajectories.
Distributed causality — no central driver of the stochastic behavior; influences arise from many directions.
Emergent structure — patterns form from local interactions rather than global rules.
Open systems — new nodes, variables, or influences can enter at any time.
This could describe:
Complex adaptive systems (ecologies, markets, neural networks)
Non-hierarchical information flows (social networks, hypertext)
Learning processes that evolve unpredictably and nonlinearly
Mathematical models where randomness interacts with decentralized topology
In short, it frames stochastic behavior not as a tree of branching probabilities but as a network of probabilistic flows, more like a web than a path.
📚 Why the term feels intuitive
Deleuze and Guattari’s rhizome already challenges linear, deterministic models of knowledge and meaning. Stochastic processes challenge deterministic models of physical or mathematical evolution. Combining them highlights randomness in systems that are already non-hierarchical and multiply connected, a natural pairing for modeling contemporary complex phenomena.
From Google AI:
Rhizomatic stochastics refers to the intersection of non-hierarchical network structures (rhizomes) and probabilistic, random processes (stochastics). While not a single codified discipline, it is an emerging conceptual framework used in philosophy, biology, and digital theory to describe systems that grow and evolve through random, unpredictable connections. Nature +4Core Concepts
- Rhizome (Philosophy): A concept developed by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari representing a centerless network where any point can connect to any other. It contrasts with "arborescent" (tree-like) structures that have a single trunk or origin.
- Stochastics (Mathematics): Systems governed by random probability. In a rhizomatic context, this means the growth and "lines of flight" (breakaway points) of the network are not predetermined but occur through chance and environmental flux.
- Biological Quasispecies: Recent studies in virology use a rhizomatic vision to explain how viral populations evolve through lethal mutagenesis—a stochastic process where random mutations are used as a "solvent" to weaken the virus's structural connections.
- Digital Networks & AI: The internet and large language models are often described as rhizomatic. The way information moves between nodes is frequently a stochastic process, where "stochastic machines" (like AI) generate unexpected but meaningful connections across a distributed network.
- Social Dynamics & "Stochastic Violence": Some theorists use the term to describe how decentralized, rhizomatic networks (like social media swarms) can trigger "spontaneous but predictable" eruptions of violence through the seeding of hatred, without a central command hierarchy.
- Rhizomatic Learning: A pedagogical approach where the "community is the curriculum". It embraces uncertainty and prepares learners for stochastic environments where they must navigate and create knowledge through social interactions rather than pre-set modules.
Friday, February 27, 2026
Sunday, February 22, 2026
sunf / EZE, 2026
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Sunday, February 15, 2026
ompp / EZE, 2026
Saturday, February 14, 2026
seek / EZE, 2026
Counterfeit People / EZE, 2025
~~~
~
~~~
~
~~
~
~
~
The Importance of Being Earnest
Six Characters in Search of an Author
~~~
~
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
~~~
~
~~~









