Summary: The Boundary of Spontaneous Order – From Historical Cycles to the Symbiotic Spiral This paper critically examines Hayek’s theory of spontaneous order, identifying a fundamental blind spot: it offers no peaceful solution to capital concentration. Historically, war served as the ultimate adjudicator – forcibly redistributing resources when markets concentrated wealth beyond sustainable limits. However, nuclear weapons have permanently broken this cycle. Large‑scale war no longer produces winners and losers; it risks civilizational annihilation, eliminating competition’s final arbiter function. The paper argues that pure spontaneous order never existed. Morality and law – subjective constructs – have always coexisted with market spontaneity. History moved through alternating phases: peacetime spontaneity → capital concentration → war/revolution → post‑war construction. The nuclear age makes this alternation impossible. Construction can no longer be a crisis‑time remedy; it must become a permanent, daily safeguard embedded within production and distribution. The proposed engineering response is the symbiotic point system, which: · Distinguishes external expansion (foreign trade, tech exports) governed purely by currency, from internal equilibrium managed by a currency‑point neutralisation mechanism.· Replaces horizontal zero‑sum competition with a vertical self‑restraint mechanism: each domestic transaction adjusts point balances to prevent hoarding and hereditary privilege.· Preserves stock wealth while restructuring incremental distribution.· Converts morality and law into procedural point‑based rules (e.g., labour, contract performance → point gains; fraud, collusion → point losses). The paper then elevates this design into a philosophical geometry rooted in Euler’s formula spiral: · Real axis (cosθ) : internal circular flow of currency and points – stable, self‑rotating, no expansion.· Imaginary axis (i sinθ) : future‑oriented progress – technological innovation, upgraded social experience – extending civilisation along the time dimension. Traditional systems collapse because they expand the real‑axis wealth circle until centrifugal forces rupture it, requiring war to reset distribution. The symbiotic spiral abandons circular expansion, preserves internal liquidity, and shifts all developmental momentum to the temporal imaginary axis. The result is a civilisation that rotates without expanding, inherits without hoarding, advances without regression. War’s historical role as a redistributive mechanism is abolished. Competition shifts from zero‑sum horizontal struggles to positive‑sum vertical contributions to long‑term human progress. What Hayek’s spontaneous order could not resolve – the peaceful, endogenous prevention of capital concentration – is answered by a mathematically grounded, operationally feasible institutional framework: the symbiotic spiral.
Pige Li (Fri,) studied this question.
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