The Codex of Constructive Sovereignty proposes a philosophical framework for understanding how civilizations emerge, endure, decline, and renew themselves. It argues that stable societies depend not only on institutions and laws but on the character, responsibility, and truth-seeking capacity of the individuals who compose them. The work develops a set of principles addressing human agency, justice, leadership, institutional resilience, cultural memory, and the transmission of knowledge across generations. Central to the framework is the concept of human entropy: the tendency of individuals and institutions to drift toward disorder when responsibility, discipline, and critical reflection are abandoned. Rather than proposing a final doctrine or perfect social system, the Codex presents a living framework for constructive sovereignty—encouraging individuals to think independently, confront reality honestly, accept responsibility for their actions, and contribute to the continuous renewal of civilization. Also available on PhilArchive.
Veridian A. (Thu,) studied this question.