Modern monetary systems remain fundamentally constrained by a persistent structural contradiction. Centralized fiat systems provide large-scale economic stability through sovereign authority and institutional trust, yet often suffer from informational bottlenecks, delayed adaptation, concentration of monetary power, and disconnection from localized value creation. Conversely, decentralized cryptocurrency systems enable open participation and distributed issuance but frequently lack durable trust infrastructures, identity continuity, and adaptive legitimacy mechanisms capable of sustaining long-term economic coordination. This paper introduces Trust-Indexed Currency Systems (TICS) — a recursive trust-based monetary architecture in which currency issuance is universally accessible, while economic influence, convertibility, and circulation emerge through dynamically evolving trust relationships. Rather than treating trust as an external sociopolitical assumption, the framework formalizes trust as a foundational economic primitive governing legitimacy propagation across transactional networks. The paper reconceptualizes currency as a relational claim on future value whose acceptance depends upon persistent trust continuity established through fulfilled expectations, historical consistency, network-validated credibility, and adaptive behavioral coordination. Under this framework, individuals, organizations, and communities may issue currencies, but the systemic legitimacy of those currencies evolves recursively through distributed trust-sensitive validation mechanisms. The work examines: The structural limitations of fiat and cryptocurrency systems The ontological foundations of currency, value, and trust Recursive trust propagation dynamics Adaptive currency convertibility mechanisms Distributed identity and legitimacy infrastructures Multi-currency economic ecosystems Governance and systemic stability challenges Recursive economic coordination theory The paper further proposes the emergence of a future recursive economic science, where economies are modeled not as static equilibrium systems, but as continuously evolving legitimacy networks shaped through adaptive recursive coordination dynamics. By integrating concepts from economics, systems theory, network science, cybernetics, governance theory, and recursive mathematical structures, this work establishes a foundation for future research into trust-sensitive distributed monetary systems capable of evolving alongside increasingly complex human and institutional networks. This paper contributes to the broader development of recursive economic theory and explores how legitimacy, trust, liquidity, and coordination may be reinterpreted within future adaptive economic civilizations. -JSR
Prashant Prakash (Wed,) studied this question.