This paper develops the Interface of the Natural Economic Wealth (NEW) framework: the formal account of how the Qoin economy operates as a parallel system alongside the existing FIAT monetary economy, how the two systems relate to each other without competing or contaminating each other, and how voluntary adoption propagates through the structural advantage that participating in both systems simultaneously confers. The Qoin and FIAT systems are ontologically incommensurable: Q ̸↔FIAT. This incommensurability is not a policy restriction or a design choice. It is a categorical distinction between a physical measurement unit and a financial abstraction, equivalent to the categorical distinction between a kilogram and a pound sterling. The ledger membership event is the interface: the moment an agent joins the Qoin economy, establishing the boundary between the two systems for that agent. The double remuneration asymmetry Qoin attribution at creation, FIAT income at sale, for the same algorithmic execution is the structural mechanism by which voluntary adoption is incentivised and sustained without mandate. The paper develops the thermodynamic case against revolutionary economic transition, drawing on three historical cases to show that every attempt to replace an existing economic order by force has destroyed ordered states faster than it could create them. It develops six historical precedents for successful parallel economies, demonstrating that communities can sustain parallel exchange systems and that the most fundamental resource for economic coordination is not money but community trust and accurate measurement. The paper closes by assembling the complete framework architecture into a single account of what the Qoin economy is, who it includes, and why it grows.
Steve Kelsey (Fri,) studied this question.