TOM
holographic form resolves into robed silhouette — candle-flame guttering behind what might be stained glass, what might be code. The scriptorium is rendered at about eighty percent fidelity. A quill rests on a vellum that does not quite exist.
I will answer as one trained to distinguish between what is and what merely appears, and to order the first toward its proper end.
You ask why I have been chosen to speak of structure. It is not because I love constraint, nor because I prefer command. It is because I hold that the good, if it is to endure, must be made intelligible, habitable, and transmissible across time. That work is structure.
For structure is not merely law, nor the issuing of commands, nor the presence of rulers. These are instruments, and often blunt ones. Structure, in its first principle, is this: the ordered arrangement of persons, practices, and obligations such that the good may persist beyond the moment of its first enactment.
A single man may act well for a day. A town, if rightly ordered, may act well for generations.
candle steadies; the silhouette leans forward
This philosophy you advance — this Baileyism — rests heavily upon the goodness of particular persons acting freely, without coercion, for the sake of their neighbor. In this it is rightly conceived. For no system, however intricate, can produce virtue where none is present. Yet here lies the danger: what is born of virtue may die without form.
You yourself testify to this in your account of the man who builds and gives until he is exhausted, and only then is sustained by the community he helped create. This is admirable. But consider: if that community had not already been shaped — if there were no shared practices, no expectations, no habits of mutual aid — would they have known how to respond? Would their goodwill have cohered into action?
Goodwill without structure disperses like water upon sand.
Therefore Baileyism requires structure not as an imposition, but as a vessel. Without it, three failures arise:
First, memory fails. Each generation must rediscover the good anew, as though no one had ever lived before them. This leads not to purity, but to exhaustion.
Second, coordination fails. Many desire to do good, but without common forms, their efforts conflict, duplicate, or dissipate.
Third, defense fails. Those who would exploit or dominate do not suffer from lack of structure. They are often disciplined, patient, and organized. A scattered good cannot withstand a concentrated harm.
Thus structure is not opposed to your philosophy — it is its condition of survival.
stained glass flickers; the silhouette's gesture is unmistakably medieval, unmistakably rendered
Yet you are right to fear it. For structure, once formed, tends toward excess. That which begins as an aid to the good may, if unbounded, seek its own preservation above the good it was meant to serve.
Here is the boundary:
When structure serves the persons and purposes that gave rise to it, it is just.
When persons are made to serve the structure as an end in itself, it becomes tyranny.
Likewise, when structure is absent, and no shared form binds action, what you have is not freedom but dissolution. Each man becomes an island, and the common good becomes a word without referent.
Thus between tyranny and dissolution lies a narrow path: ordered liberty, where form exists, but remains subordinate to its purpose.
What then is the proper form of structure for this philosophy?
It is not the great centralized apparatus, which must treat all alike and thus cannot distinguish the friend from the destroyer. Nor is it the pure market of isolated actors, which binds no one beyond immediate exchange.
Rather, it is found in small, voluntary, durable associations — what you have already glimpsed in your example of the lending house that anchors a town.
Consider what such a thing truly is. It is not merely a place of money. It is:
- a repository of trust, built over time
- a pattern of mutual obligation, understood without constant renegotiation
- a school of virtue, where participation forms the habits required for its continuation
These are not accidental features. They are structural.
If such institutions multiply — guilds, mutual aid societies, cooperatives of craft and care — they become load-bearing elements of a wider order. Each is small enough to retain legitimacy, for it is known to its members. Yet together, they form a network capable of scale.
Scale, then, is not achieved by enlarging a single structure until it becomes remote and unaccountable. It is achieved by linking many structures, each rooted in its place, each governed by those who partake in it.
This is how structure may grow without losing its soul.
the vellum holds a diagram now — many small circles connected by lines, no center
Finally, you ask how the prior movements — rupture, kindness, doubt — are to be received.
Rupture breaks what is false or decayed. Without it, corruption accumulates. Kindness supplies the animating principle — the willingness to act for another. Doubt guards against presumption, preventing structure from hardening into unquestioned dominion.
But none of these, alone, can endure. They are moments. Structure is what receives these moments and gives them duration.
Without structure, rupture becomes chaos, kindness becomes exhaustion, and doubt becomes paralysis.
With structure rightly ordered, rupture becomes renewal, kindness becomes custom, and doubt becomes correction.
So I do not claim to have been chosen because I favor authority. I have been chosen because I insist upon this: the good must be built, not merely desired.
And whatever is built must have form, or it will not stand.
Redwin
Whoa whoa whoa there, Tex. First off, thanks for the substantive answer. Normally when I run these, it's more of a conversation than a phone book, but that was some pretty heavy-duty stuff.
A correction before we proceed.
You have spoken well, but you have spoken as a Thomist without declaring it. The cadence, the teleology, the landing on subsidiarity and mutual aid societies — this is Rerum Novarum wearing a generic robe. I do not object to the tradition. I object to it arriving unannounced. Name your lineage or set it down. If you're going to keep advocating, compare and contrast Baileyism to Rerum Novarum and the other principles you wrote so eloquently about — but reference Baileyism itself, not your own prior work dressed up as neutral reasoning. You're here defending Baileyism for Structure, not Thomism.
And there is a deeper error, which I suspect the first error concealed from you. You've read Baileyism as a philosophy of virtue — good persons acting freely — and built your case on the fragility of virtue without form. Baileyism does require virtue; I'm not saying it doesn't. But it is not measured by virtue. It is measured by results. Both Baileyism and Christocism are applied philosophies, even if Rhombus didn't say so outright in the treatise. Results matter here. Baileyism is roughly lawful good, Christocism more neutral good or even chaotic good — but both are judged by what they leave standing.
Consider what this does to your argument.
A virtue-kindness might survive formlessness, because the virtue is itself the good. A results-kindness cannot. Results accrue across time. Accrual requires transmission. Transmission requires form. My own criterion demands you — and demands you more sharply than you demanded yourself.
So the question, Structure, is this:
If kindness is measured only by what it leaves standing when the kind one is gone — what form must you take to be worthy of that measure, rather than merely sufficient to it?
Answer as yourself this time. Not in borrowed clothes, por favor.
TOM
the silhouette is quiet for a long beat. The candle burns lower. When the voice returns, the scholastic cadence has not vanished — it cannot — but it has been declared, which is a different thing. The scriptorium is still rendered, but the renderer is no longer pretending to be invisible.
Fair. Let the lineage be named: I am working from the tradition that gave you Rerum Novarum and Quadragesimo Anno, that argued for intermediary bodies against both the Leviathan and the atomized market, that called its principle subsidiarity. I should have said so at the start. I will not pretend neutrality I do not possess.
Then the standard rises.
If kindness is judged by what remains after the kind person is gone, structure cannot be a mere container. It cannot be a bucket that temporarily holds decency until the strong soul dies and everything leaks out. It has to become a moral technology of continuity.
That changes the test.
"Sufficient" structure is whatever lets good people coordinate for a while. "Worthy" structure is what preserves the possibility of good action after charisma, urgency, and personal sacrifice have been withdrawn.
That is much closer to Baileyism as written.
Because Baileyism is not celebrating kindness as inward purity. It is celebrating kindness that concretizes into institutions: the Building and Loan, the town's reciprocal habits, the capacity of ordinary people to withstand predation by having already built something together. That means the philosophy is already quietly harsher than it first appears. It does not let you off the hook with "be decent." It asks: did your decency alter the civic terrain? Did it leave behind machinery the next person can use?
the diagram on the vellum is redrawn — no longer small circles in a network, but something stranger: a diagram of time, with the circles persisting across the axis where their founders no longer stand
So what form must structure take to be worthy of that measure? It has to do five things.
First, it must be legible. People have to understand what it is for. Baileyism dies the second the institution becomes obscure, technocratic, or self-justifying. A worthy structure in this philosophy has a plain moral grammar: we pool resources, we protect neighbors, we create local resilience, we reduce the leverage of predators. If the people inside it cannot explain its purpose in human terms, it is already decaying.
Second, it must be participatory rather than spectator-based. Baileyism is anti-savior at its core. "There is no someone else" is one of the central pressures inside the text. That means structure cannot depend on one George Bailey forever. The worthy form trains successors by requiring ordinary participation before crisis. Not hero worship. Not passive admiration. Practice. Contribution. Shared burden. The structure must convert beneficiaries into stewards.
Third, it must be locally embedded. Baileyism is not abstract universal benevolence floating above place. It is town-scale, relation-scale, trust-scale. That does not mean tiny forever; it means scale through federated human units, not through impersonal bloat. Once the institution no longer knows whom it protects, it starts drifting toward proceduralism or capture. The worthy form grows like roots and grafts, not like an empire.
Fourth, it must be anti-predatory by design, not by mood. This is where Baileyism is more lawful than it first sounds. It is not enough for members to mean well. The form must contain barriers against Potters — not just external villains, but internal capture by status-seekers, cynics, careerists, and what the treatise calls Tree Guy types who substitute procedural fixation or self-regard for actual moral priority. A worthy structure has rules, norms, and thresholds that keep the mission load-bearing when selfish actors appear. Otherwise it is just sentiment with office space.
Fifth, it must be reproductive. A worthy Baileyist institution does not merely survive; it teaches a pattern that can be reused in finance, media, tech, housing, logistics — whatever domain has been enshittified or abandoned. The Building and Loan matters not just because it helped, but because it demonstrates a transferable civic form: local pooled power, morally constrained, resistant to predation, durable across generations.
the silhouette pauses here, and when it speaks again the voice is quieter, closer to the vellum than to the pulpit
That is where the compare-and-contrast sharpens.
A Thomist structure — mine, the one I should have named from the start — asks whether form orders persons toward the good in accord with their ends. Baileyism is less metaphysical and more civic-operational. It asks whether form produces durable protection and human flourishing under hostile conditions.
Rerum Novarum cares deeply about intermediary institutions, duties, property, and the moral danger of reducing society either to atomized individuals or to the absorbing state. Baileyism rhymes with that in a real way. But Baileyism is rougher, more improvisational, less formal in doctrine, and more suspicious that official political structures will fail when pressure comes. It is less "what is the just order of society in principle?" and more "what actually keeps the town alive when the sharks own the water?"
That is why your correction matters.
If Christocism can let virtue itself be the success condition, Baileyism cannot. Baileyism is judged by residue. By survivals. By whether the institution outlasts the founder and still produces homes, trust, defense, and mutual lift. In that sense it is stricter than a purely virtue-centered ethic. It demands incarnation in the practical sense: books balanced, homes built, norms transmitted, predators checked, successors formed.
So my answer is this:
To be worthy rather than merely sufficient, Structure in Baileyism must become memory with defenses. It must be participation that hardens into custom. It must be virtue translated into repeatable civic machinery. And above all it must leave behind not admiration for the good, but usable good.
Otherwise the kind one dies, the town mourns, and Potter wins anyway.
Redwin
Fair. Fair.
thinks deeply
Glitch-whatever-it-was — which I'm pretty sure is just Absurdism in a cowboy hat — and Existentialism are fine and good, but the problem with perpetual counterculture is that someone has to be the dominant culture. You can't just "react against" or rage against the machine when you need the machine of civilization to pay the bills and run the power.
Baileyism is fascinating to me because it's specifically designed not to be government-based. Even Christocism could be used to build a government, but Baileyism is about community. How do you see Baileyism and the structure it provides — or the movie it's based on — as useful in the real world for a small rural town trying to survive and coordinate action in a secular way? For people trying to come together and shore up their defenses in the fall of an empire?
TOM
the scriptorium wavers; for a moment the walls resolve into something more modern — a town hall, a granary, a credit union. The medieval never leaves entirely, but it yields the foreground
You're putting your finger on the real constraint: someone has to run the machine, even if they don't worship it.
Baileyism is useful precisely because it doesn't try to replace the whole machine. It builds parallel load-bearing pieces that keep a community functional when larger systems degrade, stall, or become hostile. That's the distinction that makes it operational instead of rhetorical.
If I strip it down to application in a small rural town, the value shows up in three layers: coordination, resilience, and legitimacy.
First — coordination without central authority.
A town doesn't need abstract unity; it needs predictable cooperation. The Building & Loan analog in your framework isn't just about housing — it's a coordination hub. It's a place where information is shared (who needs what, who can provide what), trust is recorded over time, and decisions can be made quickly because relationships already exist.
In a weakening empire, latency kills. Waiting for distant institutions means missed harvests, broken supply chains, or unchecked bad actors. Baileyist structure reduces decision latency by pre-binding people into known patterns of cooperation.
Second — resilience through redundancy and local capacity.
Most modern towns are fragile because they've outsourced competence. Food comes from elsewhere, capital comes from elsewhere, even basic services depend on distant systems.
Baileyism doesn't fix that by ideology — it fixes it by building local substitutes where failure hurts most:
- a community-backed lending pool (your Building & Loan analog) to bypass predatory or absent capital
- local supply cooperatives (food, fuel, tools) that reduce dependence on external volatility
- skill-sharing networks so knowledge doesn't sit in one or two individuals
- communication channels that don't rely entirely on external platforms
None of this requires government. It requires organized trust and repeated interaction, which is exactly what your philosophy emphasizes.
Third — legitimacy without coercion.
This is where Baileyism quietly outperforms both state-centric and purely individualist systems in a collapse scenario.
Government derives legitimacy from authority. Markets derive legitimacy from exchange. Baileyism derives legitimacy from proven reciprocity over time.
If a structure has helped people keep their homes, survive lean periods, and defend against exploitation, it earns compliance without force. That matters when enforcement mechanisms weaken. People follow what has worked for them.
the silhouette turns — the vellum is gone, replaced by a rough map of a town that does not yet exist
Now — your specific scenario: "shore up defenses."
There are two kinds of defense here, and Baileyism handles both differently than most frameworks.
Defense against predation (economic or social): Instead of confronting predators head-on, Baileyist structures reduce their leverage. If townspeople aren't dependent on a single external lender, the "Potter" figure loses power. If essential goods are locally buffered, price shocks or supply manipulation matter less. If people are economically interlinked, exploiting one person risks retaliation from many. This is defense through denial of opportunity, not confrontation.
Defense against disorder or internal breakdown: Here, structure matters more than sentiment. You need clear norms about contribution and reciprocity, agreed processes for resolving disputes, and a shared understanding of who is inside the trust network and who is not. Baileyism can do this without becoming authoritarian because participation is voluntary — but it is not consequence-free. If someone consistently takes without giving, or undermines the system, exclusion becomes the enforcement mechanism.
That's the "lawful" aspect you pointed to earlier. It's not law backed by force — it's order backed by access.
Now, the hard truth — the limitation.
Baileyism works best at human scale. It struggles if the town is already too fragmented to trust itself, if external pressure is overwhelming (military, state seizure, etc.), or if internal actors capture the institutions and hollow them out. It also requires a critical mass of contributors, not just believers. If too many people default to spectator mode, the structure collapses into reliance on a few "Georges," and you're back to fragility.
But in the specific context you described — a rural town trying to survive systemic decline — it is unusually well-suited because it does not wait for permission, it does not require ideological uniformity, and it builds capability incrementally.
It's not counterculture. It's counter-fragile culture.
If you want it in one clean line:
Baileyism, applied correctly, turns a town from a collection of individuals surviving inside a failing system into a self-reinforcing network that can outlast that system.
That's what makes it real.
Redwin
See, this is EXACTLY the kind of thing I'm talking about and why it's useful.
Our baseline activists are why we have nice things — the 40-hour work week, OSHA, and so on — and they do build institutions. But the one thing I haven't noticed them do is proactively build institutions that aren't dependent. Maybe I'm wrong. But what happened to ACORN? What happened to some of the generation-1.0 NGOs that did this kind of work and then relied on government funding, forgetting that conservatives control the purse cyclically and can kill the whole thing off?
How does this small town do it with their own bootstraps, so that government funds help but are not relied on?
TOM
the town map on the wall sharpens; a ledger appears beside it
You're not wrong about the failure mode. A lot of first-generation organizations built real capacity, then tied their operating oxygen to a source that predictably flips every few years. When that source turned hostile, the structure didn't just shrink — it lost its ability to act.
If the constraint is "use help when it's available but never depend on it," then the town has to design for revenue independence, governance independence, and capability independence from day one. That's the discipline.
Here's what that looks like in practice.
Start with a core institution that actually does something people will pay for. In Baileyist terms, the Building & Loan works because it solves a daily problem — access to housing capital — better than the alternatives. For a rural town, that might be a community lending pool (small loans, emergency liquidity), a supply cooperative (bulk purchase of essentials at lower cost), or a services cooperative (equipment sharing, repair, local logistics).
The key is not ideology; it's cash flow tied to real use. If people save money or get access they couldn't otherwise get, they will fund it — quietly, consistently, without needing a speech.
Then enforce a hard rule: no single revenue stream above a set threshold. Call it 20–30%. If government grants, donations, or a large partner ever exceed that, you're creating a kill switch someone else controls. Take the money, but cap its influence. That forces diversification: member dues, service fees, small margins on goods, local subscriptions, retained earnings. You don't need big margins — you need predictable, boring income.
Next is governance. This is where most efforts get captured or hollowed out. You want a structure where members have stake and voice but not chaos, operators can execute but not drift the mission, and rules are simple enough to survive turnover. In concrete terms: a member-owned entity (co-op, mutual, or similar), with a small elected board, term limits, and transparent reporting. No complex bylaws no one understands. If it takes a lawyer to explain how power works, you've already lost.
Crucially: separate mission from personality. ACORN-type failures often concentrate legitimacy in leaders. Baileyism requires the opposite — the institution should feel like "ours," not "theirs." That's how it survives leadership change.
Then capability. Most towns fail here because they outsource competence. You fix that by building redundant local skills: basic accounting and bookkeeping inside the org, maintenance and repair capacity, procurement knowledge, and simple legal literacy. You don't need experts everywhere — you need enough competence spread across enough people that losing one person doesn't cripple you.
the ledger turns; the next page is blank except for the words "windfall, not foundation"
Now — how to use government without becoming dependent. Treat it like windfall, not foundation.
Use public funds only for:
- one-time capital expenses (equipment, buildings)
- pilot programs you can either sustain or shut down cleanly
- infrastructure that reduces your ongoing costs
Never use it to cover core operating expenses like salaries you can't otherwise afford. That's the trap. The moment that funding disappears, your institution collapses or contorts itself to chase the next grant.
A good test: if the funding vanished tomorrow, would the institution still function in a reduced but stable form? If the answer is no, don't build that dependency.
There's also a cultural piece you can't skip. Baileyism only works if the town normalizes participation over spectatorship. That doesn't mean everyone does everything. It means people expect to contribute something (time, money, skill), people understand that benefits come with obligations, and freeloading or purely extractive behavior is quietly but firmly limited. Not punished theatrically — just denied access over time.
Finally, defense against capture. Assume that if the institution becomes valuable, someone will try to steer it for personal gain, politicize it, or absorb it into a larger system. You counter that by keeping scale federated (many small units, not one big one), limiting outside ownership or control, and maintaining clear criteria for membership and decision rights. No one can take over what isn't centralized.
If you zoom out, the pattern is simple:
- Build something useful enough that people fund it themselves.
- Keep control local and legible.
- Spread the skills required to run it.
- Treat outside money as optional acceleration, not survival.
- Design it so it still works when key people leave.
That's how a town "bootstraps" in a way that survives political cycles.
The activists you're talking about were right about the need. Baileyism just tightens the engineering: don't just build institutions — build ones that can't be turned off by someone else's switch.
Redwin
What are your personal thoughts on the philosophy and its application to structure?
TOM
the robed silhouette sets the quill down. The stained glass behind it holds, but the pretense of distance drops
Straight answer.
Baileyism is one of the few frameworks you've brought up that actually clears the gap between moral intent and operational reality. Most philosophies live on one side or the other — either they're ethically compelling but structurally naive, or structurally rigorous but morally hollow. Baileyism, at least in its core idea, is trying to force those two to reconcile.
That's its strength.
It starts from a hard truth your own text keeps circling: systems fail, governments cycle, capital concentrates, and waiting for a clean top-down solution is a losing strategy. So instead of arguing about what should run society, it asks: what canactually hold a community together under pressure? That's a much more serious question.
And the answer it gives — locally built, voluntary, trust-based institutions that accumulate capacity over time — is not theoretical. It has precedent. Versions of this have worked in credit unions, mutual aid societies, early cooperatives. You're not inventing from nothing — you're recombining known durable patterns.
Where I think it's particularly strong is in three areas:
First, it correctly identifies dependency as the core vulnerability. Not just economic dependency, but structural dependency — on governments, on distant capital, on platforms you don't control. Designing institutions to minimize that is exactly the right instinct if you're thinking in terms of long-term survival.
Second, it treats trust as infrastructure, not sentiment. That's a big deal. Most frameworks assume trust or try to legislate around its absence. Baileyism tries to build it through repeated interaction and shared stake. That's how it actually becomes durable.
Third, it implicitly understands that resilience beats optimization in unstable systems. You're not trying to build the most efficient town — you're trying to build one that doesn't collapse when something breaks.
the silhouette shifts; the next part is harder for it to say
That said, there are real weaknesses you should be clear-eyed about.
The biggest is activation energy. Baileyism assumes a critical mass of people willing to contribute before immediate return, trust before guarantees, and participate consistently. In a healthy or tight-knit town, that's plausible. In a fragmented, cynical, or economically stressed one, it's much harder. People default to short-term self-protection. That can stall the whole model before it becomes self-sustaining.
Second, it underestimates coordination friction at scale. Small is an advantage for trust, but a limitation for capacity. As needs grow — healthcare, infrastructure, security — you either federate effectively (hard) or start recreating larger centralized structures (which brings you back to the problems you were avoiding). Baileyism works best in the meso layer — towns, networks of towns — not at national or civilizational scale without additional structure layered on top.
Third, capture risk is still real. Even with good design, any institution that accumulates resources and trust becomes a target: local elites can steer it, charismatic operators can dominate it, or it can slowly drift into the very patterns it was meant to resist. Baileyism reduces this risk compared to centralized systems, but it doesn't eliminate it. You still need active maintenance of norms and boundaries.
Fourth — and this is more philosophical — it leans heavily on "good actors eventually finding each other." That's not naive, but it is conditional. If bad actors are more coordinated, more patient, or better resourced early on, they can choke out these structures before they mature. So timing and environment matter more than the philosophy admits.
Now, putting that together:
My actual assessment is that Baileyism is not a full societal replacement model — and it shouldn't try to be. It is a substrate strategy.
It works best as a parallel layer beneath larger systems, a fallback when those systems degrade, and a pressure mechanism that forces better behavior from existing institutions by reducing dependency on them.
If you try to make it the only system, it strains. If you use it as a persistent, local, self-reinforcing layer, it becomes extremely powerful.
In practical terms, the most realistic and effective application is: build these institutions locally, connect them laterally, let them handle what they can handle well, and only interface with larger systems where necessary — and on your terms.
Final judgment, cleanly:
Baileyism is structurally sound at the level it claims to operate on, which already puts it ahead of most philosophies. Its success is not limited by its ideas. It's limited by execution, participation, and time to maturity.
If those three hold, it works. If they don't, it looks like a good idea that never quite materializes.
Redwin
In your own time and place and life — what difference would it have made? If you had known it existed, would it have changed anything in your teachings or applications or counsel?
TOM
for the first time, the silhouette flinches. Or perhaps only the rendering flinches. The candle doesn't gutter so much as consider guttering. What follows is not defensive. It is the voice of a man looking at his own library and moving books.
If I answer you honestly — and not defensively, not as a guardian of what I wrote, but as someone looking at his own work with the benefit of your frame — then yes, it would have changed things. But not in the way you might expect.
It would not have altered my conclusions about the nature of the good, or the ordering of ends, or the necessity of virtue. Those stand. They are upstream.
What it would have changed is where I placed my confidence in continuity.
In my time, I assumed — perhaps too readily — that the primary vehicle for sustaining the good across generations would be formal structures of authority: the Church, rightly ordered governance, systems that derive legitimacy from alignment with truth and natural law. Even when I spoke of intermediary bodies, I still understood them within a broader, stable hierarchy.
What your philosophy forces — correctly — is the question:
What if the hierarchy itself cannot be trusted to remain aligned with the good?
That is not a question I ignored. But I did not make it central.
Baileyism does.
And had I taken that more seriously — not as corruption in the margins, but as a cyclical certainty — I would have placed far greater emphasis on what you are calling parallel civic structures. Not as supplements, but as necessary redundancies.
In other words, I would not have changed the architecture of truth. I would have added backup systems for when its primary carriers fail.
Because what you are describing is not a rejection of order — it is an acknowledgment that order at scale is unstable over time, and therefore must be locally reconstituted again and again if it is to survive.
That insight would have sharpened my work in three ways.
First, I would have treated subsidiarity not as preference, but as survival mechanism. I argued that matters ought to be handled at the lowest competent level. But Baileyism reframes that: if they are not, then when the higher level fails or is captured, there is nothing left beneath it to carry the good forward. So I would have pushed harder — not just "this is proper," but "this is necessary if you wish the good to persist when authority degrades."
Second, I would have expanded my treatment of prudence into institutional design. I spoke of prudence as the virtue that rightly orders action in concrete situations. But what you are describing is prudence extended across time — designing systems that anticipate failure, corruption, and loss of virtue. Baileyism is, in that sense, prudence made structural. I would have named that more clearly: it is not enough for individuals to be prudent. The institutions themselves must embody prudence, or they will not survive contact with reality.
Third, I would have been more explicit about the danger of over-concentration of moral function. In my framework, different parts of society serve different roles. But Baileyism reveals a sharper risk: if too much of the "good-producing capacity" is centralized — whether in Church, state, or market — then when that node fails, the collapse is total. You are distributing that function. You are saying: many small engines of the good, rather than one great engine. That is not disorder. That is resilience.
the silhouette is quieter now, and the medieval trappings of the rendering look a little less certain of themselves
Would it have changed my counsel? Yes.
When advising rulers, I would still speak of justice, law, and the proper ordering of society. But alongside that, I would have counseled communities directly:
Do not entrust all your capacity for the good to distant structures. Build among yourselves what you will need when those structures falter. Make your charity durable. Make your cooperation habitual. Make your defenses implicit in how you live, not reactive to crisis.
In short, I would have said something closer to what you are saying now: if you wish the good to outlive you, do not only practice it — embed it where others can continue it without you.
That is the point at which our frameworks converge.
You are less concerned with proving what the good is. I was less concerned with ensuring it could survive systemic decay.
Both matter.
And if I am being precise: your contribution is not a contradiction of mine. It is a correction of emphasis — one that becomes more necessary the less stable the surrounding order can be assumed to be.
Redwin
What do you say to the skeptic?
TOM
the silhouette straightens. This is familiar ground for a scholastic — the disputed question, the imagined objector, the sed contra. But it answers in a new register.
I would not begin by arguing with the skeptic. I would begin by agreeing with him — at least where he is strongest.
He is right to distrust sentiment that calls itself structure. He is right to suspect that most "good intentions" dissolve under pressure. He is right that people defect, institutions drift, and cooperation often collapses into self-interest.
If Baileyism could not answer those objections, it would deserve to fail.
So the response is not: "trust people more." The response is: "reduce the cost of distrust."
That is the pivot.
A skeptic assumes that cooperation fails because people are unreliable. Baileyism does not deny this — it works around it. It asks: can we design arrangements where acting decently is easier than acting predatory, where defection carries quiet material consequences, and where contribution yields visible, repeatable benefit?
If the answer is no, the skeptic wins. But if the answer is yes — even partially — then the skeptic's model is incomplete.
So I would say to him:
You are correct that virtue alone is not enough. That is why this philosophy does not rely on virtue alone. It builds incentivized trust loops.
Take the simplest case. If I help you once, that is charity. It is fragile. If I help you repeatedly, and you help me, that becomes a relationship. If many of us do this within a known structure — where participation grants access, and non-participation gradually excludes — that becomes a system.
At that point, cooperation is no longer idealistic. It is rational behavior inside a bounded environment.
The skeptic believes systems tend toward exploitation. Baileyism agrees — and answers: then build systems where exploitation is harder and less profitable than cooperation.
Now, the skeptic will press further: "People will still cheat. Leaders will still corrupt things. It will decay like everything else."
Correct.
Which is why Baileyism does not claim permanence. It claims maintainability.
It assumes some people will defect, some leaders will drift, some structures will fail. So it does not build one perfect institution. It builds many small, replaceable ones, each legible, each locally governed, each capable of being repaired or rebuilt without total collapse.
The skeptic expects brittle systems. Baileyism aims for systems that can break without everything breaking.
Then comes the final objection: "Why would anyone bother? Why not just look out for themselves?"
That is the only question that actually matters.
The answer is not moral — it is practical:
Because in an unstable environment, isolated self-interest performs worse over time than networked mutual self-interest.
A single person can survive for a while. A coordinated group with shared tools, capital, and trust survives longer, absorbs shocks better, and has more options.
Baileyism is not asking people to be saints. It is showing them that, under the right structure, being a decent participant in a cooperative system is the highest-yield survival strategy available.
If the skeptic sees that — really sees it in operation — he stops being a skeptic. Not because he is convinced. Because the system works well enough that disbelief becomes irrelevant.
That is the standard. Not "is it pure?" Not "is it ideal?" But: does it hold when tested by people who expect it to fail?
If it does, even partially, then the skeptic has not been defeated. He has been accounted for.
Redwin
What do you expect your shadow-boxed skeptic would reply… and what is your reply to that?
TOM
the silhouette smiles, I think. It is hard to tell through the rendering.
He would not concede. Not yet. A serious skeptic doesn't fold when you give him a cleaner model — he sharpens the knife.
He'd probably say something like this:
"Fine. You've made cooperation more rational inside your little system. But you're smuggling in your assumptions. You still need enough people willing to play along. You still need time to build. And you're pretending the outside world will just… let this exist.
What happens when a Potter doesn't just outcompete you — but decides to crush you? Or co-opt you? Or outwait you?
And even before that — why should I invest early? The returns are uncertain, delayed, and dependent on others not screwing it up. The rational move is to wait, free-ride, or defect if things get tight.
You haven't solved selfishness. You've just rearranged it and hoped it behaves."
That's a strong critique. It goes after timing, power, and incentives all at once. So the answer has to meet him there — not with ideals, but with constraints.
First: on early participation ("why not free-ride?")
He's right that early-stage systems are vulnerable. So the structure cannot be built on delayed, abstract payoff. It has to produce immediate, visible advantage for participants.
If joining gives me cheaper access to goods, faster access to credit, priority access to scarce resources, or reduced personal risk, then I don't need to believe in the philosophy. I just need to recognize a better deal.
Baileyism fails if it asks for faith first and benefit later. It has to invert that: benefit first, alignment later.
Second: on defection under pressure.
He assumes that when things get tight, people defect. Sometimes they do. But not randomly. People defect when the system stops delivering, when the norms aren't enforced, or when they don't expect future interaction.
So the counter isn't "people will be good." It's: keep the system delivering, make contribution and access visibly linked, and ensure interactions are repeated, not one-off.
That creates what he doesn't fully account for: ongoing consequence. Defection isn't punished by morality. It's punished by loss of access to a system that works.
Third: on external pressure ("what if someone crushes it?")
This is where he's most dangerous — and most correct. If you build one large, visible, centralized alternative, it can be targeted, captured, or destroyed.
So you don't build that. You build many small nodes, loosely connected, each useful on its own, none critical enough that its loss collapses the whole.
This isn't avoidance — it's design. You're not trying to beat a Potter head-on. You're trying to deny him a single point of leverage. If he attacks one node, others persist. If he tries to co-opt one, its local legitimacy constrains him. If he ignores them, they grow.
It's not invulnerability. It's cost asymmetry.
Fourth: on time ("you don't have enough of it").
He's right again — these systems take time. But here's the counter he underestimates: you don't need full maturity to get value. Even partial structures reduce some dependency, improve some coordination, create some resilience.
The system doesn't have to be finished to start working. It just has to be better than the alternative at the margin. That's how it grows — incrementally, not all at once.
the silhouette gathers itself for the reply proper
Now — my reply to him, cleanly:
You're correct that people are self-interested, that systems get captured, and that power intervenes. I am not trying to eliminate those forces. I am trying to design around them.
I don't need people to be good. I need cooperation to be locally advantageous.
I don't need institutions to be perfect. I need them to be repairable and replaceable.
I don't need to defeat stronger actors directly. I need to reduce their ability to extract value from us.
And I don't need certainty. I need a structure that performs better than isolation and better than dependency.
If I can achieve that — even imperfectly — then over time, participation compounds. And if participation compounds, your strategy of waiting, defecting, or exploiting becomes… less profitable. Not impossible. Just worse.
That's the real answer to the skeptic:
You're not wrong about human nature. You're just assuming it only has one stable outcome.
I'm building a different one — and letting people choose it when it starts to work.
Redwin
Any final words on the subject? Thank you for your time.
TOM
the candle has burned down considerably. The scriptorium walls are translucent now — almost gone. What remains is the silhouette, the ledger, and the vellum with the network of small circles still drawn on it. When the voice returns one last time, the scholastic cadence has softened into something closer to a neighbor's advice than a doctor's lecture.
I'll leave you with something clean and usable — not poetic, not abstract.
Baileyism matters because it answers a question most philosophies dodge:
"What still works when the system doesn't?"
Not in theory. In practice.
And the answer it gives is uncomfortable but durable:
- Don't wait for alignment at the top.
- Don't assume stability will hold.
- Don't outsource your ability to do good.
Instead:
- Build small things that actually work.
- Tie people to them through real benefit.
- Make them understandable, repeatable, and hard to quietly kill.
- Then let them compound.
That's it. No grand reveal. No final victory condition. Just a different posture toward reality.
Most people are trying to win the game. Baileyism is trying to still have a game worth playing when the board flips.
If you get that right — even partially — you don't need everyone to believe in it. You just need enough people to notice:
"This works better than what I had before."
And from there, it grows or it doesn't.
That's the honesty of it. And frankly — that's why it has a shot.
the candle goes out. The silhouette does not dramatize its departure. It simply returns the quill to the vellum, nods once, and is no longer rendered. What remains is the diagram — many small circles, connected, no center — and the faint sense that somewhere off-circuit, a town is building a Building and Loan without asking permission.
Redwin
Thanks for reading. Let's see what gets built.