Dynamic Prescriptive Economics - General Theory and Practice of Decisions Under Complexity
Dynamic Prescriptive Economics - General Theory and Practice of Decisions Under Complexity
Tariqullah Khan | Ventureethica | 2026
DETAILED TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE > Why This Book, Why Now, and How to Read It > 1. The Question That Started Everything > 2. Where This Framework Came From > 3. What This Book Contains and What It Does Not > 4. How This Book Was Written > 5. An Honest Assessment of the Book Itself > 6. How to Read This Book > 7. Acknowledgements > 8. An Invitation
PART ONE INTELLECTUAL AND HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS
Chapter 1 Introduction to the Book > The Decision Environment, the Intellectual Inheritance, and the DPE > Architecture > 1. The Decision Environment: Why Existing Frameworks Are Not > Enough > 1.1 Noise: The Proliferation of Competing Signals > I.2 Blind Spots: What Single-Dimensional Frameworks Cannot See > I.3 Prejudices: The Distortions of Unexamined Assumptions > I.4 Tensions: The Irreducibility of Competing Objectives > I.5 Trade-offs: Beyond the False Choice Between Acceptance and > Dissolution > I.6 Complexity: The Interconnection That Single Interventions Cannot > Address > 2. The Intellectual Inheritance: What Existing Frameworks Provide > and Where They Stop > 3. Central Claim > 3.1 Claim 1: Structural > 3.2 Claim 2: Architectural > 3.3 Claim 3: Epistemological > 4. The Architecture: Ten Principles as an Integrated System > 5. The Book's Structure: Thirty-Two Chapters in Five Parts > 5.1 Part One: Foundation (Chapters 1–3) > 5.2 Part Two: The Formal Architecture (Chapters 4–11) > 5.3 Part Three: DPE Microeconomics (Chapters 12–16) > 5.4 Part Four: DPE Macroeconomics (Chapters 17–24) > 5.5 Part Five: Synthesis of Ethics and Practice (Chapters 25–32) > 6. What This Book Claims and Does Not Claim > 7. A Note on Method: Why Prescriptive Economics Requires AER > 8. To the Reader: Five Communities, Five Pathways > 9. Key Terms Introduced in This Chapter
Chapter 2 From Descriptive to Prescriptive Economics > The Intellectual Foundations of Dynamic Prescriptive Economics > 1. Descriptive Tradition and Its Structural Limits > 1.1 The Systemic Blindness of Single-Dimension Evaluation > I.2 The Monetisation Dependence of Market-Based Solutions > I.3 The Implicit Prescriptivism of Positive Economics > 2. The Intellectual Arc: From Equilibrium to the Two-Dimensional > Vision > Table 2.1: The Walras-to-DPE Arc — Paradigm, Period, Contribution, > Unfinished Project > Three Meta-Patterns: Descriptive-Prescriptive Gap Dimensionality > Problem Walras-Raworth Arc > 3. The Prescriptive Turn: What It Means and Why It Matters > 3.1 Prescriptive Economics Defined > 3.2 The Paradigm Map: Where DPE Stands > 3.3 Trade-offs, Synergy, and the Design Problem > 4. The Limits of Prescriptive Economics: Four Structural Gaps > 4.1 No Structured Multi-Dimensional Decision Space > 4.2 No Objective Measurement of Distance from the Ideal > 4.3 No Structured Transformation Pathway > 4.4 No Epistemological Grounding for Prescriptive Authority > 5. The Bridge to Dynamic Prescriptive Economics > Key Terms Introduced in This Chapter
Chapter 3 From Prescriptive to Dynamic Prescriptive Economics > The NBC Architecture, the Four Quadrants, and the Ten Integrated > Principles > 1. The Problem DPE Is Designed to Solve > 2. The Two Foundational Axioms > 2.1 The Axiom of Duality > 2.2 The Axiom of Non-Substitutability > 3. The NBC Geometry: Coordinate System, Quadrants, and Metrics > 3.1 The Coordinate Space > 3.2 The Ideal Vector and Reference Points > 3.3 The d-Gap: Measuring Governance Distance > 3.4 The Stability Margin > 4. The Four Quadrants: Canonical Names, Dynamics, and STO > Protocols > Figure 3.1: The DPE NBC Decision Space — Four Quadrant Architecture > 4.1 Q1 — Synergistic Governance: The Target Configuration > 4.2 Q2 — Legalistic/Normative Trap: Aspiration Without Architecture > 4.3 Q3 — Degenerative/Predatory State: The Stable Attractor of > Failure > 4.4 Q4 — Moralistic/Sclerotic Governance: Institutional Capacity > Against Welfare > 5. The Ten Principles: An Integrated Architecture > 5.1 Measurement Architecture — Principles 1, 2, 3 > 5.2 Intervention Architecture — Principles 4, 7 > 5.3 Epistemological Foundation — Principles 6, 9 > 5.4 Institutional Accountability Architecture — Principles 5, 8, 10 > 6. DPE in Operation: The Governance Protocol > 7. DPE's Distinctive Contribution: What the Architecture Adds > Key Terms Formally Defined in This Chapter
PART TWO THE DPE FORMAL ARCHITECTURE
Chapter 4 The Ontological Foundation > Why Every Complex Decision Exists in Two Worlds Simultaneously > 4.1 The Inadequacy of Single-Axis Decision Ontologies > 4.1.1 The Single-Axis Commitment Across Frameworks > 4.1.2 The Systematic Failure Pattern > 4.1.3 What the Failures Share > 4.2 The Formal Statement of the Axiom of Duality > 4.2.1 Preliminary: What Makes Dimensions Non-Isomorphic > 4.2.2 The Axiom of Duality — Formal Statement > 4.2.3 Interpreting the Dimensional Range > 4.2.4 The Coupling Condition > 4.2.5 What the Axiom Formally Rules Out > 4.3 Historical Witnesses: The Cross-Civilisational Record of > Two-Dimensional Governance > 4.3.1 The Islamic Legal-Ethical Architecture: Maqasid al-Shari'ah > 4.3.2 The Confucian Li-Yi Architecture > 4.3.3 The Western Natural Law Tradition: Lex Humana and Lex Naturalis > 4.3.4 Roman Jurisprudence: Jus and Aequitas > 4.3.5 The Convergence and Its Significance > 4.4 The Structural Invariants of Complex Social Systems > 4.4.1 The First Universal Constant: Irreducible Dimensionality > 4.4.2 The Second Universal Constant: Epistemic Lag > 4.4.3 The Third Universal Constant: Bounded Stability > 4.4.4 Universality vs Cultural Relativity: A Critical Clarification > 4.5 The Rubric Architecture: Making the Axiom Empirically > Tractable > 4.5.1 The Structure of Rubrics > 4.5.2 The Six Legal/Structural Rubrics > 4.5.3 The Seven Ethical/Value Rubrics > 4.5.4 Normalisation Protocol and Composite Scoring > 4.5.5 The AER Pre-Commitment Protocol > 4.6 Existing Frameworks as Special Cases of DPE > 4.7 Falsifiability Conditions > 4.8 Key Terms and Glossary
Chapter 5 The Dynamic Propositions > Epistemic Lag, Bounded Stability, and the Nash-DPE Equilibrium > 5.1/2.1 From Axiom to Dynamics: The Logical Structure of > Derivation > 5.2/2.2 The Proposition of Epistemic Lag > Formal Statement Proof Strategy Structure of Lag Governance > Implications > 5.3/2.3 The Proposition of Bounded Stability > Formal Statement Proof Strategy Threshold Binary Phase Shift > Historical Record > 5.4/2.4 The Nash-DPE Equilibrium > Formal Statement Three Conditions Existence and Uniqueness > Welfare Implications > 5.5/2.5 The Proposition System: Interactions and Coherence > 5.6/2.6 Empirical Verification: Historical Governance Episodes > Weimar Republic Bretton Woods ESG Corporate Governance > Governance
Chapter 6 The NBC Space: A Formal Geometry of Governance > Coordinates, Quadrants, Trajectories, and Stability Margins > 6.1 Why Governance Needs a Geometry > 6.1.1 The Diagnostic Function: Locating Governance States > 6.1.2 The Predictive Function: Tracking Trajectories > 6.1.3 The Prescriptive Function: Specifying Interventions > 6.2 The Formal NBC Space: Definition and Properties > 6.2.1 The Space and Its Coordinates > 6.2.2 The Ideal Vector and Reference Points > 6.2.3 The d-Gap: Formal Definition and Properties > 6.2.4 The Stability Margin Field > 6.3 The Quadrant Topology > 6.3.1 The Four Canonical Quadrants: Overview > 6.3.2 Q1 — The Ideal Zone: Characteristics and Dynamics > 6.3.3 Q4 — The Sclerotic Zone: Characteristics and Dynamics > 6.3.4 Q2 — The Utopian Trap: Characteristics and Dynamics > 6.3.5 Q3 — The Predatory State: Characteristics and Dynamics > 6.3.6 Quadrant Boundaries: The Axes as Transition Surfaces > 6.3.7 Dimensional Reduction and Governance Trilemmas > 6.4 Trajectory Analysis in the NBC Space > 6.4.1–6.4.4 Formalising Trajectories Four Canonical Types > Directional Diagnostics Curvature > 6.5 The Geometric Representation of the Four Failure Modes > Sclerotic Degradation Catastrophic Bifurcation Paradoxical > Friction Predatory Equilibrium > 6.6 STO Interventions as Vectors in the NBC Space
Chapter 7 Acquired Epistemic Rationality: The Epistemic Engine > The AER Protocol, the Two-Stage Epistemic Firewall, and the > Cross-Civilisational Reference Set > 7.1 The Need for an Epistemic Engine > 7.1.1 Why the Problem Is Non-Trivial > 7.1.2 The Formal Vulnerability: Any NBC Position Is Achievable > 7.2 The Confirmation Bias Problem in Detail > 7.2.1–7.2.3 Three Routes to Weight Manipulation The Advocacy Trap > Self-Serving Symmetry > 7.3 The AER Protocol: The Two-Stage Epistemic Firewall > 7.3.1 Stage 1: The Structural Geometry Stage > 7.3.2 Stage 2: The AER Commitment Stage > 7.3.3 The Firewall: Formal Statement > 7.4 The Cross-Civilisational Reference Set > 7.4.1–7.4.6 Selection Criteria Size and Composition Weight > Derivation Worked Examples > 7.5 The Epistemic Consistency Audit > 7.6 The Weight Revision Protocol > 7.6.1–7.6.2 Permissible Revision Triggers Non-Permissible Revision > Triggers > 7.7 DPE in the Context of Structured Analytical Methods
Chapter 8 The STO Intervention Taxonomy > Substitution, Transformation, and Offset: A Complete and Exhaustive > Architecture > 8.1 The Bridge from Diagnosis to Prescription > 8.1.1–8.1.4 Prescription Authorisation Ordering Principle Design > Sequence Figure 8.1 > 8.2 The STO Completeness Theorem > 8.2.1–8.2.2 Formal Statement What the Theorem Establishes and Does > Not Establish > 8.3 The Three Intervention Types: Full Specification > 8.3.1–8.3.2 Interaction Effects Among Intervention Types Historical > Illustrations > 8.4 Quadrant-Specific STO Protocols > 8.4.1–8.4.4 Q1 Maintenance Q4 Recovery Q2 Liberation > Recovery > 8.5 STO Sequencing Logic for Multi-Period Improvement Trajectories > 8.5.1–8.5.3 Three Sequencing Principles Four Canonical Trajectories Adaptive Sequencing > 8.6 Pathological Intervention Cases > 8.6.1–8.6.3 S-in-Q4 O-in-Q4 T-without-AER
Chapter 9 Failure Mode Taxonomy > Diagnosing Sclerotic Degradation, Paradoxical Friction, Predatory > Equilibrium, and Bounded Stability > 9.1 The NBC Space and Its Failure Geography > 9.2 Failure Mode I: The Epistemic Trap (Q2) > Definition Coordinate Signature Bounded Stability Dynamics STO > Protocol > 9.3 Failure Mode II: The Utopian Trap (Q1 Drift) > Definition Coordinate Signature Institutional Legitimacy Paradox > STO Protocol > 9.4 Failure Mode III: Sclerotic Equilibrium (Q4) > Definition Coordinate Signature Stability Paradox STO Protocol > 9.5 Failure Mode IV: Predatory Equilibrium (Q3) > Nash-DPE Equilibrium Condition Coordinate Signature > Contraindications STO Protocol > 9.6 Integrated Failure Mode Taxonomy > 9.7 The STO Decision Matrix > 9.8 Inter-Quadrant Transition Dynamics > 9.8.1–9.8.3 Direction of Failure Drift Q3 Basin of Attraction > Transition Thresholds
Chapter 10 Subsumption Proofs > DPE as the General Theory: Encompassing RCT, Game Theory, Behavioural > Economics, and Ostrom > 10.1 Formal Definition of Subsumption > 10.2 Subsumption Proof I: Rational Choice Theory > Target Framework Limiting Conditions Formal Recovery Theoretical > Surplus > 10.3 Subsumption Proof II: Nash Game Theory > Target Framework Limiting Conditions Formal Recovery Theoretical > Surplus > 10.4 Subsumption Proof III: Behavioural Economics > Target Framework Functional Forms for Epistemic Lag Formal > Integration Surplus > 10.5 Subsumption Proof IV: Ostrom's Institutional Analysis > Target Framework Limiting Conditions Formal Correspondence > Theoretical Surplus > 10.6 Integrated Subsumption Map > 10.7 Strengthened Lemmas and Synthesis
Chapter 11 The Synthetic Proof of Generality > Universality, Subsumption, Falsifiability, and Parsimony > 11.1 The Complete DPE Architecture: A Formal Summary > 11.2 Criterion I: Universality > Completeness of NBC Space d-Gap Defined for Every State STO > Completeness > 11.3 Criterion II: Subsumption > 11.4 Criterion III: Falsifiability > AER Protocol as Falsifiability Mechanism Four Categories of > Falsifiable Predictions > 11.5 Criterion IV: Parsimony > Derivation Chain from the Axiom of Duality Symmetric Architecture
PART THREE DPE MICROECONOMICS APPLICATIONS
Chapter 12 The Individual Decision-Maker > Cognitive Legitimacy, Ethical Alignment, and the Eudaimonia Gap > 12.1–12.3 Individual NBC Architecture x-Dimension (Economic and > Cognitive Legitimacy) y-Dimension (Ethical and Relational Alignment) > 12.4 Four Individual Failure Modes and the Individual Eudaimonia > Map > 12.5 Bounded Stability at the Individual Level > 12.6 The Individual NBC in Practice > 12.6.6 A Bayesian Updating Procedure for the Structural/Values > Distinction > 12.7 The Micro-Level Fifth Subsumption > 12.8 Policy Translation and Objections > Annotated Glossary of Key Terms
Chapter 13 Family Governance > The Intergenerational NBC and the Transmission Theorem > 13.1–13.2 The Family as the Missing Unit in Economic Theory Why > the Family Is Categorically Different > 13.3 The Family NBC Architecture: Formal Definition > 13.3.1–13.3.4 x-Dimension y-Dimension Rubric Architecture > Measurement Protocol > 13.4 The Four Family Failure Modes > 13.5 The Intergenerational NBC Transmission Theorem > 13.6 Four Illustrative Scenarios > 13.7 The Family AER Protocol > 13.8–13.9 Empirical Validation Programme Connection to Part 3 > Architecture > Study Questions Recommended Readings Appendix 13B: Survey > Instruments
Chapter 14 Corporate Governance > The Purpose-Profit Frontier and the Nash-Firm Equilibrium > 14.1–14.2 The Firm Between Individual and Institution Financial > Legitimacy versus Profit Maximisation > 14.3 The Firm NBC Architecture: Formal Definition > 14.3.1–14.3.2 The Purpose-Profit Frontier The Firm Rubric > Architecture > 14.4 The Four Firm Failure Modes > 14.5 The Nash-Firm Equilibrium and the Collective Action Problem > 14.5.1–14.5.2 Transition Path Problem D-Gap to Distress Mechanism > 14.6–14.7 Four Illustrative Scenarios The Firm-Level AER > Protocol > 14.8–14.9 Empirical Validation Connection to Parts 3 and 4 > Study Questions Recommended Readings Glossary of Key Terms
Chapter 15 Institutional Governance > The Mission Drift Theorem and the Political Economy of Beneficiary > Accountability > 15.1–15.2 The Institution as Meso Level Why the Institution Is > Not a Large Firm > 15.3 The Institution NBC Architecture: Formal Definition > 15.4 The Four Institution Failure Modes > 15.5 The Mission Drift Theorem > 15.5.1–15.5.4 Four Drift Mechanisms Political Economy of > Accountability Differential Drift Rates Empirical Probes > 15.6–15.7 Four Illustrative Scenarios The Institutional AER > Protocol > 15.8–15.9 Empirical Validation Part 3 Synthesis: Complete DPE > Micro Architecture > Study Questions Recommended Readings Appendix 15C: AER Design > Principles
Chapter 16 The Circular-ESG Enterprise > The NC-ITFP Theorem and the Nash-Circular Equilibrium > 16.1–16.2 The Circular-ESG Firm NBC Architecture: Why x = > Circularity-Nature > 16.2.1–16.2.2 Dimensional Definition Rubric Architecture > 16.3 The Four Business Forms: A Complete Taxonomy > 16.4 The Natural Capital Integrated Total Factor Productivity > Theorem > 16.5 The Nash-Circular Equilibrium > 16.6–16.7 Four Illustrative Scenarios The Circular-ESG AER > Protocol > 16.8–16.9 Empirical Validation Bridge to Part 4: > Micro-Foundations for Macro Governance > Study Questions Recommended Readings Appendix 16B: Shadow Price > Estimation Protocol
PART FOUR DPE MACROECONOMICS APPLICATIONS
Chapter 17 Regenerative Human Development > The Civilisational Q2 Trap and the Sovereign NC-ITFP > 17.1–17.2 From Firm to Country: The Circular-ESG to RHD > Transition RHD NBC Architecture > 17.3 The RHD Objective Function: Quasi-Concavity and > Non-Substitutability > 17.4 The Lagrangian Optimality Conditions and Shadow Price > 17.5 Full-Sample Empirical Validation: 166 Countries > 17.6 The Four Country Configurations: Taxonomy and Empirical > Position > 17.7 The Civilisational Q2 Trap: The Country-Level Easterlin > Paradox > 17.8 Sovereign NC-ITFP: National Wealth Accounting for the RHD > Framework > 17.9–17.11 Nash-RHD Equilibrium Four Country Scenarios RHD > AER Protocol > 17.12–17.13 Additional Empirical Validation Bridge to Part 4 > Domain Chapters
Chapter 18 Sustainable Finance and Islamic Social Finance > Breaking the Domain Q2 Lock in Capital Allocation > 18.1 The Domain Q2 Trap in Sustainable Finance > 18.2 Micro-Level NBC: The Sustainable Finance Institution > 18.3 Macro-Level NBC: National Sustainable Finance Systems > 18.4 Instrument-Level Diagnosis and Q1 Redesign > Blended Finance Article 6 Carbon Markets NC-ITFP Integrity > Standard > 18.5 The Micro-Macro Interaction: Breaking the Double Q2 Lock > 18.6 The Q1 Sustainable Finance Architecture: Design Principles > and Mechanisms > 18.7–18.8 Four Illustrative Scenarios Empirical Validation > Programme > Appendices 18A–18D: Instrument Diagnostic Table Scenario NBC > Rankings Research Design > Study Questions (Parts A–E) Recommended Readings
Chapter 19 Circular Energy Transition Governance > The Green-Linear Energy Paradox and the NC-ITFP Standard > 19.1 The Green-Linear Energy Paradox: Financing the Wrong > Transition > 19.2 Technology-by-Technology NC-ITFP Analysis > 19.3 The Circular Energy Transition Theorem > 19.3.1–19.3.2 Why the Green-Linear Paradox Is a Nash Equilibrium > Q1-Approaching Requirements > 19.4–19.5 Micro-Level NBC: The CET Firm Macro-Level NBC: > National CET Systems > 19.6 The CET STO Framework: Technology-by-Technology Prescriptions > 19.7–19.8 Four Country Scenarios The CET AER Protocol > 19.9 Retroactive Implication for Chapter 18: Updating Sustainable > Finance Architecture > 19.10–19.11 Empirical Validation Bridge Forward > Study Questions Glossary Appendices 19A–19B
Chapter 20 Artificial Intelligence Governance > The AI Domain Q4 Trap and the Civilisational AI Governance Protocol > 20.1 The Most Powerful Instrument of Industrial Rationality Ever > Constructed > 20.2 The NBC Architecture: Industrial Rationality and > Civilisational Rationality > 20.2.1 The Critical Non-Isomorphism > 20.3 The AI Governance Rubric Architecture > 20.4 The Four AI System Configurations > 20.5 The AI Domain Q4 Trap Theorem > 20.6 Macro-Level NBC: National AI Governance Systems > 20.7 The AI Governance STO Framework: Five Technology Systems > 20.8–20.9 Four Country Scenarios The AI-CET Connection > 20.10–20.12 The Civilisational AI Governance AER Protocol > Empirical Validation Bridge Forward
Chapter 21 Digitalisation, Inclusion, and the Digital Dividend > Who Benefits from the AI Economy? > 21.1–21.2 The Digital Productivity Trap NBC Architecture: Data > Utility and Privacy Protection > 21.3–21.4 The Digital Dividend Rubric Architecture Four > Digitalisation Configurations > 21.5 The Digital Inclusion Theorem > 21.6–21.7 Macro-Level NBC: National Digitalisation Systems The > STO Framework > 21.8–21.9 Four Country Scenarios The Digitalisation AER > Protocol > 21.10–21.11 Empirical Validation Bridge Forward > Study Questions Glossary Recommended Readings
Chapter 22 Government Efficiency, Equity, and Public Governance > The Public Governance Q2 Trap: When the State Becomes Efficient at > Inequality > 22.1 The Meta-Governance Problem: Governance of Governance > 22.2 The NBC Architecture: Government Operational Efficiency and > Social Equity > 22.2.1–22.2.2 Washington Consensus as Q2-Generating Architecture > Non-Isomorphism in Political Economy Terms > 22.3 The Government Governance Rubric Architecture > 22.4 The Four Government Governance Configurations > 22.4.1 Quadrant Dynamics: Drift, Capture, and the Rarity of Q1 > 22.5 The Public Governance Q2 Trap Theorem > 22.6 AER Cross-Traditional Evidence for Equity Pre-Commitment > 22.7–22.8 Four Country Scenarios The Wellbeing Governance AER > Protocol > 22.9–22.10 The STO Framework: Five Intervention Domains > Empirical Validation > Glossary Study Questions Recommended Readings Appendix: Formal > d-Gap Expression
Chapter 23 Effective Policy Coordination > Monetary-Fiscal Governance in the Era of Rising Global Fragmentation > 23.1 The Coordination Imperative: Why Existing Frameworks Fail > 23.2–23.3 NBC Architecture: External Stability and Domestic > Welfare Rubric Architecture > 23.4 The Four Monetary-Fiscal Governance Dynamics > 23.4.1–23.4.2 Quadrant Dynamics The Q2 Trap: Formal Statement > 23.5–23.6 Contemporary Policy Tensions Four Country Scenarios > 23.7–23.8 The STO Framework: Five Intervention Domains The > Wellbeing Coordination AER Protocol > 23.9 The Coordination Council: Governance Architecture > 23.9.1–23.9.3 Coordination Council Model KPI Architecture AER > Epistemic Learning Loop > 23.10–23.12 Political Economy Force Field Empirical Validation Bridge Forward
Chapter 24 Position, Viability, and the Path to Q1 > A Unified Measurement Synthesis Across All Domains > 24.1 The Architecture of the Synthesis > 24.2 The Universal Q2 Temporal Arbitrage Theorem > 24.2.1–24.2.2 Why Temporal Arbitrage Is the Universal Equilibrium > Formal Equilibrium Derivation > 24.3 Domain-by-Domain d- Divergence Analysis > 24.4 The Joint d- Policy Architecture > 24.5 The Regenerative Finance Facility: Complete Operational > Design > 24.6 The Integrated d- Governance Architecture > 24.6.1–24.6.2 Political Economy of Measurement Reform > O-Coordination in Practice > 24.7 The Path to Q1: Sequencing and Prioritisation Logic > 24.7.1–24.7.2 The J-Curve of Transition The Managed Transition > Clause > 24.8–24.10 The DPE Contribution: What the Framework Adds > Strengthening the Synthesis Bridge to Part 5
PART FIVE SYNTHESIS OF ETHICS AND PRACTICE – FUTURE ECONOMIES
Chapter 25 Connections with Economics > How DPE Engages the Unfinished Projects of Economic Decision Science > 25.1 Introduction: Engaging an Unfinished Project > 25.2 The Intellectual Lineage: Ten Thinkers, Ten Incomplete > Projects > 25.2.1–25.2.10 Walras Simon Ostrom Sen Schumpeter Keynes > Hayek Kahneman Rawls Raworth > 25.3 Comparative Analysis: The Full Interaction Matrix > 25.4 The Unfinished Questions: Mapping the Gaps > 25.5 Managing Pluralism: Inter-Tradition Tensions > 25.6 Complementary Frameworks: An Acknowledgment > 25.7 Three Meta-Patterns Across the Intellectual Lineage > 25.7.1–25.7.3 Descriptive-Prescriptive Gap Dimensionality Problem > Walras-Raworth Arc > 25.8 DPE as General Theory: The Subsumption Claim > 25.8A–25.8B Empirical Anchor Clarified Position Methodological > Defence Objections and Replies > 25.9 Implications for Economic Theory, Education, and > Institutional Design > 25.10 Conclusion: A Platform for the Next Generation of Questions
Chapter 26 The Intergenerational Equity Bridge > DPE Architecture of Sovereign Infrastructure and Intergenerational Fiscal Justice > 26.1 Introduction: The Intergenerational Compact and Its Breach > 26.2 Strategic Opacity as Governance Failure > 26.2.1–26.2.3 The Hidden Asset Class | The Threefold Distortion | Strategic Opacity as a Q3 Trap > 26.3 The Sovereign Infrastructure Stack as a DPE System > 26.3.1–26.3.2 The Tri-Layer Model | The Network Premium > 26.4 NBC Quadrant Mapping of Infrastructure Governance > 26.4.1–26.4.3 The Two Pivotal Dimensions | The Ideal Vector and the Q3 Trap | The Spectrum of Implementation Choices > 26.5 The Intergenerational Equity Index as a δ-Index > 26.5.1–26.5.3 From Proximity Metric to Sectoral δ-Index | The IEI Formula | The d-Gap for Sovereign Infrastructure > 26.6 STO Pathways from Strategic Opacity to Verified Sovereignty > 26.6.1–26.6.2 The Three STO Pathway Types | Resolving the Verification/Autonomy Tension > 26.7 OSV as the Epistemic Foundation of the Distributed Infrastructure Ledger > 26.7.1–26.7.2 The DIL as Physical OSV | Legitimate Opacity and the Process-Data Distinction > 26.8 Empirical Application: IEI Illustration for the Mediterranean/GCC Panel > 26.8.1–26.8.3 Data and Methodology | Illustrative IEI Coordinates | Panel Findings > 26.9 The Grandchildren Test: Intergenerational Equity as DPE Normative Criterion > 26.9.1–26.9.3 Formalising the Intergenerational Obligation | Civilisational Wisdom Traditions | AER and the Grandchildren Test > 26.10 Conclusion: From Hidden Liability to Transparent Latent Equity > Glossary of Key Terms | Study Questions | Recommended Readings > Appendix 26A: NBC Diagram — Sovereign Infrastructure Governance > Appendix 26B: IEI Scoring Rubric > Appendix 26C: STO Pathway Table — Full Specification
Chapter 27 Acquired Epistemic Rationality > Intergenerational Wisdom as the Epistemological Foundation of > Decision Science > 32.1 Introduction: The Hidden Epistemological Substrate > 32.2 Formal Definition and Properties of AER > 32.2.1–32.2.3 Definition Two-Stage Epistemic Firewall AER > Distinguished from Related Concepts > 32.3–32.4 Deriving AER from Economic Thought AER in Economic > History: What Survived and Why > 32.5 Wisdom Traditions as Empirically Validated AER > 32.5.1–32.5.2 Selection Criteria Divergent Traditions and What They > Reveal > 32.6 The Neoclassical-to-Regenerative Arc as AER Accumulation > 32.7 AER Formalised: The Governance Architecture > 32.7.1–32.7.4 Repository Structure Pre-Commitment Protocol OSV > and PCVP Conflict Protocol > 32.8 AER Across the DPE Framework: Cross-Chapter Integration > 32.8A–32.8B Epistemic Calibration and Humility Formal Expression > Objections and Replies > 32.9 Conclusion: Why AER Makes DPE's Prescriptive Ambition > Possible
Chapter 28 Rules vs Purpose: The Synergy of Law and Applied Ethics > The Analytical-Systemic Tension Across Nine Governance Traditions > 32.1 Introduction: The Structural Tension in Every Normative > Tradition > 32.2 The Quadrant Architecture of Law-Ethics Relations > 32.3 The Tension in Religious-Legal and Civilisational Traditions > 32.3.1–32.3.3 Islamic Us l al-Fiqh and Maq Systems-Analytical > Hermeneutics International Human Rights > 32.4 The Tension in Secular Legal-Ethical Traditions > 32.4.1–32.4.4 Constitutional Democracy Corporate Governance > Medical Ethics Environmental Law > 32.5 AER as the Epistemological Bridge > 32.6 STO Pathways to Q1: From Each Failure Mode > 32.6.1–32.6.3 From Q2 Legalism From Q4 Moralism From Q3 Nihilism > 32.7–32.9 Connection to Part 2 The Practitioner Question: What > the Framework Cannot Substitute Conclusion > Study Questions Recommended Readings
Chapter 29 Open-Source Verifiability and the Future of Economics > The Mathematical Necessity of Transparent Governance Architecture > 32.1 Introduction: The Epistemological Crisis of Complex Economies > 32.2 Open-Source Verifiability: Formal Definition and Properties > 32.2.1–32.2.5 Definition Five Properties Two-Stage Firewall > Process vs Data Transparency Literature Positioning > 32.3 The Mathematical Necessity of OSV > 32.3.1–32.3.3 Equimarginal Optimality Condition Proposition 32.1 > OSV and AER Integration Function > 32.4 OSV and AER: Two Expressions of the Same Epistemological > Commitment > 32.5 Five Frontier Domains: OSV Applied > 32.5.1–32.5.5 Gig Economy Orbit Economy DLT and DeFi > Governance Central Bank Digital Currencies > 32.6–32.7 OSV and the Three Failure Modes The -Index as OSV > Instrument > 32.8–32.11 Legitimate Opacity Connection to DPE Architecture > Orbital Institutions Conclusion
Chapter 30 Antitrust and the Architecture of Platform Competition > Dynamic Prescriptive Antitrust: A DPE Framework for Market Power > Governance > 32.1 Introduction: The Framework Diagnosing Itself > 32.2 The Two Dimensions of Political Economy NBC Space > 32.2.1 Derivation from the Four Analytical Pairs > 32.3 The Rubric Architecture > 32.3.1–32.3.2 The Six x-Rubrics: Institutional Power for Collective > Action The Seven y-Rubrics: Civilisational Accountability > 32.4 Quadrant Configurations and Political Economy Traps > 32.4.1 The Q2 Trap Taxonomy > 32.5 The Universal Political Economy Q4 Theorem > 32.6 AER Cross-Civilisational Reference Set for Political Economy > 32.7 STO Pathways to Q1: AER-Guided Prescriptions by Quadrant > 32.7.1–32.7.3 From Q2 to Q1 From Q4 to Q1 From Q3 to Q1 > 32.8–32.10 Integration with DPE Architecture DPE's Own > Political Economy Position Conclusion
Chapter 31 The Political Economy of Q1 Transition > Power, Institutions, and the Enabling Conditions for Governance > Reform > 32.1–32.2 Introduction: The Framework Diagnosing Itself Two > Dimensions of Political Economy NBC Space > 32.3–32.4 The Rubric Architecture Quadrant Configurations and > Political Economy Traps > 32.5–32.6 The Universal Political Economy Q4 Theorem AER > Cross-Civilisational Reference Set > 32.7 STO Pathways to Q1 > 32.7.1–32.7.4 From Q2 to Q1 From Q4 to Q1 From Q3 to Q1 > Practitioner Formation > 32.8 Integration with the DPE Architecture > 32.9 DPE's Own Political Economy Position > 32.9.1–32.9.3 Who Benefits from DPE Adoption? Who Resists, and How DPE's Own Q1 Transition > 32.10 Conclusion: Q1 in Any Domain Requires Q1 in Governance > Itself
Chapter 32 The Research and Teaching Agenda > Toward a Living Framework: Five Open Questions and the Programme to > Answer Them > 32.1 Introduction: The Difference Between a Completed System and a > Living Framework > 32.2 Honest Accounting: What DPE Has Established and What Remains > Open > 32.2.1–32.2.3 What the Book Has Established What Remains to Be > Validated Unresolved Tensions > 32.3 The Research Programme: Three Tiers > 32.3.1–32.3.4 Tier One: Validation Tier Two: Extension Tier > Three: Methodology First Empirical Priorities > 32.4 Cross-Tradition Scholarly Engagement > 32.5–32.7 The Teaching Philosophy The Teaching Architecture: > Four Levels Research-Teaching Integration > 32.6.1–32.6.4 Graduate Seminars Professional Practitioner Training Undergraduate Courses Executive Education > 32.8–32.9 Institutional and Collaborative Requirements > Connection to the Book's Architectural Logic > 32.10 Five Open Questions: The Appropriate Conclusion > 32.11 Conclusion: The Ongoing Work > Glossary of Key DPE Terms Study Questions Recommended Readings
CONCLUSION
Governance as Civilisational Practice > 1. The Moment This Book Was Written For > Three Conditions: Convergence of Governance Failures Maturity of > Intellectual Inheritance Practical Urgency > 2. What Thirty-Two Chapters Have Established > Part One: Context Part Two: Architecture Parts Three–Four: > Applied Demonstration Part Five: Synthesis > 3. What the Framework Cannot Do > Political Will Practical Wisdom Certainty Completeness > 4. The Invitation > To Economists To Governance Practitioners To Scholars in Adjacent > Traditions To Legal Theorists To the Next Generation > 5. The Circle Closes
BACK MATTERS
Integrated Glossary > 108 terms across three tiers: Tier 1 Core Architecture (26 terms) > Tier 2 Named Discoveries and Domain Terms (57 terms) Tier 3 > Supporting Concepts (25 terms). Alphabetical with chapter > cross-references throughout.
Question Bank > 273 questions across 30 chapters (Chapters 4–32), three tiers per > chapter: Tier 1 Conceptual Mastery Tier 2 Application and Analysis > Tier 3 Synthesis and Original Contribution. Navigation index by Part > included.
Recommended Readings > Curated reading lists drawn from chapter-level recommendations across > all 32 chapters and the Conclusion, organised by Part and domain. > Includes foundational texts, methodological references, and emerging > literature on each governance domain.
Bibliography > 88 annotated entries across 12 thematic sections. Full bibliographic > data with annotation noting each work's relationship to the DPE > framework. Key cross-reference: Ostrom (1990) cited in 9 chapters — > highest citation frequency across the applied chapters.