Coda: In Plain Terms
166 words, about 1 minute.
The plain point: the most valuable things a community learns must be held in common, or someone will eventually own them and charge rent. What is common cannot be repossessed. — Everything the Cardinal Scale figured out — how it governs, how it repairs conflict, how it farms — it published for any community that wanted it. Giving the knowledge away is exactly what kept it from being owned. These very volumes are part of that commons — and as they grow into a work you can question and add to, the knowledge of how to build keeps moving to whoever needs it next.
Toward the coherent substrate. Extraction privatizes what it can and charges rent on it; that is its core motion. A commons that cannot be owned is the anti-extractive heart of the whole design. What this book — and its growing, question-answerable form — gives away freely is itself part of that commons: the knowledge of how to leave extraction, kept moving to whoever needs it next.