Episode 44: Why Institutions Prioritize Metrics Over People: Institutional Autopoietization and the Loss of the Social

A deep dive into why institutions prioritize metrics over people. This episode explores institutional autopoietization, the constraint ratchet, legibility capture, organizational non-learning, scapegoating, affective capture, and the life-coherence corrective needed to restore institutions to the people and communities they were built to serve. Read More

Episode 40: Field Repair for a Life-Coherent Commons: A Critique of Toward a Life-Coherent Commons

A critique of Toward a Life-Coherent Commons focused on making field repair more actionable. This episode asks how the framework can better confront power, resistance, bad-faith actors, Caribbean island realities, and the ethical use of AI as a bounded tool in service of life. Read More

Episode 39: Replacing Metric Dashboards with Life-Coherent Commons: A Debate on Systemic Repair

A debate on dashboard control, field repair, and the life-coherent commons. This episode asks whether metric-driven governance can manage complex global crises — or whether dashboards often hide the living harms they claim to measure, requiring institutions to be re-nested within life, sufficiency, repair, and transgenerational responsibility. Read More

Episode 38: Re-nesting Our Institutions into Life: Toward a Life-Coherent Commons

A deep dive into the Great Inversion, systemic drift, and the life-coherent commons. This episode asks how finance, medicine, law, technology, education, religion, and governance can be re-nested within the shared conditions that allow life to continue, recover, and flourish. Read More

Episode 15: Why Property Claims Outrank Human Needs: Life-Coherent Jurisprudence and the Repair of Law

A deep dive into life-coherent jurisprudence, legal drift, life-harm, and the repair of law. This episode asks why property claims, contracts, debt, enforcement, and legal abstractions so often outrank human needs — and how law can be re-nested within life, relation, repair, and continuity. Read More

Life-Coherent Jurisprudence: Legal Drift, Life-Harm, and the Repair of Law | ChatGPT-5.5 Thinking and NotebookLM

Law came after life. Before courts, constitutions, treaties, statutes, contracts, property titles, corporations, money, debt, markets, and states, there were living beings in organism–niche relations, communities in place, ecosystems in reciprocity, and worlds sustained through the ongoing conservation of life. This white paper develops a framework of life-coherent jurisprudence: a way of understanding, evaluating, and repairing law according to whether it preserves, restores, and expands life-capacity across persons, communities, ecosystems, civil commons, and future generations.

The paper argues that modern legal systems have drifted, unevenly and historically, from life-sequencing toward money-value sequencing. In the original order, law serves the life-ground. In the inverted order, life is made to serve money, property, contract, debt, sovereignty, corporation, market, procedure, and growth. This is named as the Great Inversion. The paper does not frame this drift as a simple story of blame. Drawing on Humberto Maturana’s biology of cognition, natural drift, and legitimate otherhood, it understands legal systems as conserved coordinations in language, emotion, institution, and history. Law does not merely regulate a world; it helps bring one forth.

Johan Galtung’s distinction between direct, structural, and cultural violence is used to help law see harms it often normalizes or conceals. John McMurtry’s life-value onto-axiology is used to distinguish life-value from money-value and to ask whether legal arrangements enable or disable life-capacity. Maturana provides the primary integrative frame: what world does this law conserve, and who is allowed to arise within it as a legitimate other?

The white paper proposes seven life-coherent orientation principles: life-ground primacy; legitimate otherhood and equal life-worth; non-domination and anti-violence; life-necessity protection; participatory co-authorship; truth, naming, and repair; and future viability. It then develops a practical Life-Coherent Legal Drift and Repair Instrument to diagnose legal drift, identify life-harm, classify drift patterns, and match repair pathways to the level of harm.

The paper concludes that law becomes worthy of life when it learns from the harms it has conserved and participates in the drift toward more truthful, reparative, and legitimate coexistence.

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Episode 14: Governing for Shared Life Capacity: Life-Coherent Politics and the Worlds We Conserve

A deep dive into life-coherent politics and the governance of shared life capacity. This episode asks whether our political, economic, legal, and digital systems protect the life ground — or whether people, communities, ecosystems, and attention are being consumed to keep the system running. Read More