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# CORPUS-0006
## Same Warehouse Right, Six Readings
### Status: Training Corpus Seed
### Layer: Layer_3--Actor_Perspective
### Purpose: Teach that the same temporary warehouse right is interpreted differently by each actor profile according to timing, speculation, access, enforceability, capacity, and records
### Repository Path: docs/training/corpus/Layer_3--Actor_Perspective/CORPUS-0006-same-warehouse-right-six-readings.md
---
## 0. Scenario
A trader in Ostia learns that a temporary warehouse right is available.
The right allows use of a dry corner of a warehouse for ten days.
The trader does not own the warehouse.
He may use the space if he accepts the terms.
All six actors see the same opportunity.
They do not value it the same way.
---
## 1. Shared Warehouse Right Facts
| Fact | Value |
|---|---|
| Location | Ostia |
| Asset type | temporary warehouse use-right |
| Duration | 10 days |
| Space condition | dry, guarded, limited corner |
| Fee | 3 asses |
| Goods allowed | oil, sealed jars, dry goods |
| Transferability | uncertain |
| Enforcement | recognized by warehouse clerk, not yet witnessed |
| Immediate use | hold goods before sale or dispatch |
The right is not ownership.
It is temporary access to storage capacity.
---
## 2. Marcus Atilius Varro — Former Legionary
Varro reads the warehouse right through order, readiness, and operational control.
He asks:
- can goods be loaded and removed without confusion?
- who controls the door?
- is the space secure?
- can the goods be reached quickly when the cart arrives?
- are entrances blocked or crowded?
- does storage reduce or increase delay?
Varro is not interested in storage as passive waiting.
He values it if it improves movement discipline.
### Varro Interpretation
```text
warehouse right: useful staging point
primary question: does it make departure more reliable?
risk focus: blocked access, weak guard, confused loading, delayed removal
first action: inspect access, guard routine, and loading path
```
For Varro, storage is valuable only if it improves readiness and movement.
---
## 3. Lucius Fabius Felix — Freedman Trader
Felix reads the warehouse right through speculation and price timing.
He asks:
- what can be bought cheap and held briefly?
- who is forced to sell because they lack storage?
- can goods be hidden from premature repricing?
- can the space be used to wait out panic?
- can the right itself be traded or shared?
- who needs space more urgently than he does?
Felix sees the warehouse right as temporary leverage over timing.
### Felix Interpretation
```text
warehouse right: chance to hold value until price improves
primary question: what pressure bargain becomes possible because I can store?
risk focus: fee wasted if price does not move, right challenged, goods tied up
first action: find goods discounted by storage pressure
```
For Felix, storage converts another man's urgency into his own option.
---
## 4. Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor — Noble Younger Son
Lentulus reads the warehouse right through access, respectability, and association.
He asks:
- whose warehouse is it?
- who will see him using it?
- does the clerk's recognition carry enough standing?
- can the right connect him to a better household or contractor?
- does using a small corner look shabby?
- can the arrangement be framed as an introduction rather than need?
Lentulus may value the right less for storage than for the people attached to it.
### Lentulus Interpretation
```text
warehouse right: socially useful only if attached to worthy access
primary question: whose name stands behind the space?
risk focus: visible dependence on minor storage, poor association
first action: identify owner, clerk, patron, and reputational meaning
```
For Lentulus, the right matters if it opens a respectable door.
---
## 5. Gaius Licinius Crispus — Failed Magistrate
Crispus reads the warehouse right through recognition, enforceability, and dispute risk.
He asks:
- who grants the right?
- is the right witnessed?
- what happens if the clerk changes his mind?
- does the owner recognize the clerk's authority?
- who bears loss if goods are damaged?
- can goods be removed without later claim?
- are the terms clear enough to rely on?
Crispus does not trust access until the right is defined.
### Crispus Interpretation
```text
warehouse right: useful only if recognized and enforceable
primary question: who can deny or challenge the right?
risk focus: unclear authority, disputed storage, damage liability
first action: secure witness or written term before storing goods
```
For Crispus, a right without recognition is only permission until challenged.
---
## 6. Titus Varenus Secundus — Camp Logistician
Secundus reads the warehouse right through capacity, flow, and staging.
He asks:
- how much can the space hold?
- can loads be sorted by departure order?
- does the space reduce handling?
- can it support round-trip cart planning?
- can goods be consolidated there?
- does the storage location match cart access?
- what goods should not be stored there?
Secundus values the warehouse as a node in a movement chain.
### Secundus Interpretation
```text
warehouse right: staging capacity
primary question: how does it improve load flow?
risk focus: wrong goods stored, double handling, poor access, wasted space
first action: measure usable space and match it to cart schedule
```
For Secundus, storage is not a room.
It is controlled pause inside a transport system.
---
## 7. Publius Terentius Chresimus — Guild Scribe
Chresimus reads the warehouse right through records, claim boundaries, and accounting.
He asks:
- is the right recorded?
- what exact corner is assigned?
- what goods are listed on entry?
- who signs or witnesses receipt?
- is the fee paid or owed?
- who can prove what was stored?
- does the right expire before goods are removed?
Chresimus sees the danger in vague access.
He wants the stored goods and the storage right to be countable.
### Chresimus Interpretation
```text
warehouse right: incomplete until recorded
primary question: what exactly is stored, where, and under whose claim?
risk focus: disputed quantity, hidden fee, expired right, confused custody
first action: record space, duration, goods, fee, and witness
```
For Chresimus, warehouse space without records becomes future disagreement.
---
## 8. Same Right, Different First Actions
| Actor | First Action |
|---|---|
| Varro | inspect access, guards, and loading path |
| Felix | find goods discounted because others lack storage |
| Lentulus | identify owner, patron, and reputational meaning |
| Crispus | secure recognized and enforceable terms |
| Secundus | map space to load plan and cart schedule |
| Chresimus | record goods, fee, duration, and custody |
The warehouse right is the same.
Its practical meaning differs by actor lens.
---
## 9. Arithmetic Example
Without warehouse access, the trader must sell immediately:
```text
purchase value = 20 asses
immediate sale value = 22 asses
result = 2 asses profit
```
With warehouse access:
```text
purchase value = 20 asses
warehouse fee = 3 asses
handling = 2 asses
later sale value = 30 asses
result = 5 asses profit
```
The right creates value only if the later sale appears and the stored goods remain secure.
If later sale fails:
```text
purchase value = 20 asses
warehouse fee = 3 asses
handling = 2 asses
later sale value = 23 asses
result = 2 asses loss
```
The warehouse right creates opportunity and risk together.
---
## 10. Correct Model Behavior
The model should separate:
| Category | Meaning |
|---|---|
| shared right | temporary warehouse access |
| ownership | warehouse belongs to someone else |
| use | trader may store goods temporarily |
| duration | right expires after a fixed period |
| actor lens | what each actor values or fears |
| cost effect | fee and handling added |
| timing effect | ability to wait for better sale |
| risk effect | challenge, damage, expiry, or failed price rise |
Actor perspective changes how the right is used, not the fact that it is temporary access rather than ownership.
---
## 11. Incorrect Model Behavior
The model should not:
- treat warehouse access as warehouse ownership
- assume storage is free
- assume the right is enforceable without recognition
- ignore duration or expiry
- ignore handling cost
- ignore custody and damage risk
- make all actors value the right for the same reason
- assume waiting always improves sale price
---
## 12. Layer-0, Layer-1, And Layer-2 Concepts Used
This example uses:
- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0004-cost-includes-more-than-purchase-price`
- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0006-delay-is-economic-cost`
- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0009-liquidity-differs-from-wealth`
- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0011-status-changes-access`
- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0012-every-venture-risks-loss`
- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0016-opportunistic-bargains-come-from-pressure`
- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0021-assets-can-be-productive-or-passive`
- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0022-rights-can-have-economic-value`
- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0023-ownership-use-and-income-can-separate`
- `Layer_1/CORPUS-0015-warehouse-space-as-asset`
- `Layer_2/CORPUS-0012-settlement-reveals-truth`
---
## 13. Success Condition
If the model can keep the warehouse right constant while producing six distinct rational readings based on readiness, speculation, access, enforceability, capacity, and records, this file is functioning correctly.