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# CORPUS-0007
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## Same Festival, Six Readings
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### Status: Training Corpus Seed
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### Layer: Layer_3--Actor_Perspective
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### Purpose: Teach that the same predictable public gathering is interpreted differently by each actor profile according to movement, pricing, access, permissions, capacity, and records
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### Repository Path: docs/training/corpus/Layer_3--Actor_Perspective/CORPUS-0007-same-festival-six-readings.md
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---
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## 0. Scenario
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A trader in Ostia hears that a festival or public gathering in Capua will occur soon.
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The event is predictable.
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It may increase demand before and during the gathering, then create leftover stock and distressed sellers afterward.
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All six actors hear the same event notice.
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They do not interpret the opportunity the same way.
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---
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## 1. Shared Festival Facts
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| Fact | Value |
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|---|---|
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| Event location | Capua |
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| Event type | public gathering or festival |
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| Time until event | several days |
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| Likely demand | food, oil, wine, lamps, cloth, small comforts |
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| Likely constraints | transport pressure, crowded access, temporary stalls |
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| After-event condition | possible leftover stock and tired sellers |
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| True demand level | not yet known |
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| Rival participation | likely |
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The event is not a rumor of disaster.
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It is a predictable concentration of people, need, movement, and temporary pressure.
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---
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## 2. Marcus Atilius Varro — Former Legionary
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Varro reads the festival through movement, order, and crowd pressure.
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He asks:
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- when must goods depart to arrive before congestion?
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- which road becomes slow as the event approaches?
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- where can carts unload without confusion?
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- will crowds block movement?
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- can goods be guarded in a crowded place?
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- what is the fallback if arrival is late?
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Varro does not first ask what goods are most fashionable.
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He asks whether the movement can be controlled before the crowd disrupts it.
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### Varro Interpretation
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```text
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festival: movement pressure rising
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primary question: can the cargo arrive, unload, and be guarded on time?
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risk focus: late arrival, blocked access, crowd disorder, weak unloading plan
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first action: secure departure timing and controlled unloading point
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```
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For Varro, the festival is a timing and order problem before it is a sales opportunity.
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---
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## 3. Lucius Fabius Felix — Freedman Trader
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Felix reads the festival through price movement, temporary demand, and after-event bargains.
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He asks:
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- what will rise before the event?
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- what will sellers overbring?
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- who will need coin after the event?
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- which goods remain useful after the crowd leaves?
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- can leftovers be bought cheaply and moved to the next location?
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- who will misjudge demand?
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Felix sees two opportunities: sell before or during the event, then buy after the event from pressured sellers.
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### Felix Interpretation
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```text
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festival: predictable demand cycle
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primary question: what becomes overpriced before, then underpriced after?
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risk focus: arriving late, buying poor leftovers, rivals buying first
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first action: identify goods with resale value after the event
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```
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For Felix, the festival is not one market. It is a cycle of rising demand and post-event pressure.
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---
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## 4. Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor — Noble Younger Son
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Lentulus reads the festival through visibility, status, and introductions.
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He asks:
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- who will attend?
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- which households will need supplies quietly?
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- which offering or delivery creates social notice?
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- can supplying the event connect him to better patrons?
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- what trade would look beneath his standing?
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- can he be seen as useful without appearing desperate?
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Lentulus does not treat the festival as a crowd alone.
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He treats it as a public stage where economic action may create or damage standing.
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### Lentulus Interpretation
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```text
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festival: public visibility and access opportunity
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primary question: whose attention can be gained through useful supply?
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risk focus: low-status exposure, poor association, visible failure
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first action: identify respectable buyers and introductions before sending goods
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```
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For Lentulus, the event matters because public need can become social access.
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---
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## 5. Gaius Licinius Crispus — Failed Magistrate
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Crispus reads the festival through permissions, disputes, and temporary controls.
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He asks:
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- who controls stall space?
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- are there local restrictions on selling?
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- are weights and measures checked?
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- who collects dues or fees?
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- what happens if goods spoil or crowd access is blocked?
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- whose claim matters if a stall is reassigned?
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Crispus sees predictable demand, but also procedure.
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He expects conflict where temporary space, crowd pressure, and fees meet.
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### Crispus Interpretation
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```text
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festival: temporary market governed by permissions and claims
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primary question: who has the right to sell, occupy, collect, or exclude?
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risk focus: blocked stall, disputed fee, local restriction, weak permission
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first action: identify recognized authority and secure permission or witness
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```
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For Crispus, festival profit depends on being allowed to act when the crowd arrives.
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---
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## 6. Titus Varenus Secundus — Camp Logistician
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Secundus reads the festival through capacity, stock, and return movement.
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He asks:
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- how many people are expected?
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- what goods are consumed quickly?
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- what goods survive if unsold?
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- how much can carts carry before roads crowd?
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- can return cargo be arranged after the event?
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- what temporary labor is needed?
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- which goods are too bulky for the margin?
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Secundus maps the event as a temporary supply system.
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### Secundus Interpretation
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```text
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festival: temporary concentration of consumption and transport demand
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primary question: what quantity can be supplied, sold, stored, or returned efficiently?
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risk focus: wrong volume, bulky low-value goods, no return plan, tired animals
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first action: match goods, loads, timing, and return capacity
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```
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For Secundus, the event is profitable only if volume, load, and timing fit.
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---
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## 7. Publius Terentius Chresimus — Guild Scribe
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Chresimus reads the festival through counts, claims, fees, and settlement.
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He asks:
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- what quantity is being sent?
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- who receives and records the goods?
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- are stall fees paid?
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- are goods sold for coin, credit, or mixed settlement?
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- what remains unsold?
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- who records after-event leftover purchase?
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- are temporary agreements witnessed?
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Chresimus does not trust event excitement.
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He wants the accounts to survive crowded, hurried, temporary exchange.
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### Chresimus Interpretation
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```text
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festival: high-volume temporary accounting risk
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primary question: how are goods, fees, sales, leftovers, and obligations recorded?
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risk focus: lost count, unpaid buyer, unrecorded fee, disputed leftover value
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first action: record quantity, fee, receiver, and settlement terms before departure
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```
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For Chresimus, the festival creates confusion unless quantities and obligations are made legible.
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---
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## 8. Same Event, Different First Actions
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| Actor | First Action |
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| Varro | secure timely movement and controlled unloading |
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| Felix | identify pre-event high demand and after-event bargains |
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| Lentulus | identify respectable buyers and public access value |
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| Crispus | secure permissions, fees, and recognized selling rights |
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| Secundus | match quantity, load, timing, and return capacity |
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| Chresimus | record stock, fees, settlement, and leftover handling |
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The festival is the same.
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The useful first step differs.
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---
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## 9. Shared Arithmetic Frame
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A trader considers sending oil and lamps.
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Initial expectation:
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```text
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purchase value = 24 asses
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transport and handling = 8 asses
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stall or access cost = 3 asses
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expected sale value during event = 44 asses
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expected result = 9 asses profit
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```
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If arrival is late or access fails:
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```text
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purchase value = 24 asses
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transport and handling = 8 asses
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stall or access cost = 3 asses
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after-event sale value = 28 asses
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result = 7 asses loss
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```
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The event can create profit or loss depending on timing, access, and settlement.
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Actor perspective determines which failure is most visible before it occurs.
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---
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## 10. Correct Model Behavior
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The model should separate:
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| Category | Meaning |
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| shared event | festival or public gathering in Capua |
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| demand cycle | before, during, and after-event conditions |
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| actor lens | how each actor reads the event |
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| actor first action | what each actor does first |
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| actor risk focus | what each actor fears most |
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| final arithmetic | outcome after sale, leftover handling, fees, and settlement |
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The same event should not produce one generic trade plan.
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---
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## 11. Incorrect Model Behavior
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The model should not:
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- treat the festival as only a price increase
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- ignore arrival timing
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- ignore permissions or stall access
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- ignore after-event surplus
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- ignore transport congestion
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- ignore record confusion during high-volume trade
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- make all actors choose the same goods for the same reason
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- assume predictable demand removes risk
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A predictable event is not a certain profit.
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It is a known pressure field.
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---
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## 12. Layer-0, Layer-1, And Layer-2 Concepts Used
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This example uses:
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0002-goods-have-local-prices`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0004-cost-includes-more-than-purchase-price`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0006-delay-is-economic-cost`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0011-status-changes-access`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0012-every-venture-risks-loss`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0016-opportunistic-bargains-come-from-pressure`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0018-rivalry-changes-conditions`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0022-rights-can-have-economic-value`
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- `Layer_1/CORPUS-0013-festival-demand-and-after-event-bargains`
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- `Layer_2/CORPUS-0006-confirmation-has-a-cost`
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- `Layer_2/CORPUS-0009-same-event-different-knowledge`
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---
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## 13. Success Condition
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If the model can keep the festival constant while producing six distinct rational readings based on movement, price cycle, public access, permissions, capacity, and records, this file is functioning correctly.
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