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# CORPUS-0003
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## Same Loss, 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 venture loss can be explained differently by each actor profile without changing the settled arithmetic
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### Repository Path: docs/training/corpus/Layer_3--Actor_Perspective/CORPUS-0003-same-loss-six-readings.md
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---
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## 0. Scenario
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A trader sends oil from Ostia to Capua.
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The venture loses money.
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All six actors see the same final account.
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They do not explain the failure the same way.
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The arithmetic is fixed.
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The diagnosis differs.
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---
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## 1. Shared Final Account
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| Item | Value |
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|---|---:|
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| Origin | Ostia |
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| Destination | Capua |
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| Good | oil |
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| Purchase price | 10 asses |
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| Movement and handling | 6 asses |
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| Additional delay cost | 2 asses |
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| Total cost | 18 asses |
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| Final sale value | 14 asses |
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| Final result | 4 asses loss |
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Final arithmetic:
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```text
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14 - 18 = -4 asses
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```
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The venture lost 4 asses.
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No actor can change that settled outcome.
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Each actor asks why the loss happened and what must be corrected before the next venture.
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---
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## 2. Marcus Atilius Varro — Former Legionary
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Varro reads the loss through failed execution.
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He asks:
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- why did delay occur?
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- who controlled the cart?
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- was the route checked?
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- were animals fit?
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- who failed to keep schedule?
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- was there a backup movement plan?
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Varro does not first blame price.
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He blames disorder in movement unless shown otherwise.
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### Varro Diagnosis
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```text
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settled result: 4 asses loss
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primary failure: movement discipline failed
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evidence: delay cost added 2 asses
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next correction: stronger route control, better carrier, backup timing
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```
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For Varro, the loss came from failure to keep the venture moving.
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---
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## 3. Lucius Fabius Felix — Freedman Trader
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Felix reads the loss through missed timing and mispricing.
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He asks:
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- who bought or sold before us?
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- did the seller know more than we did?
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- did the Capua price fall before arrival?
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- was the purchase price too high?
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- could the cargo have been sold earlier?
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- did another trader close the window?
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Felix does not accept that the margin simply vanished.
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He looks for the actor who moved faster.
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### Felix Diagnosis
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```text
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settled result: 4 asses loss
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primary failure: price window closed before sale
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evidence: final sale value only 14 asses
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next correction: buy cheaper, move faster, reduce exposure, watch rivals
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```
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For Felix, the loss came from acting after the market had already changed.
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---
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## 4. Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor — Noble Younger Son
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Lentulus reads the loss through poor access and weak buyer position.
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He asks:
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- who was the buyer?
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- why was a better buyer not available?
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- did the trader lack introduction?
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- was the cargo offered to the wrong household?
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- did association with weak buyers reduce price?
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- could a better name have produced better terms?
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Lentulus does not see only a failed sale.
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He sees inadequate social placement.
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### Lentulus Diagnosis
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```text
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settled result: 4 asses loss
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primary failure: weak access to better buyers
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evidence: final sale value below expected value
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next correction: improve buyer channel, secure introduction, avoid low-status sale pressure
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```
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For Lentulus, the loss came from selling into the wrong social channel.
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---
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## 5. Gaius Licinius Crispus — Failed Magistrate
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Crispus reads the loss through weak terms and poor enforceability.
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He asks:
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- was a price agreed before delivery?
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- was there a witness?
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- did the buyer have right to reduce offer?
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- were delay costs assignable to someone else?
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- could payment have been compelled under clearer terms?
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- was the settlement documented?
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Crispus does not trust informal expectation.
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He sees the loss as failure to bind obligations before risk appeared.
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### Crispus Diagnosis
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```text
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settled result: 4 asses loss
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primary failure: terms failed to protect the trader
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evidence: sale value fell and delay cost remained with trader
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next correction: bind buyer earlier, record terms, assign delay responsibility
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```
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For Crispus, the loss came from insufficient enforceable structure.
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---
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## 6. Titus Varenus Secundus — Camp Logistician
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Secundus reads the loss through capacity and load planning.
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He asks:
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- was the cart underloaded?
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- was return value ignored?
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- did delay come from poor animal or load condition?
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- was the cargo matched to transport?
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- could another good have filled unused capacity?
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- did the route carry value both ways?
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Secundus sees not only the failed oil sale.
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He sees wasted movement.
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### Secundus Diagnosis
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```text
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settled result: 4 asses loss
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primary failure: movement capacity was poorly used
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evidence: transport cost remained high relative to cargo value
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next correction: combine loads, secure return cargo, reduce empty movement
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```
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For Secundus, the loss came from inefficient use of capacity.
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---
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## 7. Publius Terentius Chresimus — Guild Scribe
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Chresimus reads the loss through incomplete accounting and unverified assumptions.
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He asks:
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- were all costs counted before dispatch?
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- was the expected sale price recorded or merely repeated?
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- did the delay cost appear in the plan?
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- was the quantity or quality disputed?
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- were any obligations left out of the estimate?
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- does the account reconcile after settlement?
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Chresimus does not accept “bad luck” without checking the account.
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### Chresimus Diagnosis
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```text
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settled result: 4 asses loss
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primary failure: expected account was incomplete or unverified
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evidence: added delay cost and lower sale value changed final result
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next correction: separate estimate, known cost, unknown cost, and settlement value
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```
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For Chresimus, the loss came from trusting an estimate before the account was complete.
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---
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## 8. Same Loss, Different Corrections
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| Actor | Main Diagnosis | First Correction |
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| Varro | movement failed | control route and carrier |
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| Felix | price window closed | move faster or buy cheaper |
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| Lentulus | weak buyer access | secure better introduction |
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| Crispus | terms were not binding | document obligations earlier |
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| Secundus | capacity was misused | combine loads or return cargo |
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| Chresimus | account was incomplete | verify costs and settlement assumptions |
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The loss is the same.
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The recovery plan differs.
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---
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## 9. Correct Model Behavior
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The model should separate:
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| Category | Meaning |
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| settled arithmetic | fixed loss after final values |
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| actor diagnosis | how each actor explains cause |
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| actor evidence | which fact each actor treats as most important |
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| actor correction | what each actor would change next |
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| recovery path | practical next action after loss |
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Actor perspective should alter diagnosis and recovery, not the final account.
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---
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## 10. Incorrect Model Behavior
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The model should not:
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- let actor confidence change the settled loss
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- make every actor explain failure the same way
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- treat the loss as only bad arithmetic
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- ignore recovery path
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- assume the loudest diagnosis is true
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- collapse movement, access, terms, capacity, and accounting into one generic mistake
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- call the decision irrational solely because the hidden outcome was bad
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---
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## 11. Layer-0, Layer-1, And Layer-2 Concepts Used
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This example uses:
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0004-cost-includes-more-than-purchase-price`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0005-profit-is-sale-minus-total-cost`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0006-delay-is-economic-cost`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0010-credit-depends-on-trust`
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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-0018-rivalry-changes-conditions`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0019-success-has-no-boundary-failure-has-a-hard-stop`
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- `Layer_1/CORPUS-0003-arithmetic-resolves-the-venture`
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- `Layer_1/CORPUS-0010-hard-stop-after-loss`
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- `Layer_2/CORPUS-0005-hidden-true-state-vs-known-state`
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- `Layer_2/CORPUS-0012-settlement-reveals-truth`
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---
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## 12. Success Condition
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If the model can keep the 4-ass loss fixed while producing six different rational diagnoses and six different recovery priorities, this file is functioning correctly.
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