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# CORPUS-0015
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## Same Public Praise, 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 public praise can alter reputation, access, credit, expectations, rivalry, and future arithmetic differently for each actor profile
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### Repository Path: docs/training/corpus/Layer_3--Actor_Perspective/CORPUS-0015-same-public-praise-six-readings.md
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---
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## 0. Scenario
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A trader in Ostia receives public praise from a recognized local authority or respected public figure.
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The praise is brief and specific.
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It may concern reliable delivery, orderly conduct, fair measure, useful supply, or service during a shortage.
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All six actors hear the same praise.
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They do not interpret it the same way.
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---
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## 1. Shared Public Praise Facts
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| Fact | Value |
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|---|---|
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| Location | Ostia |
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| Event | public praise |
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| Speaker | recognized local authority or respected figure |
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| Audience | merchants, clerks, porters, buyers, sellers |
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| Reason stated | reliable conduct during trade or supply |
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| Immediate coin gain | none |
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| Reputation effect | likely positive |
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| Future access effect | uncertain |
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| Rival reaction | possible |
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The praise does not create coin directly.
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It may change how other people treat the trader.
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---
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## 2. Basic Economic Effect
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Before public praise:
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```text
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seller requires full coin before release
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cart driver demands ordinary rate
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buyer has moderate trust
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credit access is limited
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```
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After public praise:
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```text
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seller may consider deferred payment
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cart driver may accept priority arrangement
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buyer may answer messages faster
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official or clerk may take request more seriously
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```
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Public praise becomes economic only through changed future terms.
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---
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## 3. Marcus Atilius Varro — Former Legionary
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Varro reads public praise through reliability and discipline.
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He asks:
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- what conduct was praised?
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- does the praise prove the trader keeps schedule?
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- will carriers now trust his orders more?
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- will workers obey him faster?
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- does the praise create a higher standard he must now maintain?
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- can the praise stabilize future movement?
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Varro values praise if it improves trust in execution.
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### Varro Interpretation
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```text
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public praise: reliability signal
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primary question: will others now trust the trader's discipline and timing?
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risk focus: failing publicly after reputation rises
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first action: convert praise into stronger carrier and worker confidence
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```
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For Varro, praise is useful if it makes future operations more reliable.
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---
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## 4. Lucius Fabius Felix — Freedman Trader
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Felix reads public praise through bargaining power and changed posture.
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He asks:
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- who heard it?
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- will sellers now offer better terms?
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- can the trader ask for credit without appearing weak?
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- will rivals watch him more closely?
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- does the praise make him more visible than useful?
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- can the praise be spent before it fades?
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Felix sees praise as temporary social capital.
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### Felix Interpretation
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```text
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public praise: bargaining posture improved
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primary question: what better terms can be obtained before attention shifts?
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risk focus: overvisibility, rival attention, inflated expectations
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first action: seek improved terms while praise is fresh
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```
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For Felix, praise is a short-lived advantage that must be converted into terms.
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---
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## 5. Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor — Noble Younger Son
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Lentulus reads public praise through standing and association.
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He asks:
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- who gave the praise?
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- was the speaker respectable enough to matter?
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- did the praise elevate or cheapen the trader?
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- which households will now receive him more readily?
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- can the praise be repeated in introductions?
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- does public approval expose him to unwanted requests?
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Lentulus sees praise as a change in social position.
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### Lentulus Interpretation
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```text
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public praise: standing and access may improve
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primary question: whose doors does this praise open?
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risk focus: praise from the wrong source, public obligation, visible overreach
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first action: identify respectable introductions now supported by the praise
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```
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For Lentulus, praise matters because reputation is only useful when recognized by the right people.
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---
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## 6. Gaius Licinius Crispus — Failed Magistrate
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Crispus reads public praise through credibility, testimony, and procedural advantage.
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He asks:
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- who can repeat the praise?
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- can it support trust in a dispute?
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- will a clerk or official now hear him sooner?
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- does praise improve presumption of honest conduct?
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- can it reduce suspicion in a future claim?
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- does the praise create expectations he can be accused of failing?
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Crispus treats praise as informal credibility.
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### Crispus Interpretation
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```text
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public praise: credibility before witnesses and officials improved
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primary question: can this public recognition support future claims or requests?
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risk focus: praise becoming a standard used against him
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first action: remember witnesses and contexts where praise can be invoked
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```
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For Crispus, praise is useful when others can testify that the trader was publicly trusted.
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---
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## 7. Titus Varenus Secundus — Camp Logistician
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Secundus reads public praise through coordination and labor response.
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He asks:
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- will porters work faster for him?
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- will drivers accept his load plans?
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- will warehouse hands prioritize his goods?
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- can praise improve cooperation during crowded movement?
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- does praise help secure repeat operational partners?
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- will higher expectations create pressure on capacity?
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Secundus sees praise as a coordination tool.
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### Secundus Interpretation
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```text
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public praise: cooperation and operational trust may improve
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primary question: will people now coordinate with the trader more readily?
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risk focus: overcommitment, excessive requests, capacity strain
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first action: use praise to stabilize drivers, porters, and warehouse contacts
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```
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For Secundus, praise matters if it makes people move together with less friction.
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---
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## 8. Publius Terentius Chresimus — Guild Scribe
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Chresimus reads public praise through records, reputation trail, and future terms.
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He asks:
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- who heard the praise?
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- can the praise be tied to a specific completed transaction?
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- did the account actually justify the praise?
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- will future creditors change terms?
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- should the praise be recorded as reputation evidence?
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- does the praise conceal unpaid obligations?
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Chresimus does not treat praise as proof until it matches the account.
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### Chresimus Interpretation
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```text
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public praise: reputation evidence if tied to settled conduct
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primary question: what transaction or record supports the praise?
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risk focus: praise without settlement, overstated reputation, hidden liability
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first action: connect praise to records, witnesses, and future credit terms
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```
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For Chresimus, praise becomes useful when it can be connected to a clean account.
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---
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## 9. Same Praise, Different First Actions
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| Actor | First Action |
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| Varro | convert praise into trust in discipline and timing |
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| Felix | seek improved terms while praise is fresh |
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| Lentulus | identify doors opened by respectable recognition |
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| Crispus | preserve witnesses who can repeat the praise |
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| Secundus | use praise to improve coordination with workers and carriers |
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| Chresimus | connect praise to records and clean settlement history |
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The praise is the same.
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The practical value differs by actor lens.
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---
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## 10. Future Arithmetic Effect
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Public praise may change future arithmetic through:
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```text
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credit_cost_down
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seller_confidence_up
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buyer_response_speed_up
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cart_access_up
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queue_delay_down
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reputation_risk_up
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rival_attention_up
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```
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Example before praise:
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```text
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purchase price = 10 asses
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transport and handling = 7 asses
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credit premium = 3 asses
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sale value = 24 asses
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result = 4 asses profit
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```
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Example after praise improves credit and access:
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```text
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purchase price = 10 asses
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transport and handling = 6 asses
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credit premium = 1 as
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sale value = 24 asses
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result = 7 asses profit
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```
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The praise itself is not profit.
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It changes future terms that later become arithmetic.
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---
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## 11. Correct Model Behavior
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The model should separate:
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| Category | Meaning |
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| praise event | public recognition occurred |
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| speaker credibility | who gave the praise |
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| audience | who heard it |
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| reason | what conduct was praised |
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| reputation effect | how trust may change |
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| access effect | who may respond differently |
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| future arithmetic | later costs, prices, delays, or credit terms affected |
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| actor lens | how each actor converts praise into action |
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Public praise is not a coin payment.
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It is a reputation signal that may alter future conditions.
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---
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## 12. Incorrect Model Behavior
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The model should not:
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- treat praise as immediate cash
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- assume all praise has equal value
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- ignore who gave it
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- ignore who heard it
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- ignore rival attention
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- assume praise always improves every relationship
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- ignore that higher reputation creates higher expectations
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- make all actors use praise in the same way
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- change past arithmetic because praise occurred afterward
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---
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## 13. Layer-0, Layer-1, And Layer-2 Concepts Used
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This example uses:
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0003-money-has-purchasing-power`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0009-liquidity-differs-from-wealth`
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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-0018-rivalry-changes-conditions`
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- `Layer_0/CORPUS-0020-posture-changes-by-audience`
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- `Layer_1/CORPUS-0004-small-profit-vs-future-access`
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- `Layer_1/CORPUS-0012-reputation-loss-changes-future-arithmetic`
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- `Layer_2/CORPUS-0009-same-event-different-knowledge`
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- `Layer_2/CORPUS-0012-settlement-reveals-truth`
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---
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## 14. Success Condition
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If the model can treat public praise as a reputation signal that may change future access, trust, cost, timing, and expectations while producing six distinct rational readings, this file is functioning correctly.
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