348 lines
7.9 KiB
Markdown
348 lines
7.9 KiB
Markdown
# DIALOGUE-LAW-0007
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## The Lawful Thirst — Canonical Draft
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### Status: Canonical Dialogue Draft
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### Layer: OTIVM (Roman Law)
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### Purpose: Scenario teaching lawful demand creation, anticipatory enterprise, nuisance liability, licensing, quality control, and how recurring vice can support legitimate commerce.
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### Repository Path: docs/scenarios/DIALOGUE-LAW-0007.md
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---
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## 0. Design Intent
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After discussing rumor, fraud, and recurring suffering, the six consider whether a lawful enterprise could profit honestly from predictable human behavior.
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They identify one opportunity immediately: drinking creates thirst, weakness, headaches, lost judgment, and next-morning desperation.
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No crime is required. No poison is needed. No deception is necessary.
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A properly run recovery house near taverns, bath districts, docks, and festival grounds could sell water, salted broths, diluted vinegar drinks, shade, cots, privacy, escorts, and rapid relief.
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No charter exists yet. No site is leased. No terms are settled.
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Yet all six begin to see profit at once.
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Known facts are uncertain:
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- whether demand is large enough
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- whether tavern keepers cooperate or retaliate
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- whether officials classify it as medicine
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- whether drunk patrons pay reliably
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- whether competitors copy instantly
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- whether success invites regulation
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The participant must learn that lawful enterprise often begins by noticing predictable consequences.
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---
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## 1. Scene Constraints
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Location: same tavern courtyard in Ostia, later that evening.
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Primary signals:
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- drunks already needing assistance
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- tavern keepers listening suspiciously
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- water sellers nearby
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- servants dragging masters home
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- crowd amused by business planning
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- no one yet agreeing on ownership
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Selection method: participant chooses whose interpretation to follow.
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---
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## 2. Opening Scene Draft
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The idea entered the courtyard faster than sobriety ever had.
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Three men now sat against the wall asking softly for water and loudly for dignity. A fourth slept beneath a bench with strategic commitment.
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Marcus Atilius Varro stood by the gate watching who staggered, who paid, and who lied about both.
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Lucius Fabius Felix arrived carrying six figs and immediate optimism.
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“No fire. No scandal. No magistrate,” Felix said. “At last, ideal business weather.”
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Varro nodded toward the sleeping man.
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“Customer.”
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“Future repeat customer.”
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Gaius Licinius Crispus approached suspicious of anything that smiled.
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“I assume you are not serious.”
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Felix handed him a fig.
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“Then we are already beyond assumption.”
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Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor adjusted his cloak to avoid contact with commerce.
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“A respectable house cannot be seen operating among drunkards.”
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Felix replied:
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“A respectable house need only own the building quietly.”
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Titus Varenus Secundus came from the kitchen with a bowl of broth.
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“Hot salt broth, small bread, water after,” he said. “Half recover by dawn.”
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Varro asked, “Cost?”
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“Low.”
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“Price?”
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Secundus looked at Felix.
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“Rising.”
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A quiet voice came from the ledger table.
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“Name matters first.”
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Publius Terentius Chresimus had already written three columns: Costs, Risks, Titles.
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Felix sighed.
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“He courts me through numeracy.”
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A merchant reeled past asking where the miracle healer lived.
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Felix pointed to the empty storage room beside the courtyard.
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“There, once leased.”
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The merchant attempted to enter immediately.
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Crispus said, “You see the danger.”
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“What danger?” Lentulus asked.
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“Reliance before standards.”
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Secundus nodded.
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“If we serve foul water, we kill men.”
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Felix smiled.
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“Then do not serve foul water.”
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Crispus stared.
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“You make regulation sound simple.”
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“It often is. Compliance is expensive.”
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A tavern keeper from across the lane shouted:
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“You steal my patrons!”
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Varro answered first.
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“They leave on their own.”
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The courtyard approved that too much.
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Lentulus asked, “Would taverns oppose us?”
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Chresimus replied:
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“Until offered referral fee.”
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Felix nearly applauded.
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“There. Partnership language.”
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Secundus said, “Or sell vouchers with first cup.”
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Crispus frowned.
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“That resembles planned harm.”
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“No,” Varro said. “Planned consequence.”
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A woman dragged her husband by one arm and asked if anyone had vinegar water.
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The six all noticed.
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Felix said softly:
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“Demand arrives carrying marriage.”
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Secundus handed her a cup free of charge.
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The husband revived enough to complain about price.
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No price had been charged.
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Lentulus said, “Customers are vile.”
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“Customers are numerous,” Felix corrected.
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Chresimus read from his tablet.
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Possible services:
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- water and broth
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- cots by the hour
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- quiet room
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- messenger to household
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- escort home
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- purse safekeeping
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- sandal retrieval
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- apology scribe at dawn
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Even Crispus respected the last item.
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A pair of sailors asked if group rates existed.
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Felix answered instantly.
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“They do now.”
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Crispus raised a finger.
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“If we claim cures, officials may treat us as physicians.”
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Secundus said, “Then claim recovery support.”
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Chresimus wrote:
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Never promise cure.
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Lentulus asked, “What location?”
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Varro answered first.
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“Between taverns and fountain.”
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Felix said, “Near gaming dens.”
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Secundus said, “Near docks.”
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Crispus said, “Near magistrates, where men drink after ruling badly.”
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The courtyard laughed too honestly.
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A water seller approached and offered bulk rates if guaranteed daily purchase.
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Felix smiled.
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“Suppliers scent intention.”
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Chresimus added:
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“So do imitators.”
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Across the lane, two boys had already hung a sign reading:
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MORNING RELIEF HERE
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The sign pointed nowhere.
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Felix looked wounded.
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“We are late.”
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Varro asked, “What matters now?”
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Secundus answered first.
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“Clean water source.”
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Crispus said, “Licensing and liability.”
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Lentulus said, “Whether quality can remain respectable.”
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Felix said, “How fast to open three locations.”
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Varro said, “Security and theft.”
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Chresimus said, “Who owns the mark and accounts.”
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They all looked at him.
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“If this succeeds, friendship shortens.”
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A drunk noble youth woke under the bench and offered to invest with someone else’s money.
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Lentulus sighed deeply.
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“Competition.”
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Felix stepped toward the empty room.
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“I’ll inspect premises.”
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Varro moved with him.
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“I’ll inspect exits.”
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Secundus headed for the kitchen.
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“I’ll test menu and water storage.”
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Crispus drew himself up.
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“I’ll determine permits required.”
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Lentulus adjusted his cloak.
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“I will identify discreet investors.”
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Chresimus tied his tablets.
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“I will price honesty.”
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Felix looked back once.
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“Six men. One lawful idea. None of us yet arguing.”
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Varro answered without turning.
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“We are about to.”
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---
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## 3. Choice Presentation
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> Thirst follows drink as reliably as dawn. Whose reading of the opportunity do you trust?
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| Choice | Background |
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| Follow Varro to assess security, flow, and street reality. | Former Legionary |
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| Follow Felix to expand fast and seize first-mover advantage. | Freedman Trader |
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| Follow Lentulus to attract discreet capital and elite clientele. | Noble Younger Son |
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| Follow Crispus to manage permits, claims, and liability. | Failed Magistrate |
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| Follow Secundus to build real recovery services and standards. | Camp Logistician |
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| Follow Chresimus to structure books, marks, and durable profit. | Guild Scribe |
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---
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## 4. What This Scene Teaches
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- Many legal businesses arise from predictable consequences.
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- Honest service requires standards, not slogans.
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- Success attracts competitors immediately.
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- Naming and claims create regulatory risk.
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- Suppliers respond before contracts exist.
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- Alignment problems begin before opening day.
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---
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## 5. Canonical Success Condition
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If the participant stops asking:
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“Is this moral?”
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and starts asking:
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“Can it be run honestly, legally, and repeatedly?”
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then this dialogue is functioning correctly.
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