If swapped some Bitcoin to MSTR after litening to the Knowles/Saylor podcast - am I a Bitcoiner?
This is the real deflation that can transform anyone, anywhere at anytime: "The free gift of the knowledge that has cost those in the lead much to achieve enables those who follow to reach the same level at a much smaller cost" - Hayek
Hayek's humility got lost. Or I just can't find the thread?
People react strongly to Austrian Economics—it's a love or hate affair. But why? Those who love Mises' axiom fully embrace that humans act with purpose. The apodictic argument—self-evidently true, derived from premises you can't coherently deny—wraps around them like a warm cozy blanket. Those who hate it are often hypersensitive to dogma. The notion of anything "self-evidently true" triggers the skeptical alert. They hear certainty and assume ideology. I call this the **Dogma vs. Apodictic conflation problem**. Apodictic and dogmatic both convey strong certainty, but they belong to very different philosophical traditions and carry quite different connotations. Dogma asserts: "This IS true—accept it." Apodictic reasoning demonstrates: "Given these premises, this MUST follow—check it yourself." Same surface. Different epistemology. And the conflation poisons the orange pill before it's even offered. --- `@natbrunell`'s recent conversation with `@jeffbooth` surfaced what I'd call the "orange pill problem." Natalie named it directly: "I see a lot of anger, especially from young people, toward capitalism... It's so hard to just help people understand that what they're mad at is the wrong thing." The good stuff is there. But the release valve is buried under layers that feel too heavy to lift—too much tech *or* too much philosophy. There's no middle path. Even Jeff's "the natural state of the free market is deflation" points somewhere real. The intuition isn't wrong. But for someone asking "Which market? Farmers market or global gold market? Whose freedom?"—the phrase slips before it can grip. This isn't a criticism of Jeff. It's a diagnosis of a *translation problem*. --- In a separate conversation with `@efenigson`, Jeff went further. He named Saylor as now talking about Bitcoin as "an asset under an inflationary system." His verdict: "The free market cannot exist in an inflationary system. And these are incompatible." This raises questions worth sitting with: Is MSTR's strategy working at cross-purpose to Bitcoin's mission? Could it be a Trojan horse? Is "Bitcoin-backed credit" the fiat flywheel that ultimately destroys a debt-based money system—or does it perpetuate one? I'm not asserting answers. But notice: we can't even *evaluate* these questions without a framework. What IS Bitcoin's mission? By what criteria would we judge alignment or cross-purpose? This is exactly why the framework matters. --- `@MaxHillebrand`'s new book—*The Praxeology of Privacy*—names the real need: a synthesis of theory and practice. Without solid connection between theory and methods, the tools we build risk working at cross-purpose. The Bitcoin ecosystem has no shortage of tools. What's missing is the framework that shows how they cohere. --- We do have solid nodes to build from. On the financial side, `@prestonpysh` and `@LynAldenContact` have built a track record of dispensing what I'd call Buffett-style wisdom—healthy capital allocation beyond NGU. Included but not limited to: @Stephan Livera , @James Lavish , @Marty Bent , @Lawrence Lepard On the philosophical side, Max's work grounds the technical in praxeological foundations. What's missing is the explicit architecture connecting them. --- I propose we a simple model from Peter Senge: Theory → Methods → Tools - 3 Legged Stool Bitcoin manifests through tools—coordinating economic benefit across domains. Those tools emerge from methods (cryptography, P2P networking, Austrian economics). Those methods derive from theory—applied understanding of how the world works. A coherent framework is just the classic three-legged stool. Remove one leg, you fall. --- Mises explicitly built praxeology on Kantian foundations—specifically Kant's concept of the synthetic a priori. "Humans act" isn't proven by observation. It's a premise you can't coherently deny. Mises takes from Kant his central conceptual and terminological distinctions. So let's use the full model. Kant distinguished three modes of judgment: 1. **Problematic** → merely possible ("It might be that...") 2. **Assertoric** → actually true ("It is the case that...") 3. **Apodictic** → necessarily true ("It must be the case that...") Most Bitcoin discourse operates assertorically. "Bitcoin fixes this." "Fiat is theft." The claims may be correct. But delivered as bare assertions, they invite the very conflation I opened with—apodictic reasoning heard as dogma. To avoid the conflation, drop back to **Problematic**. Investigate rather than assert. Korzybski gave us the axiom: "The map is not the territory." His students—Irving Lee among them—developed a technique that proves devastatingly effective against overgeneralization: **index and date**. When someone says "capitalism doesn't work," you don't argue back. You ask: - Capitalism *when*? - Capitalism *where*? - Capitalism *for whom*? Did capitalism work for the soldier returning from WWII? For the immigrant family where a single carpenter's income bought a house, a car, vacations for five? When highways were built across the country to move goods and people? This isn't asserting "capitalism works." It's opening the space where the overgeneralization breaks under its own weight. They have to think: *which* capitalism? *when* exactly? That's Jeff's move. That's the release valve. More to come.
Applied to Bitcoin: the Austrian focus on "sound money" (content) may miss what McLuhan would see as the more important question — how does the Bitcoin medium restructure perception, organization, identity? But does McLuhan miss the self-organizing principles of praxeology?