<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><channel><title>Philosophy on hippotion</title><link>https://blog.hippotion.com/tags/philosophy/</link><description>Recent content in Philosophy on hippotion</description><generator>Hugo</generator><language>en-us</language><lastBuildDate>Fri, 08 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://blog.hippotion.com/tags/philosophy/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><item><title>Veracracy: The Question We Forget to Ask When We Govern</title><link>https://blog.hippotion.com/posts/veracracy/</link><pubDate>Fri, 08 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://blog.hippotion.com/posts/veracracy/</guid><description>I built a clock that counts down to a form of government that doesn&amp;rsquo;t exist yet — legitimacy grounded in verified knowledge rather than power, wealth, or whoever shouts loudest. The only reason I&amp;rsquo;m not embarrassed to have built it: the clock can run backward, the assumption behind it is published in plain sight, and the first concrete brick already ships real parliamentary data. A measurement, not a prophecy.</description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2 id="the-missing-question">The missing question</h2>
<p>Democracies ask <em>what do we want?</em> Markets ask <em>what will we pay?</em> Both are
good questions, and between them they run most of the world. But there&rsquo;s a
third question that almost no system asks before it acts, and it&rsquo;s the one that
decides whether the first two produce anything good:</p>
<p><em>What do we actually know — and how do we know it?</em></p>
<p>I gave the idea of governing as if that question came first a name —
<strong>veracracy</strong>, from <em>veritas</em> (truth) and <em>kratos</em> (rule). Not rule <em>by</em>
experts in a back room. Rule by <strong>evidence that anyone can inspect</strong>,
deliberated by the people it binds. It lives at
<a href="https://veracracy.hippotion.com">veracracy.hippotion.com</a>, and this is the
honest account of what it is and why an infrastructure engineer ended up
building a shrine to an idea.</p>
<figure>
    <img loading="lazy" src="clock.png"
         alt="The veracracy clock at veracracy.hippotion.com"/> <figcaption>
            <p>The clock reads ~2051 — computed, not wished, from one published assumption. The sun&rsquo;s height above the horizon is how far the weighted dials have risen; the tag tracks the beacon (Taiwan) against the world.</p>
        </figcaption>
</figure>

<h2 id="what-it-actually-means">What it actually means</h2>
<p>Strip the romance and veracracy is five fairly concrete commitments:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Truth as civic infrastructure.</strong> Verified, open evidence maintained like
roads and water — with provenance, versioning, and repair crews. A public
utility, not a content feed.</li>
<li><strong>Radical transparency.</strong> Binding decisions carry their evidence trail by
default. <em>A law without its sources is a claim, not a law.</em></li>
<li><strong>Decentralised trust.</strong> No ministry of truth. Verification is plural,
adversarial, and bridging — many checkers, no single owner, consensus that
has to span camps to count.</li>
<li><strong>Ethical AI as auditor and advocate.</strong> Machines that trace claims, surface
contradictions, and argue <em>against</em> the powerful reading of the data — never
as oracle, always as instrument.</li>
<li><strong>Participatory epistemocracy.</strong> Citizens not as voters once every four
years, but as standing jurors of what is true enough to act on, where weight
accrues to evidence rather than volume.</li>
</ul>
<p>If you squint, none of that is a political program. It&rsquo;s the same instinct I
bring to a cluster — <em>provenance, versioning, a reconciler, no single point of
trust</em> — pointed at the question of how a society decides what&rsquo;s real. That&rsquo;s
the only way I know how to think, so that&rsquo;s the lens I used.</p>
<h2 id="why-a-clock-and-why-it-can-run-backward">Why a clock, and why it can run backward</h2>
<p>Here&rsquo;s where most &ldquo;vision&rdquo; projects lose me, and where I tried not to lose
myself. A manifesto is cheap. Anyone can declare a better world and feel
moral. So instead of a manifesto, the site is a <strong>measurement</strong>.</p>
<p>It shows a single year — <em>first light</em>, the year the first place on Earth
might plausibly govern this way. Right now it reads around <strong>2051</strong>. But that
number isn&rsquo;t a wish; it&rsquo;s computed, from one assumption stated in plain sight:
<em>the infrastructure of verified governance has been built since the world went
online in 1991, and continues at the average pace it has held since.</em> A set of
dials — open data, civic tech, verification at platform scale — each scored
0–1 from a named source, weighted, extrapolated. Change the assumption and the
number moves: pace the same dials from Athens in 508 BC instead, and dawn lands
near the year 3860. So the assumption is the lever, which is exactly why it&rsquo;s
published.</p>
<p>And the clock can run <em>backward</em>. There&rsquo;s a Watch — a standing log of what
moved the year — that deliberately files the evidence <em>against</em>: every
transparency rollback, every deliberation experiment that failed, every force
pushing dawn further out. Because <strong>a sunrise that only ever gets closer is a
marketing widget.</strong> The honesty is the product. If I can&rsquo;t show you the thing
that would move the number the wrong way, you shouldn&rsquo;t believe the number.</p>
<h2 id="the-first-brick">The first brick</h2>
<p>Ideas this size are easy to admire and easy to never touch. So the rule I set
myself is that veracracy has to cash out in things that actually run.</p>
<p>The first one shipped this week:
<a href="https://blog.hippotion.com/posts/votewatch/">VoteWatch</a> — every roll-call vote
in the European Parliament and the Slovak National Council, scraped from the
public record, distilled into plain language, showing which party voted which
way, with a button that asks you whether you&rsquo;d have voted the same. It&rsquo;s the
third and fifth pillars made clickable: <em>binding decisions carrying their
evidence trail</em>, and <em>citizens as standing jurors</em> rather than spectators. The
gap it surfaces — between how parliament voted and how the people who answered
would have — is veracracy in miniature, on real data, today.</p>
<p>It&rsquo;s small. It&rsquo;s one person&rsquo;s homelab. The voting is an indicative signal, not
a secured ballot, and I say so on the page. But it&rsquo;s the difference between a
belief and a brick, and I would rather lay one honest brick than write a
beautiful manifesto.</p>
<h2 id="where-this-comes-from">Where this comes from</h2>
<p>I&rsquo;ll be straight about the shape of this: it&rsquo;s idealistic, it&rsquo;s personal, and
I don&rsquo;t expect to see first light. I&rsquo;m a solo operator in a small town who runs
a rack of servers and thinks too much about how systems stay trustworthy when
no one&rsquo;s watching them. Veracracy is what happened when that instinct refused
to stay inside the server room.</p>
<p>The version of this I can defend isn&rsquo;t the dream — it&rsquo;s the discipline around
the dream. Publish your assumption. Let the clock run backward. Cash the idea
out in something real. Credit your sources. Ship the honest version, not the
robust-sounding one.</p>
<p>A measurement with one stated assumption — not a prophecy. The clock&rsquo;s at
<a href="https://veracracy.hippotion.com">veracracy.hippotion.com</a>; disagree with a
dial and you&rsquo;ve understood the point.</p>
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