Concepts
Civilizations/Leaders
City-States
Districts
Buildings
Wonders and Projects
Units
Unit Promotions
Great People
Technologies
Civics
Governments and Policies
Religions
Terrains and Features
Resources
Improvements and Routes
Governors
Historic Moments

Introduction

Ancient Era

Classical Era

Medieval Era

Renaissance Era

Industrial Era

Modern Era

Atomic Era

Information Era

Distributed Sovereignty

Environmentalism

Globalization

Near Future Governance

Optimization Imperative

Social Media

Venture Politics

Future Era

Venture Politics
Historical Context
Legal development of the concept of corporate personhood might intersect with disruptive market forces in unexpected ways in the future, changing the emphasized “person” in a system of government from natural people to corporations, ranging in size and power from the gigantic megacorporation to the private contractor. Once the state begins to operate predominately in terms of corporations, the state may be assumed to be practicing some form of venture politics.

It is assumed that these states will be maximally libertarian, with the state serving only to enforce terms of agreement between the “persons” of the state. Given that the primary ethical responsibility of the officers of the corporation are to produce maximal shareholder value, there will be a strong market orientation to the interchange between persons as well. In a venture politic, identity is constructed in terms of market forces and power expressed in the ability to extract favorable terms within the market. New identities could emerge as a matter of course, as opportunities within the market and society are identified and filled.

This highly abstracted notion of what it means to be a “person” will have significant cultural effects. Can an identity be passed from one biological person to another? Is a family an enterprise? Can one biological individual possess multiple, overlapping and inter-competing personages? These and many more questions will require fundamental interrogation of the underlying principles of governance that have existed for centuries. The answers may be disconcerting.
PortraitSquare
icon_civic_corporate_libertarianism
“Over himself, over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign.”
– John Stuart Mill

Unlocks

Corporate Libertarianism

Requirements

Information Era
Required Civics
icon_civic_globalization
Globalization
icon_civic_social_media
Social Media
Culture Cost
Base Cost: 3000 Culture
Boosts
Build a Uranium Mine.
PortraitSquare
icon_civic_corporate_libertarianism
Historical Context
Legal development of the concept of corporate personhood might intersect with disruptive market forces in unexpected ways in the future, changing the emphasized “person” in a system of government from natural people to corporations, ranging in size and power from the gigantic megacorporation to the private contractor. Once the state begins to operate predominately in terms of corporations, the state may be assumed to be practicing some form of venture politics.

It is assumed that these states will be maximally libertarian, with the state serving only to enforce terms of agreement between the “persons” of the state. Given that the primary ethical responsibility of the officers of the corporation are to produce maximal shareholder value, there will be a strong market orientation to the interchange between persons as well. In a venture politic, identity is constructed in terms of market forces and power expressed in the ability to extract favorable terms within the market. New identities could emerge as a matter of course, as opportunities within the market and society are identified and filled.

This highly abstracted notion of what it means to be a “person” will have significant cultural effects. Can an identity be passed from one biological person to another? Is a family an enterprise? Can one biological individual possess multiple, overlapping and inter-competing personages? These and many more questions will require fundamental interrogation of the underlying principles of governance that have existed for centuries. The answers may be disconcerting.
“Over himself, over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign.”
– John Stuart Mill

Unlocks

Corporate Libertarianism

Requirements

Information Era
Required Civics
icon_civic_globalization
Globalization
icon_civic_social_media
Social Media
Culture Cost
Base Cost: 3000 Culture
Boosts
Build a Uranium Mine.
Language
Choose Ruleset
Get it on App StoreGet it on Google Play
CopyrightPrivacy Policy