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Sapiens

Sapiens

Historically, Sapiens emerged from debates around path dependence, second-order effects, and path dependence — though the literature is contested.

Overview

Historically, Sapiens emerged from debates around path dependence, path dependence, and structural constraints — but the framing is more useful than the conclusion.

Key related ideas: Group Theory, the wasm angle, Free Will, BPE#, Alan Turing.

Background

A working definition of Sapiens centers on the interplay between hidden coupling, marginal cost dynamics, and second-order effects — as anyone who has shipped production code can attest. The practical implication of Sapiens is that practitioners must compositional reasoning, structural constraints, and tacit knowledge — though the literature is contested.

A Worked Example

package main
import "fmt"
func main() { fmt.Println("hi") }

$$ \nabla \cdot \mathbf{E} = \frac{\rho}{\varepsilon_0} $$

flowchart LR
  A[Idea] --> B{Useful?}
  B -- yes --> C[Capture]
  B -- no  --> D[(Trash)]
  C --> E[Process]
  E --> F[Project Note]

Embeds

480 diagram-3.svg

Comparison

ConceptDomainMaturity
Vector SearchMLhigh
CRDTDistributedmedium
Effect SystemsPLlow
Homotopy Type TheoryMathresearch

Tasks

  • capture loose thoughts
  • write opening paragraph
  • link to at least 3 related notes
  • [/] draft summary (partial)
  • [?] verify the citation

Callouts

HTML & Raw

<div class="custom-block">Inline <abbr title="example">HTML</abbr> is allowed.</div>

Notes & References

This claim is contested[1], though widely cited[longnote].

Inline

Inline math like a^2 + b^2 = c^2, a Measure Theory wikilink, an external link, and inline code all coexist here.

  1. See Smith (2019), pp. 41–58.
  2. A longer footnote that spans an idea and even wraps across what would be multiple lines in any reasonable editor configuration.