CLA | Ch. 1 — Space as a Rupture of the Legal Paradigm
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Summary
Westphalia was an engineering solution, not an eternal truth. Space is the environment where that engineering stops working.
Chapter 1 of CLA: Algorithmic Law for the Cosmos argues that outer space is not simply a new domain for existing law — it is the catalyst for a paradigmatic crisis that reveals the structural limits of the modern legal system.
The chapter introduces the concept of territorial proxy obsolescence: territory was always a technology of control, not an essence. A technology that proved optimal for three centuries under specific conditions — limited human mobility, geographically fixed resources, predominantly physical wealth. In space, that technology becomes entirely obsolete.
The episode examines three scenarios of state transfiguration — the Algorithmic Protectorate, the Infrastructure Federation, and Distributed Functional Sovereignty — and establishes the central thesis: the transition of humanity toward a multiplanetary species requires not adapting terrestrial law, but transfiguring it.
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📖 CLA: Algorithmic Law for the Cosmos — Volume I
Jesús Bernal Allende | School of Duty-to-Optimize and Sovereignty of Evidence
https://a.co/d/0aqO3T6K
🌐 https://edo-os.com
🔗 https://www.linkedin.com/in/jesus-bernal-allende-030b2795