but do these guidelines suggest anything that would put a damper on 'outside the box'thinking?
well, as long as they're guidelines, meaning you can also
not follow them from time to time, it might be okay.
if these guidelines are supposed to be followed
always (i would call them "rules" then), they will form the box (prison).
what box you may ask?
> never to set in motion a process that results in any unnecessary
> disturbance in your vicinity (sirens, alarms, explosions, etc)
what's unnecessary?
can you be sure?
if you'd rather be better safe than sorry you will be trapped inside the box.
> - unless otherwise requested, all communications will be placed at a 3rd party
> location, and will be placed there with the understanding that they may never be
> retreived or responded to
actually i don't quite understand this one, what's it for, and why?
who's the 3rd party? anyone?
> - never ask for a favor
in the broadest sense? that's gonna require some big adaptation. i'm not sure if i would call such a society "human" anymore.. have you ever considered how much a part of your communication consists of direct or indirect requests to another person? (favours?)
together with the last one, i think we're gonna need to evolve physically or plug ourselves continously into VR, because also, i can't even look at anyone without communicating.
> make available anything that i have an abundance of for you to use or not use
> as you see fit
sounds like a good plan, but is it even theoretically possible? what if the making-available costs some resources that deplete your abundance? (or even more convoluted situations)
rules are not just supposed to be broken, they will eventually break themselves.
either the rules are too loose to be useful
or they are too strict to be fruitful
or they will break or be broken continously and over and over again, like we do trying to break out of the B.I.P.
at least i think this is the case.
i don't think this problem can be solved by applying (more) rules. remember the aneristic strife?
you make rules, i will poke holes in them.
and not only will i break them, i will use the rules to break the rules.
either they will be too strict, and things will go completely rigid (solid)
or they will be too loose and they will accomplish nothing (gaseous)
or they will be "just right" OR SO YOU THINK and they will contradict themselves (liquid)
at least, this is what i think i believe.
but there is probably (i think) some fundamental math/logic backing me up here. (which is also powerful enough to contradict itself, but that doesn't make it useless, au contraire, it makes it the right way to go)