On Thu, Mar 23, 2023 at 5:45 PM Yachay Wayllukuq via agora-discussion <agora-discussion@agoranomic.org> wrote: > > That's pretty fascinating. > > Are there any other notable "unwritten rules"? Precedents or other thing > that are, in practice, as strong as actual explicit ruletext?
There should be nothing "as strong as actual rules text". If a rules text directly contradicts a CFJ or our common way of doing things ("game custom"), the rules text wins (see Rule 217). The issue is with all the places the rules are silent or ambiguous, which especially happens with qualitative words. What makes something "clear and unambiguous"? If an officer publishes "a report" but leaves something out, does it count as a report? For the purposes of R2221, when is something a "dialect correction" versus an actual change in the rule? Etc. Many of these things are "hard to define in words, but we know it when we see it". Those sorts of interpretations have built up a lot over the years into a kind of common law and a set of examples (e.g. examples of which communications were clear and which were not). Importantly, those can always be changed via changing the rules text, or through a CFJ that says "those past CFJs were wrong". Since resolving all of these issues are ultimately consensus (via choosing not to appeal judgements) or democratically decided (via Moots), their sole "power" is the power to persuade, and the power to serve as predictions[0] of what the likely consensus outcomes will be the next time that controversy comes up. The flip side is those "predictions" can turn into "self-fulfilling prophesies" if not revisited with fresh eyes from time to time. [0] see Holmes, "The Path of the Law" (pdf: http://moglen.law.columbia.edu/LCS/palaw.pdf) -G.