--- id: extraction-rules name: extraction_rules artifact_type: content description: Guidelines for extracting economic entities from source text version: 1.0.0 --- # Entity Extraction Rules ## What Constitutes an Entity An economic entity is a distinct concept, actor, mechanism, or institution that plays a functional role in Adam Smith's economic analysis. Extract entities at the level of specificity where they carry independent meaning. ## Extraction Criteria 1. **Concepts**: Abstract economic ideas (e.g., "division of labour", "effectual demand", "natural price"). Extract when Smith defines, explains, or argues about the concept. 2. **Actors**: Economic agents with defined roles (e.g., "the labourer", "the merchant", "the sovereign"). Extract when the actor performs a distinct economic function. 3. **Mechanisms**: Processes or dynamics that produce economic effects (e.g., "accumulation of stock", "market price adjustment", "foreign trade"). Extract when the mechanism is described as producing specific outcomes. 4. **Institutions**: Organised structures that shape economic behaviour (e.g., "the corporation", "the guild", "the joint-stock company"). Extract when the institution's economic function is described. ## Granularity Rules - Extract at the level of a single coherent concept. - Do NOT extract synonyms as separate entities — choose the primary term Smith uses and note variations. - DO extract distinct aspects of a broad concept as separate entities when Smith treats them independently (e.g., "wages of labour" and "profits of stock" are separate from "price of commodities" even though they compose it). - If an entity appears across multiple chapters, extract it on first significant appearance and note cross-references in later chapters. ## Naming Conventions - Use Smith's own terminology where possible. - Normalise to lowercase except for proper nouns. - Use the most common form Smith uses (e.g., "division of labour" not "divided labour"). ## Quality Checks - Each entity must have a definition that would be comprehensible without reading the source chapter. - Each entity must cite the specific book and chapter of first appearance. - Economic Domain must be one of: Production, Distribution, Exchange, Consumption, Accumulation, Regulation, or General Theory.