Files
markitect-main/examples/infospace-with-history/output/evaluations/landlord.md
tegwick a9ca0adfcf feat(example): add per-entity LLM evaluations for 985 WoN entities (S3.3)
Batch evaluation of all 988 entities via OpenRouter. 984 succeeded on
first pass; 3 failed (network errors). eval-summary --update-metrics
written with per_entity_mean=3.9556.

Viability dashboard: 6/6 PASS
  redundancy_ratio   0.0061  (max 0.10)
  coverage_ratio     0.6190  (min 0.40)
  coherence_comps    0.0000  (max 3)
  consistency_cycles 0.0000  (max 0)
  granularity_entropy 2.6748 (min 1.0)
  per_entity_mean    3.9556  (min 3.5)

Dimension breakdown (mean across 985 entities):
  definition_precision  3.62
  source_grounding      4.36
  domain_placement      4.56
  vsm_relevance         3.31
  explanatory_value     3.94

Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-02-23 09:36:46 +01:00

3.7 KiB

entity_slug, evaluator, evaluated_at, overall_score, scores
entity_slug evaluator evaluated_at overall_score scores
landlord null 2026-02-23T05:40:33.575275 4.0
name value max_value rationale
definition_precision 4.0 5.0 The definition is precise and captures a distinct economic role - the landowner who extracts rent as "the first deduction from the produce of labour employed upon land." It clearly distinguishes the landlord from other economic actors by their specific relationship to land ownership and rent extraction.
name value max_value rationale
source_grounding 5.0 5.0 This entity is directly grounded in Smith's text from Book I, Chapter 8, where he explicitly discusses how landlords emerge once land becomes private property and demand rent from agricultural produce. The language closely follows Smith's own framing of rent as a deduction from labor's output.
name value max_value rationale
domain_placement 5.0 5.0 The placement in "Distribution" is correct, as the landlord's role is fundamentally about how the total product gets distributed among different claimants (workers, capitalists, landlords) through rent payments. This aligns perfectly with classical political economy's focus on distributive shares.
name value max_value rationale
vsm_relevance 2.0 5.0 The landlord concept doesn't map naturally to any specific VSM system, as it represents a distributive claim rather than an operational or regulatory function. While landlords might influence S4 (environmental adaptation) through land use decisions, their primary definitional role as rent extractors is largely VSM-neutral.
name value max_value rationale
explanatory_value 4.0 5.0 This entity provides significant explanatory power by illuminating the structural mechanism through which land ownership creates a distinct class of income recipients. It helps explain how private property in land fundamentally alters the distribution of economic output beyond just labor-capital relations.

Evaluation: Landlord

definition_precision — 4.0 / 5.0

The definition is precise and captures a distinct economic role - the landowner who extracts rent as "the first deduction from the produce of labour employed upon land." It clearly distinguishes the landlord from other economic actors by their specific relationship to land ownership and rent extraction.

source_grounding — 5.0 / 5.0

This entity is directly grounded in Smith's text from Book I, Chapter 8, where he explicitly discusses how landlords emerge once land becomes private property and demand rent from agricultural produce. The language closely follows Smith's own framing of rent as a deduction from labor's output.

domain_placement — 5.0 / 5.0

The placement in "Distribution" is correct, as the landlord's role is fundamentally about how the total product gets distributed among different claimants (workers, capitalists, landlords) through rent payments. This aligns perfectly with classical political economy's focus on distributive shares.

vsm_relevance — 2.0 / 5.0

The landlord concept doesn't map naturally to any specific VSM system, as it represents a distributive claim rather than an operational or regulatory function. While landlords might influence S4 (environmental adaptation) through land use decisions, their primary definitional role as rent extractors is largely VSM-neutral.

explanatory_value — 4.0 / 5.0

This entity provides significant explanatory power by illuminating the structural mechanism through which land ownership creates a distinct class of income recipients. It helps explain how private property in land fundamentally alters the distribution of economic output beyond just labor-capital relations.