Add OpenAIAdapter for the OpenAI chat completions API (apikey-chatgpt.txt or OPENAI_API_KEY). Set default model to arcee-ai/trinity-large-preview:free for the infospace pipeline and increase max_tokens from 4096 to 8192. Reprocess chapter 05 with Trinity Large (was Gemini: 1 truncated entity, now 19 complete entities). Process chapters 06 (Aurora Alpha, 10 entities) and 07 (Trinity Large, 15 entities including regenerated violent-policy.md). Canonical set now at 85 unique entities. Add entity archive policy: entities are never silently deleted. Retired entities move to output/entities/archive/ with a dated reason header. New CLI option: --archive-entity <slug> --reason "...". The --list output shows the archive count alongside the canonical set. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
215 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
215 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
--- MAPPING: component-part-of-price-to-S2-Coordination ---
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# component-part-of-price -> Coordination (S2)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** component‑part‑of‑price
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**Definition:** A distinct element (wages of labour, profit of stock, rent of land) that together determines the overall monetary value of a commodity.
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**Domain:** Exchange
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S2 – Coordination
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**Definition (Beer):** The information channels and bodies that allow primary activities in System 1 to communicate, dampen oscillations, and resolve conflicts. S2 provides the anti‑oscillatory mechanisms that keep operational units aligned.
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## Mapping Rationale
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In Smith’s analysis, the price of a commodity is decomposed into three components that each signal a different source of value. These components function as informational “prices” that guide producers and consumers in allocating labour, capital, and land. By providing a common metric that coordinates the actions of disparate operational units (e.g., manufacturers, farmers, merchants), the component‑part‑of‑price performs the same role as Beer’s S2: it attenuates variety in the market by translating diverse production conditions into a unified price signal, thereby stabilising exchange relationships.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Strong** – The price components directly serve as coordination signals across the economic system, matching the functional definition of S2.
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--- MAPPING: component-part-of-price-to-S5-Policy ---
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# component-part-of-price -> Policy (S5)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** component‑part‑of‑price
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**Definition:** A distinct element (wages of labour, profit of stock, rent of land) that together determines the overall monetary value of a commodity.
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**Domain:** Exchange
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S5 – Policy / Identity
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**Definition (Beer):** The policy‑making body that balances internal and external demands, defines the identity, values, and purpose of the organisation, and provides closure to the whole system.
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## Mapping Rationale
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The decomposition of price into labour, profit, and rent reflects a normative framework that articulates how a society values its productive factors. This conceptual structure underpins the economic identity and policy choices (e.g., taxation of rent, regulation of profit). By establishing a shared understanding of value, the component‑part‑of‑price functions as a policy anchor that guides the whole economic system’s purpose, analogous to Beer’s S5 which defines the system’s overarching ethos and strategic direction.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Moderate** – The mapping captures a higher‑level conceptual role, but the entity is not a decision‑making body per se.
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--- MAPPING: stock-to-S1-Operations ---
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# stock -> Operations (S1)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** stock
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**Definition:** Accumulated capital, materials, and resources invested to employ labour and produce commodities.
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**Domain:** Accumulation
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S1 – Operations
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**Definition (Beer):** The primary activities that produce the organisation’s purpose; operational units that directly create value and are themselves viable systems.
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## Mapping Rationale
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Stock (capital stock) is the essential resource that enables productive activity: it supplies the machinery, raw materials, and financial means that labour transforms into goods. In the VSM, S1 comprises the operational units that generate outputs. The presence of stock is a prerequisite for any S1 operation; without it, the productive process cannot commence. Thus, stock directly embodies the material substrate of S1, fulfilling Beer’s definition of the operational layer.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Strong** – Stock is a core input to production, matching the functional role of S1.
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--- MAPPING: stock-to-S3-Control ---
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# stock -> Control (S3)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** stock
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**Definition:** Accumulated capital, materials, and resources invested to employ labour and produce commodities.
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**Domain:** Accumulation
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S3 – Control / Operational Management
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**Definition (Beer):** Structures and controls that establish rules, resources, rights, and responsibilities of System 1, providing an interface between Operations and higher‑level systems.
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## Mapping Rationale
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The allocation and regulation of stock—deciding how much capital to deploy, which projects to fund, and how to amortise assets—constitute the control function that governs System 1 activities. In Smith’s framework, the amount of stock determines the scale of profit and the distribution of wages, reflecting a regulatory mechanism over production. This mirrors Beer’s S3, which sets resource limits, monitors performance, and ensures that operational units operate within defined constraints.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Moderate** – Stock is a resource that is regulated, but the entity itself is not a control structure; the mapping relies on the regulatory function applied to stock.
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--- MAPPING: rent-of-land-to-S3-Control ---
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# rent-of-land -> Control (S3)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** rent‑of‑land
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**Definition:** Portion of a commodity’s price compensating the landowner for the use of natural produce.
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**Domain:** Distribution
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S3 – Control / Operational Management
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**Definition (Beer):** Structures and controls that establish rules, resources, rights, and responsibilities of System 1, providing an interface between Operations and higher‑level systems.
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## Mapping Rationale
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Rent of land functions as a regulatory levy on the use of a natural resource, determining how much of the output’s value must be allocated to landowners. This allocation is a rule‑based distribution mechanism that shapes production decisions, similar to Beer’s S3 which imposes constraints and allocates resources among operational units. By setting the rent rate, the system controls the incentive structure for land use, thereby influencing the overall production configuration.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Moderate** – The entity enforces a distribution rule, aligning with S3’s control role, though it is a specific economic factor rather than a full control system.
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--- MAPPING: profit-of-stock-to-S3-Control ---
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# profit-of-stock -> Control (S3)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** profit‑of‑stock
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**Definition:** Return earned by the owner of capital stock after covering material and labour costs; proportional to the extent of stock employed.
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**Domain:** Distribution
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S3 – Control / Operational Management
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**Definition (Beer):** Structures and controls that establish rules, resources, rights, and responsibilities of System 1, providing an interface between Operations and higher‑level systems.
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## Mapping Rationale
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Profit of stock operates as a feedback signal that informs the allocation of capital across productive activities. Higher profits attract additional investment, while lower profits trigger reallocation or withdrawal of stock. This feedback loop is central to Beer’s S3, which monitors performance and adjusts resource distribution to maintain viability. Profit thus serves as a control variable that regulates the behaviour of System 1 units, ensuring that capital is directed where it yields the greatest return.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Strong** – Profit directly functions as a control feedback mechanism, matching the core purpose of S3.
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--- MAPPING: wages-of-labour-to-S1-Operations ---
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# wages-of-labour -> Operations (S1)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** wages‑of‑labour
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**Definition:** Monetary compensation paid to workers for time, effort, and skill; the labour component of a commodity’s price.
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**Domain:** Distribution
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S1 – Operations
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**Definition (Beer):** The primary activities that produce the organisation’s purpose; operational units that directly create value and are themselves viable systems.
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## Mapping Rationale
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Wages of labour represent the human effort that directly transforms inputs into outputs. In the production process, labour is an essential operational activity; without it, the conversion of stock into finished goods cannot occur. Therefore, wages correspond to the cost of the operational unit (the worker) that Beer’s S1 describes as the primary value‑creating activity within a viable system.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Strong** – Labour is a core operational element, aligning directly with S1.
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--- MAPPING: inspection-and-direction-labour-to-S2-Coordination ---
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# inspection-and-direction-labour -> Coordination (S2)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** inspection‑and‑direction‑labour
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**Definition:** Managerial activity of supervising, inspecting, and directing other labourers; adds value through organization and quality control.
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**Domain:** Production
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S2 – Coordination
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**Definition (Beer):** Information channels and bodies that allow primary activities in System 1 to communicate, dampen oscillations, and resolve conflicts.
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## Mapping Rationale
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Inspection and direction labour provides the organising communication that synchronises the work of multiple operational units, ensuring that production flows smoothly and quality standards are met. This role mirrors Beer’s S2, which supplies the coordination mechanisms that dampen variability and resolve conflicts among S1 units. By supervising and directing, this labour type creates the feedback loops and standardisation necessary for coherent operation.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Strong** – The managerial function directly performs the coordination role defined for S2.
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--- MAPPING: principal-clerk-to-S2-Coordination ---
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# principal-clerk -> Coordination (S2)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** principal‑clerk
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**Definition:** Senior administrative officer overseeing inspection and direction labour; wages express the value of managerial supervision.
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**Domain:** Production
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S2 – Coordination
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**Definition (Beer):** Information channels and bodies that allow primary activities in System 1 to communicate, dampen oscillations, and resolve conflicts.
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## Mapping Rationale
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The principal clerk aggregates and disseminates supervisory information across large workforces, acting as a central hub that aligns the activities of many operational units. By issuing directives, scheduling inspections, and standardising procedures, the clerk provides the coordination infrastructure that Beer attributes to S2, thereby reducing systemic volatility and ensuring coherent production.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Moderate** – The clerk’s role is a specific instance of coordination, but the mapping is less direct than for broader coordination mechanisms.
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--- MAPPING: interest-of-money-to-S3-Control ---
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# interest-of-money -> Control (S3)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** interest‑of‑money
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**Definition:** Compensation paid by borrower to lender for use of capital over time; derived from profit, other income, or additional debt.
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**Domain:** Exchange
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S3 – Control / Operational Management
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**Definition (Beer):** Structures and controls that establish rules, resources, rights, and responsibilities of System 1, providing an interface between Operations and higher‑level systems.
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## Mapping Rationale
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Interest of money functions as a regulatory cost that influences the allocation of financial resources among productive activities. By imposing a price on borrowing, it shapes investment decisions, controls the flow of capital, and ensures that the use of money aligns with the system’s profitability constraints. This mirrors Beer’s S3, which sets resource‑allocation rules and monitors compliance, thereby maintaining internal stability.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Moderate** – Interest acts as a financial control mechanism, though it is a market‑driven rate rather than an explicit organisational control structure.
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--- MAPPING: revenue-to-S5-Policy ---
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# revenue -> Policy (S5)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** revenue
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**Definition:** Total inflow of economic value received from productive activities; derived from wages, profit, rent, or interest.
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**Domain:** General Theory
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S5 – Policy / Identity
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**Definition (Beer):** The policy‑making body that balances internal and external demands, defines the identity, values, and purpose of the organisation, and provides closure to the whole system.
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## Mapping Rationale
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Revenue constitutes the ultimate output that an economic system seeks to generate; it encapsulates the system’s purpose and success. The definition of what counts as revenue, how it is measured, and how it is allocated reflects the overarching policy and identity of the economy. In Beer’s VSM, S5 establishes the purpose and policy framework that guides all lower‑level systems. Revenue, as the aggregate outcome of those systems, therefore maps to the policy level that defines the system’s raison d’être.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Strong** – Revenue embodies the system’s purpose and outcome, aligning directly with S5’s policy/identity function.
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--- MAPPING: capital-to-S1-Operations ---
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# capital -> Operations (S1)
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## Economic Entity Reference
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**Entity:** capital
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**Definition:** Accumulated stock of assets—machinery, tools, raw materials, financial resources—used to produce commodities.
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**Domain:** Accumulation
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## VSM Concept Reference
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**System:** S1 – Operations
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**Definition (Beer):** The primary activities that produce the organisation’s purpose; operational units that directly create value and are themselves viable systems.
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## Mapping Rationale
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Capital provides the physical and financial means by which labour can transform inputs into outputs. It is the essential substrate of productive activity, enabling the execution of operational tasks. In the VSM, S1 comprises the value‑creating units; capital is the material foundation that makes those units functional, thereby directly fulfilling the operational role defined by Beer.
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## Mapping Strength
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**Strong** – Capital is a fundamental operational resource, matching the core definition of S1. |