Implements markitect/llm/ package with concrete LLMAdapter implementations:
- OpenRouterAdapter: HTTP via urllib with retry/backoff on 429/5xx
- ClaudeCodeAdapter: subprocess-based Claude CLI with stdin piping
- Factory pattern: create_adapter("openrouter") or create_adapter("claude-code")
- API key resolution chain: constructor > env var > project-root key file
- 42 unit tests, 2 integration tests (gated on API key / CLI availability)
Also adds the infospace-with-history example with Wealth of Nations VSM
analysis pipeline, templates, schemas, source chapters, and processed
output for chapters 1-2. process_chapters.py now supports --provider
and --model flags for automatic LLM-driven processing.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
133 lines
8.2 KiB
Markdown
133 lines
8.2 KiB
Markdown
# Chapter Analysis: Book I, Chapter 1 — Of the Division of Labour
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## Chapter Summary
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Smith opens *The Wealth of Nations* by identifying the division of labour as
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the primary cause of improvement in the productive powers of labour. Using the
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celebrated pin-factory example, he demonstrates that ten workers collaborating
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under a division of labour can produce 48,000 pins per day, compared to fewer
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than 20 each if working independently — a productivity gain of over 240-fold.
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He attributes this gain to three mechanisms: increased dexterity through
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specialisation, time saved by eliminating task-switching, and the invention
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of labour-saving machinery stimulated by focused attention on single operations.
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Smith extends the argument from the workshop to society at large, showing that
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the separation of trades advances furthest in the most developed countries,
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and that the resulting multiplication of production creates a "universal
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opulence" reaching even the lowest social ranks. He illustrates this with the
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day-labourer's woollen coat, whose production requires the co-operation of
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thousands of workers across dozens of trades and multiple countries.
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## Entities Extracted
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| # | Entity | Type | Economic Domain | Description |
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|---|--------|------|-----------------|-------------|
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| 1 | Division of labour | Concept | Production | Separation of work into specialised tasks to increase productive power |
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| 2 | Productive powers of labour | Concept | Production | Capacity of labour to produce output per worker per unit time |
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| 3 | Dexterity of the workman | Concept | Production | Skill and speed acquired through repeated specialised operation |
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| 4 | Saving of time | Concept | Production | Elimination of time lost in switching between tasks |
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| 5 | Invention of machinery | Mechanism | Production | Development of labour-saving machines stimulated by specialisation |
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| 6 | Separation of trades | Mechanism | Production | Emergence of distinct occupations as separate specialisations |
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| 7 | The workman | Actor | Production | Individual labourer performing productive specialised work |
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| 8 | The philosopher | Actor | General Theory | Observer-specialist who combines knowledge across fields |
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| 9 | Universal opulence | Concept | Distribution | Material well-being extending to all social ranks |
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| 10 | Exchange | Mechanism | Exchange | Trading surplus production for goods produced by others |
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| 11 | Co-operation of labour | Mechanism | Production | Interdependent collaboration across trades and locations |
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| 12 | Manufactures | Concept | Production | Sector of production transforming raw materials through specialised operations |
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| 13 | Agriculture | Concept | Production | Sector of production with limited division of labour due to seasonal constraints |
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**Total entities: 13**
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## VSM Mappings
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| Entity | VSM Concept | Strength | Key Rationale |
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|--------|------------|----------|---------------|
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| Division of labour | S1 (Operations) | Strong | Defines internal architecture of operational units |
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| Division of labour | Recursion | Strong | Operates at multiple levels: workshop, trade, nation |
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| Productive powers of labour | S1 (Operations) | Strong | Key performance indicator of S1 effectiveness |
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| Dexterity of the workman | S1 (Operations) | Strong | Self-optimisation capacity of individual S1 elements |
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| Saving of time | S2 (Coordination) | Moderate | Eliminates oscillation between work modes |
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| Invention of machinery | S4 (Intelligence) | Strong | Adaptive innovation driven by focused observation |
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| Separation of trades | S1 (Operations) | Strong | Differentiation of S1 into distinct operational units |
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| The workman | S1 (Operations) | Strong | Fundamental S1 element at lowest recursion level |
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| The philosopher | S4 (Intelligence) | Strong | Environmental scanning and cross-domain synthesis |
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| Universal opulence | Viability | Moderate | Emergent outcome of a functioning viable system |
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| Exchange | S2 (Coordination) | Strong | Primary coordination mechanism between S1 units |
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| Co-operation of labour | S2 (Coordination) | Moderate | Observable result of effective S2 coordination |
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| Manufactures | S1 (Operations) | Strong | Major S1 domain with high internal differentiation |
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| Agriculture | S1 (Operations) | Strong | S1 domain constrained by environment in differentiation |
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**Total mappings: 14** (some entities map to multiple VSM concepts)
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## VSM Coverage
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| System | Covered | Entities Mapped | Notes |
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|--------|---------|-----------------|-------|
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| S1 (Operations) | Yes | Division of labour, productive powers, dexterity, separation of trades, the workman, manufactures, agriculture | Dominant system — chapter focuses on operational structure |
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| S2 (Coordination) | Yes | Saving of time, exchange, co-operation of labour | Present through coordination mechanisms |
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| S3 (Control) | No | — | No entities map to internal regulation or resource allocation |
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| S3* (Audit) | No | — | No entities map to monitoring or verification |
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| S4 (Intelligence) | Yes | Invention of machinery, the philosopher | Innovation and environmental scanning |
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| S5 (Policy) | No | — | No entities map to identity, policy, or purpose |
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| Recursion | Yes | Division of labour | Multi-level operation explicitly noted |
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| Variety | No | — | Not explicitly addressed in this chapter |
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| Requisite Variety | No | — | Not explicitly addressed |
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| Attenuation/Amplification | No | — | Not explicitly addressed |
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| Algedonic Signals | No | — | Not explicitly addressed |
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| Autonomy | No | — | Implicit but not directly discussed |
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| Viability | Yes | Universal opulence | System-level outcome |
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**Systems covered: S1, S2, S4 (3 of 5 primary systems)**
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**Systems not covered: S3, S3*, S5**
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**Key concepts covered: Recursion, Viability (2 of 7)**
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## Gaps & Observations
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### Uncovered Systems
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- **S3 (Control)**: The chapter does not discuss regulation, resource allocation,
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or governance of operational units. Smith's "invisible hand" and regulatory
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structures appear in later chapters.
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- **S3* (Audit)**: No monitoring or verification mechanisms are discussed.
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- **S5 (Policy)**: The chapter does not address sovereign authority, economic
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policy, or the purpose of the commonwealth. Smith's brief reference to
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"a well-governed society" hints at S5 but does not develop it.
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### Difficult Mappings
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- **Saving of time** maps only moderately to S2 because it describes the
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elimination of a coordination problem rather than a coordination mechanism
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itself.
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- **Universal opulence** maps to Viability rather than a specific system,
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making it a systemic property rather than a structural element.
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### Emerging Themes
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1. **S1 dominance**: This chapter is overwhelmingly about operational structure.
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As the opening chapter of the book, it establishes the productive foundation
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before introducing regulatory and policy layers in subsequent chapters.
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2. **Recursion as implicit structure**: Smith's analysis naturally operates at
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multiple recursive levels (worker → workshop → trade → nation) even though
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he does not use systems-theoretic language.
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3. **Innovation feedback loop**: The connection between S1 (specialised workers)
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and S4 (invention/philosophy) represents a key feedback loop in the viable
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system: operational focus generates adaptive innovation.
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### Suggestions for Enriching Coverage
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- **S3 coverage** is likely to emerge in chapters on wages, profits, and market
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regulation (Book I, Chapters 7-10).
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- **S5 coverage** should appear in Book IV (political economy) and Book V
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(sovereign revenue).
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- **Variety and requisite variety** may emerge when Smith discusses market size
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(Chapter 3) and the limitations of regulation.
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- Later chapters on money (Chapter 4) and prices (Chapters 5-7) should
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strengthen S2 coverage through the price mechanism.
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### Cross-chapter Anticipations
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Several entities from this chapter will likely recur and deepen in subsequent
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chapters:
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- **Division of labour** → Chapter 2 (its cause) and Chapter 3 (its limits)
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- **Exchange** → Chapter 4 (money as medium of exchange)
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- **Productive powers** → Chapters 5-7 (price theory as measure of output)
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