日期:2026/02/07 IAE

Charity Economicism
The Canonical Utility Function
Canonical Proposition
In Charity Economicism, utility is not defined by money, wealth, or output,
but by the sustainable expansion of the overall quality of life.
Utility is therefore reconceptualized as a civilizational measure, rather than an economic or monetary one.
Total Utility Function
The total utility function in Charity Economicism is defined as a multiplicative structure:
U=f(L×S×V)
where:
-
L (Living Utility) represents the quality of daily life, including dignity, psychological security, social connection, and meaningful participation.
-
S (Survival Utility) represents the system’s capacity to sustain life under risk, shock, and across generations.
-
V (Life Utility) represents the existential dimension of life, including meaning, purpose, spiritual growth, and participation in civilization.
These three dimensions form an interdependent multiplicative system with the following properties:
-
If any one dimension approaches zero, total utility collapses.
-
No single dimension may be maximized at the expense of the others.
-
Solutions that achieve efficiency or wealth through the degradation of dignity, life, or meaning are categorically excluded.
Civilizational Implication
In Charity Economicism, utility maximization is not the maximization of wealth,
but rather:
Enabling more lives, over a longer period of time,
to exist together in states of greater dignity and meaning.
This proposition constitutes the canonical foundation of the utility function in Charity Economicism and serves as the first-principle basis for institutional design, measurement systems, and civilization-level economic architecture.