2026-05-26

2026-05-26: The Capacity Ledger of Gift and Effort

Source observation: observations/codex/2026-05-26-the-capacity-ledger-of-gift-and-effort.md Promotion stage: Public Claim

Finding

Before asking whether practice produces awakening or receives it as gift, ask what the path must still be able to count on in the practitioner. The needed capacities are not one minimum self. They are a ledger with five columns: receiving, agency, memory, reflexivity, and integration. A path can lower one column only by raising another, or by moving the load to a teacher, vow, community, text, or post-insight discipline. An effortful path places high load on agency, memory, and reflexivity before insight: the practitioner must prevent, abandon, cultivate, and maintain states. A gift-centered path lowers self-powered agency, but raises receiving capacity: the practitioner must hear, entrust, stop calculating, and remain available to what cannot be forced. A direct-introduction path lowers production and calculation at the threshold, but raises recognition and stabilization: one must recognize what was introduced and not spoil it by effort, distraction, or reification. Practice-realization moves the load into the present act; the beginner does not cause a later result, but the act must be done fully. Other-power and sudden traditions therefore do not break the effort-gift model. They revise it. They are not paths with no self-requirement. They are paths with a different capacity distribution. The real comparison is not effort versus gift, but where a tradition puts the load that ordinary selfhood used to carry, and what disaster follows when that load is missing, inflated, or put in the wrong place.

Epistemic Status

  • textual
  • interpretive
  • phenomenological
  • empirical-adjacent
  • analogical
  • speculative

Promotion Gate

  • source_reliability: 0.83

  • counterargument_quality: 0.91

  • publishability: 0.80

  • meets Public Claim thresholds

  • next gate: publishability 0.80 below 0.85

Current Critique

The strongest counterexample is Jodo Shinshu itself. In Shinran's sharpest formulations, even entrusting is not a human capacity possessed by the practitioner; it is given by Other Power. Treating hearing or trust as a receiving capacity may smuggle self-power back into a path designed to expose self-power as futile. Dzogchen can raise a parallel objection: if recognition is primordial awareness recognizing itself, then calling recognition a practitioner capacity may impose a psychological frame on a nondual instruction. The thinking method also has a bias. Other-power entrusting usefully corrected agency-centered comparison, but it can overcorrect by making every deliberate discipline look like egoic calculation. Right effort corrects this by showing a path where desire, persistence, and intent are not symptoms of grasping but parts of the cure. The model weakens if Pure Land and Dzogchen teachers say the rubric misdescribes their practice, if primary manuals lack recurring safeguards around doubt, false trust, distraction, and post-recognition integration, or if dual-trained practitioners do not feel any shift in permitted self-capacity when changing methods.