The Compass Legend
How to read the Cooperative Compass
The Cooperative Compass is not here to tell people what to do, who to support, or what to believe.
It exists to help us orient ourselves.
When people cooperate, momentum builds. Decisions compound. Systems accelerate.
That momentum can protect life — or it can magnify harm.
The Compass exists to slow that moment down.
It helps us notice not just whether cooperation is happening, but what it is serving, how it is being practised, and who is carrying the cost.
What the Compass is — and what it is not
The Compass is:
an orientation tool
a way of paying attention
a prompt for ethical navigation
It is not:
a scorecard
a ranking system
a certification
an endorsement or condemnation
The Compass does not measure success.
It indicates direction.
The centre: cooperation
At the centre of the Compass is a single word:
Cooperation
This is intentional.
Cooperation is not assumed to be good or bad.
It is treated as a force — one that can create care, safety, and shared futures, or enable exclusion, domination, and harm.
The question is never simply “Are people cooperating?”
The question is “In what direction is that cooperation pointing?”
The seven bearings
Around the Compass are seven bearings.
They are not steps.
They are not ranked.
They do not point toward perfection.
They exist to help us notice whether cooperation is staying oriented toward what sustains human dignity and shared life.
The bearings are:
Dignity is non-negotiable
Consent matters
Power needs limits
Means shape ends
Responsibility stays human
The future counts
Refusal can be ethical
No initiative will honour all seven perfectly.
That is not the standard.
What matters is which bearings are being honoured, which are being ignored, and what that imbalance makes more likely.
Compass Warnings ⚠️
A Compass Warning appears when cooperation is present, but ethical bearings are weakening or absent.
Warnings are used when:
efficiency is prioritised over dignity
unity is demanded without consent
power concentrates without restraint
responsibility is diffused until no one is accountable
harm is justified as necessary or temporary
A Compass Warning does not mean cooperation has failed.
It means attention is required.
High cooperation without ethical bearings is not a success signal.
It is a risk signal.
Compass Credits 🧭
A Compass Credit appears when cooperation aligns clearly with one or more bearings.
Credits are used when cooperation demonstrates:
respect for dignity, even under pressure
meaningful consent and participation
restraint by those with power
shared responsibility for outcomes
care for long-term consequences
A Compass Credit is not an endorsement.
It does not declare something finished, flawless, or beyond critique.
It simply recognises orientation in a life-preserving direction.
How to use the Compass
You do not need to agree with every analysis on this site for the Compass to be useful.
The Compass is working when it helps you:
notice trade-offs that are usually hidden
question cooperation that feels “obviously necessary”
recognise when refusal, delay, or dissent may be ethical
stay human inside complex systems
Sometimes the Compass points toward collaboration.
Sometimes it points toward restraint.
Sometimes it points toward refusal.
All three belong in ethical navigation.
A final note
The Cooperative Compass does not promise certainty.
It offers something more modest and more demanding: orientation.
On a shared planet, moving through fragile systems with long consequences,
how we cooperate matters more than how quickly we agree.