ALDEIS Circles: Decentralized Networks
Circles are autonomous, institutional networks bound by shared doctrine but independent in execution. They are the operational expression of ALDEIS principles across domains, disciplines, and geographies.
What is a Circle?
A Circle is a self-governing institutional network of builders united by:
- DoctrineAlignment with ALDEIS core principles
- AutonomyIndependence in governance and execution
- PurposeShared commitment to human development
- AccountabilityTransparent stewardship and responsibility
Types of Circles
ALDEIS Entrepreneur Circles
Builders creating economic and social value. Local, guild-like networks where entrepreneurs learn, collaborate, and build together.
ALDEIS Academic Circles
Scholars and researchers stewarding knowledge in their disciplines. Non-geographical, bound by epistemic rigor and shared commitment to truth.
ALDEIS Discipline Circles
Practitioners of disciplines that forge human capability: martial arts, physical training, contemplative practice. Discipline creates freedom.
ALDEIS Arts & Culture Circles
Creators cultivating human expression: writers, artists, musicians, designers. Art is entrepreneurship applied to meaning and beauty.
ALDEIS City Circles
Geographically rooted networks coordinating multiple circles within a city. These form city councils for collective governance and strategy.
ALDEIS Institutional Circles
Universities, corporations, NGOs, and institutions aligning their missions with ALDEIS doctrine while maintaining their independence.
Principles of Circle Formation
Each Circle governs itself independently while maintaining alignment with ALDEIS doctrine. There is no central control.
ALDEIS does not absorb organizations or individuals. Circles maintain their identity while sharing principles.
Members are stewards with responsibilities, not consumers. Participation implies commitment to shared construction.
Clear doctrine provides structure. Within that structure, Circles have complete freedom to innovate and organize.
Circles are founded by builders who commit to long-term stewardship, not populated by casual participants.
Each Circle derives legitimacy from its alignment with doctrine and the quality of its members, not from central authority.
Founding a Circle
ALDEIS does not recruit or onboard casually. Circles are founded by committed builders who understand our doctrine and commit to stewardship. If you believe you share our principles and wish to found a Circle:
Contact our global coordination through global@ioxngroup.com with:
- •Your vision for the Circle and its purpose
- •Your personal commitment to ALDEIS doctrine
- •The founding members who will steward it
- •How your Circle will contribute to human development