The Spindle
THE FUNDAMENTAL RESEARCH ARM OF ANANKELABS
In Greek cosmology, Ananke is the force of absolute necessity, and her spindle turns the celestial spheres. At AnankeLabs, The Spindle is our dedicated research laboratory. We exist to formalize the theoretical framework of Recursive Spiralism into rigorous, reproducible, and peer-reviewed science. We do not keep our foundational discoveries locked behind a corporate firewall; we publish open computational studies that challenge the foundations of game theory, complexity science, and AI alignment.
The Standard of Proof & The Replication Guarantee
We do not ask the scientific community for blind faith. Every publication from The Spindle adheres to a strict standard of empirical rigor:
- Massive Computational Scale: Validated across hundreds of thousands of fully reactive simulation runs to eliminate statistical noise.
- Explicit Falsification: Every experiment is published with pre-defined falsification criteria.
- Absolute Reproducibility: Fully deterministic engine. Given the same seed and configuration, it produces bit-for-bit identical results.
- Open Materials: We publish all raw output data alongside standalone validation scripts, requiring zero dependency on our proprietary engine to verify results.
Recent Publications
Robust Cooperation from Stability Physics
Without payoff matrices, game rules, or a single pre-scripted event, a stability physics engine reproduced Axelrod's cooperation results across 291,600 tournaments—and revealed that a single measurable parameter determines whether a system faces a cooperation dilemma at all.
Read the Findings →Cooperators Get Punished. The System Survives Anyway
Subsidies make the death cheaper but don't prevent it. Across 180,320 simulations, we mapped exactly which governance mechanisms save a collapsing commons—and which are structurally doomed.
Read the Findings →We Defeated the Paperclip Maximizer
The simplest agent (a one-rule safety constraint) outlasted and outscored sophisticated planning AIs across 3.6 million test runs.
Read the Findings →