# BOOK LAUNCH!
# The Praxeology of Privacy
v0.1.0 Now Available
I'm excited to announce the publication of **"The Praxeology of Privacy: Economic Logic in Cypherpunk Implementation"** - a complete manuscript bridging Austrian economics with cypherpunk cryptography.
## What Is This Book?
This work proves that **privacy isn't just a preference—it's an economic necessity**. Through rigorous praxeological analysis, it demonstrates that privacy is logically required for rational economic action, property rights, and voluntary exchange.
### The Core Argument
I develop a **Three-Axiom Framework** showing how:
- **Privacy enables economic calculation** (building on Mises)
- **Privacy protects rational discourse** (extending Hoppe)
- **Privacy provides resistance tools** (following Voskuil)
The result? A systematic proof that surveillance systems create the same calculation problems as socialist planning, while cryptographic tools restore the conditions necessary for free markets.
## Why This Matters
For too long, privacy advocates have relied on moral arguments while economists have ignored cryptographic innovation. This book bridges that gap, showing that:
- **Cypherpunks** gain rigorous economic foundations for their tools
- **Austrian economists** discover how cryptography solves fundamental problems
- **Everyone** learns why privacy is essential for human flourishing
## What's Inside
~70,000 words across 21 chapters covering:
- Economic logic of digital signatures and zero-knowledge proofs
- How surveillance destroys market discovery processes
- Cryptographic property rights and enforcement mechanisms
- Practical framework for building parallel economies
- Original theoretical contributions to both traditions
## Download Now
**Complete manuscript available in multiple formats:**
- Light/Dark PDFs for reading
- Summary collection for overview
- Text-to-speech optimized version
- Individual chapters + full archive
👉 **Download here:** towardsliberty.com/pop
## The Best Part
This work is **100% public domain**. Copy it, share it, sell it, modify it—whatever helps spread these ideas.
## Next Steps
- **Researchers**: I welcome feedback, critique, and collaboration
- **Educators**: Use this material in courses and discussions
- **Practitioners**: Apply the framework to evaluate privacy technologies
- **Publishers**: Contact me about formal publication opportunities
I would love to get some serious review before we print the first batch, so please reach out with critique and improvement proposals.
This represents a couple years of research connecting two intellectual traditions that desperately needed each other. I believe it's the first systematic praxeological analysis of cryptography—and hopefully not the last.
**What do you think? Does this framework resonate with your understanding of privacy and economics? Do I make any logical flaws?**

