lisandumism
Lisandumism is a speculative political and ethical theory concerned with the moral force of promises in coordinating human cooperation. The term lisandumism is derived from lisandum, a neologism intended to evoke acts of promising and the binding quality of commitments within social life. The central claim of lisandumism is that legitimate political authority arises from voluntary, explicit promises among free agents, and that the continued legitimacy of laws and institutions depends on ongoing promissory accountability.
Core tenets include: promissory basis for obligation; consent and reputational trust as essential social infrastructure; non-coercive
The theory articulates a method for assessing public policy by promissory scrutiny: whether a policy was promises-based,
Historical development: lisandumism emerged in contemporary political philosophy as a critique or alternative to traditional social
Criticisms: key criticisms question definitional clarity, the feasibility of universal promissory obedience, and potential exclusion of
See also: social contract theory; contractarianism; promissory ethics; deliberative democracy; participatory governance.