clearstream
(He, Him)
Regards my above, I intentionally leave open the strategy that S is non-normative while secret.* This is premised on saying that normal is down to consensus. Who consented to S while it was secret? Just one participant, right? A meaning of normal is normal for the society - in this case, players and MC together - so how can anything known to just one participant and thus lacking consensus count as a "norm"?
Thus I can resist S being a "pre-existing norm" until it becomes subject to the consent of the society. It might possibly be a prospective norm, but hasn't yet passed into recognition as a norm.
This picture changes for a society that grants to some participant(s) the job of establishing norms. As I have said in different ways further above, any S can be made normal in the case that the person(s) appointed to say what is normal said it. The two modes connect via the idea of prospective norms, i.e. that the appointed person(s) be the proposer of norms that will ordinarily be accepted in this latter mode of play.
*It is with this sort of thing in mind, as well as plain lacunae, that I included the words "so far as pre-existing norms extend", i.e. that they might not extend.
Thus I can resist S being a "pre-existing norm" until it becomes subject to the consent of the society. It might possibly be a prospective norm, but hasn't yet passed into recognition as a norm.
This picture changes for a society that grants to some participant(s) the job of establishing norms. As I have said in different ways further above, any S can be made normal in the case that the person(s) appointed to say what is normal said it. The two modes connect via the idea of prospective norms, i.e. that the appointed person(s) be the proposer of norms that will ordinarily be accepted in this latter mode of play.
*It is with this sort of thing in mind, as well as plain lacunae, that I included the words "so far as pre-existing norms extend", i.e. that they might not extend.
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