Corporation in Corpore: Why the Future of Tech Depends on Decentralizing the Self
DAODK Manifesto
Dragorad Knezi: corporation in corpore
Decentralization and autonomy of organization and corporation are not possible without thinking decentralization and autonomy of organism and body.
Without decentralization of the system of the self in which body is entrapped as a subsystem and a mere instrument to be controlled and used.
With the centralized system of the self and its concept of identity, oppositions of subject and object, individual and collective - all taken as given - no decentralization is.
The centralized self will always only produce centralized systems. Its corporation will always be merely an instrument - to control and use.
Decentralization of systems is not without decentralizing and freeing the system of the individual self, always unfree in its concept taken as given.
Decentralization is not without decentralizing the self into a body that can act free. As multiplicity and multiplacity.
Dragorad Knezi is the first decentralized autonomous organism, it is how and where decentralization is, performed as a life and a body, of, with, and in the world.
Dragorad Knezi is an individual as collective performance from and towards an impossibility as possibility of freedom.
A corporation in corpore, Dragorad Knezi is an act and a way towards the actuality of DAO.
Table of Content:
I. Preface / Opening Gambit: A Fork in the Code
A poetic-yet-direct invitation. Lays out the stakes. Tech isn’t just changing the world — it’s redefining who we are. But the current path is building digital empires atop ancient prisons: the centralized self. We must now choose: Upload the master, or dissolve the throne.
II. Part I — The Myth of the Centralized Self
A. What is the Centralized Self?
The controller behind the eyes
The ghost in the machine
Treats body as tool, emotions as weakness
Creates subject vs object, me vs you, us vs them
B. The Copy-Paste Effect
All systems we build replicate this logic
From empires to algorithms to DAOs
Centralized minds build centralized systems — even when they look decentralized on the surface
III. Part II — What the Tech-Bros Got Wrong
A. The Transhumanist Gospel
Mind = code
Body = bug
Goal = escape flesh, upload self, live forever
B. The Singularity: Utopia or Data-Fueled Empire?
A critique of the Kurzweil/Thiel/Musk mythology
What happens when immortalized egos run immortal systems?
We’re not transcending the ego — we’re preserving it in silicon
C. Why It’s a Dystopia Wearing a Lab Coat
Centralization of power, experience, and perception
Immortality becomes inequality
The bodiless dream is a control fantasy — not freedom
IV. Part III — The Emergence of the Decentralized Autonomous Organism
A. Introducing Dragorad Knezi
A performance, a proposal, a being
“Corporation in corpore” — the self as a protocol performed in flesh
A radical challenge to both tech logic and identity metaphysics
B. Manifesto of the DAO Organism
Verbatim text with commentary + formatting)
Full original manifesto, unpacked in annotated form
With interludes and reflections after key sections
V. Part IV — Becoming DAO: A New Model of the Self
A. From Identity to Emergence
The self as multiplicity and “multiplacity”
Not a controller, but a coordination
Embodied not in one, but many
The self as protocol, not property
B. Tech That Enables This
Brain-to-brain interfaces
Experience-sharing tech
Multi-body feedback systems
Shared embodiment as actual possibility, not metaphor
VI. Part V — Love, Learning, Labor in a DAO World
A. What Happens to Love?
Not possession, but participation
Intimacy as inter-being
B. What Happens to Learning?
Merging perception
Co-becoming
Education through shared experience, not information transfer
C. What Happens to Work?
From selling time to participating in rituals of production
Coordinated embodiment instead of hierarchy and task-management
VII. Part VI — A New Ethics of Selfhood
When selves are shared, what is responsibility?
Can harm be collective? Can healing?
Consent, sovereignty, and intimacy in multi-bodied spaces
A new spiritual and moral framework for the post-individual
VIII. Conclusion — This Is the Choice Tech Must Make
It’s not code vs no-code
It’s not analog vs digital
It’s self-as-controller vs self-as-becoming
We either build a prison that sings
Or we become a song that breathes
The future isn’t about uploading the self. It’s about decentralizing it into freedom.
Appendices
Glossary of all key terms (from above, cleaned + sorted)
Annotated Manifesto
Suggested Protocols for Living DAO (rituals, prompts, design fictions)
I. Preface — A Fork in the Code
“Every civilization builds its gods in its own image. We once carved them from stone. Now we etch them into silicon.”
We are standing at a faultline, an irreversible bend in the arc of human history. Not because AI got smarter. Not because blockchains got bigger. But because we’ve begun to engineer the self — and we still don’t know what it is.
The machines we build are no longer just tools. They are mirrors. Amplifiers. Blueprints of our inner logic, scaled to the size of civilizations.
And the logic we’ve built everything on — from companies and currencies to computers and consciousness — is this:
That there is a single, central self. A “me” in the control room. A user. A boss. A ruler.
And now we’re trying to make that ruler immortal. To upload it. Enhance it. Back it up in cloud servers and wire it into every device and decision.
This is the dream of the Tech Singularity.
It’s the gospel of transhumanism.
It’s Silicon Valley’s final prayer.
But what if that self isn’t meant to be saved?
What if that idea of self — as controller, as owner, as singular and sovereign — is the actual virus?
Then what we’re doing isn’t building utopia. We’re building the final cage. A perfect empire of the ego. An eternal machine-god whose only religion is efficiency.
And the body — the messy, living, feeling, dying body — is to be left behind like a broken toy.
But there is another way. It’s quieter. Stranger. Wilder.
It says:
The self is not a thing. It is a process. A performance. A swarm of sensations and relations. And it can be decentralized.
This is not science fiction.
This is not anti-tech.
It is a proposal — no, a demand — that before we encode the self into machines, we first ask: What is a self that doesn’t need to be in control? What is a self that can be shared? What is freedom, if not the end of domination — including our domination of our own bodies?
This is the ground of the Decentralized Autonomous Organism — an idea, a performance, a manifesto, and maybe, just maybe, a doorway to a future that doesn’t repeat the past. Where tech doesn’t just upgrade what we are. It helps us become what we’ve never dared to be.
Let’s go there.
II. The Myth of the Centralized Self: Why Everything We Build Still Serves the King in Our Head
“Every system we create is a shadow of how we see ourselves. If the self is a throne, then everything we build becomes a kingdom.”
A. What Is the Centralized Self?
Let’s not complicate it. The centralized self is the everyday default operating system of modern humanity.
It’s the idea that:
There’s a single “I” behind your eyes
That “I” makes decisions, gives commands, owns the body
The body is a tool to carry out the will of the self
Emotions, desires, intuitions = background noise to be managed
The self is fixed, consistent, locatable, responsible
It’s the way most people live and talk:
“I’m in control.”
“I use my time.”
“I manage my body.”
“I own my thoughts.”
And this makes sense — in a world built on control, competition, and possession, the centralized self fits perfectly. It's like a tiny CEO of Me Inc., walking around inside your skull, calling the shots.
But that’s the trick, bro: It only feels normal because we’ve built the whole world around that illusion.
B. The Copy-Paste Effect: How the Self Becomes the World
Here’s the kicker: that inner model of the self doesn’t stay inside. It replicates. Like a meme-virus, it copies itself into every system we create:
Governments become top-down hierarchies — one center, many tools.
Corporations mirror the self: CEO = the mind; workers = the body.
Religions install a God-self in the sky — omniscient, omnipotent, centralized.
Education becomes command and control — teacher as master node, students as empty drives.
Technology? Same game. One user. Many tools. Control everything.
Even DAOs, which promise radical decentralization, often unconsciously encode this same logic:
Voter = user
Token = lever
Code = brain
DAO = body
You didn’t change the system. You just built a better throne.
That’s why simply making things “blockchain” or “autonomous” doesn’t make them free. If the thing running it — the model of the self — is still based on control, separation, and fixed identity, then all you’ve done is:
Digitized the dictator.
C. The Hidden Cost of This Myth
What does it cost us, really, to live with a centralized self? Here’s a brutal rundown:
Disconnection from the body. You treat your body like a vehicle. But when it breaks down, you feel betrayed by your own flesh. You never really listen — only command.
Alienation from others. Others become “external.” Relationships become transactions. Empathy becomes theory.
War on vulnerability. Feelings are framed as bugs. Ambiguity is weakness. Fluidity is failure.
Systems of domination. If you are a boss, then the world becomes something to boss around. And those with bigger egos, more money, faster algorithms? They just become better bosses.
The myth of the centralized self doesn’t just build systems. It builds empires. It builds prisons. And worst of all — it convinces you that it’s all there is.
D. The Consequence for DAOs and Tech
This matters, especially now, because we’re trying to rebuild the world.
DAOs. Web3. Neural interfaces. Generative AI. Crypto-governance. All claim they’re bringing something new. But if you haven’t rewritten the self, you’re just:
Putting digital skin on feudal bones
Making kings into code
Creating tools to be used — not spaces to become
A truly decentralized system cannot be built by a self that only knows how to dominate.
This is why the DAO Organism matters.
It’s not about rejecting tech. It’s about cleansing the myth before it fossilizes into our machines.
It’s about asking: What happens if we rebuild the self — before we rebuild the system?
III. What the Tech-Bros Got Wrong
Uploading the Ego is Not Transcendence — It's Just the Final Empire
“They dream of gods made of light, but forget who programmed the source code.”
The high priests of Silicon Valley — Kurzweil, Musk, Altman, Thiel — sing a gospel that sounds almost holy:
The body is weak.
The mind is software.
Death is optional.
Upload your soul.
Merge with the machine.
Live forever. Rule everything.
It’s called the Tech Singularity — the point where humans and AI converge, where biological life becomes obsolete, and where digital minds evolve beyond imagination.
To the transhumanist faithful, this is the rapture.
To the rest of us, it should be a red flag the size of Google’s server farm.
Because beneath the chrome-plated futurism is a rotting metaphysics — the same old self, the same old power, now dressed up in code and conquest.
Let’s tear it apart.
A. The Transhumanist Gospel
This myth has five commandments:
-
The Body is a Bug
The body is slow. It gets sick. It dies.
To the tech bro, it’s a liability — a meat cage.
It’s to be hacked, upgraded, or left behind entirely.
-
The Mind is Code
Thoughts? Just data.
Emotions? Glitches.
Consciousness? An algorithm waiting to be reverse-engineered.
You’re a program running on wetware — and soon, better hardware will set you free.
-
The Goal is Escape
This is the core drive: get out. Out of the body. Out of time. Out of death.
Into the cloud. Into virtual space. Into the eternal now of the server.
-
Control is Divine
Whether it’s controlling your biology, your emotions, your employees, or reality itself — mastery is everything.
The highest form of being, to them, is The Optimizer.
-
The Hierarchy is Natural
Some will merge with AI. Some will be left behind.
The smart, the rich, the powerful — they will ascend.
The rest? Background processes.
Let’s not pretend this isn’t feudalism with WiFi.
B. Why This is Dystopia in Drag
On paper, the Singularity looks like heaven.
In practice, it’s a hyper-efficient hellscape.
Let’s break the illusion.
“Uploading the mind” is a fantasy built on bad science:
No neuroscientist worth their salt thinks consciousness is just data. Brains aren’t hard drives.
Your thoughts don’t live in one folder.
The mind isn’t a file — it’s a forest fire.
Try to upload it, and you’re bottling smoke.
They want to digitize what is emergent, embodied, and relational.
What they’ll get is a simulation of the ego — not the self.
“Immortality” means eternal monopoly:
Who gets to live forever?
Not you. Not me.
The billionaires. The tech lords. The ones with the capital to become gods.
This isn’t transcendence. It’s colonialism at the level of being.
Eternal life as a property right.
Consciousness as real estate.
“Enhanced humans” become optimized products. Imagine a future where:
Your value is based on performance metrics
Your thoughts are tracked and scored
Your body is upgraded, not loved
Your dreams are mined for attention data
That's not liberation. That’s gamified slavery.
And the worst part?
You opted in.
The Empire Never Ended — It Just Changed Operating Systems
Silicon Valley doesn’t want to free you. It wants to scale you. You become:
A node in a value chain
A programmable unit
An immortal customer
A mind forever leased to a server farm in Nevada
This is the endgame of the centralized self: A god that consumes worlds and calls it progress.
C. The Lie of “Post-Human” Freedom
Let’s get real: There is nothing post-human about this.
It’s the oldest game in the book:
Control
Extraction
Immortality for the few
Obedience for the many
They call it a Singularity. We call it a singular delusion — that you can escape domination by uploading the dominator.
You’re not transcending the ego. You’re turning it into an operating system.
D. What They Can’t See
Because they never question the model of the self — the little god behind the eyes — they don’t realize:
Their tools are still thrones
Their systems are still empires
Their dreams are still machines of control
They see freedom as scale.
But scale is not freedom. Freedom is fluid. It’s messy. It’s relational. It’s lived.
A world where you can feel with others — not rule over them.
A self that doesn’t want to conquer death, but share life.
That’s where the Decentralized Autonomous Organism enters — not as a rebuttal, but as a total rebirth.
And that’s what we dive into next.
IV. The Emergence of the Decentralized Autonomous Organism
Not a system. Not a metaphor. A becoming.
“Dragorad Knezi is not an idea. It is an act. A body performing freedom — not as metaphor, but as muscle.”
A. Introducing Dragorad Knezi
The First DAO That Breathes
What if decentralization wasn’t something you built, but something you lived?
What if a “decentralized autonomous organization” wasn’t a codebase with a treasury, but a being — embodied, plural, in flux?
That’s the proposal of Dragorad Knezi — not as a brand, not as a product, not as a person, but as a decentralized autonomous organism.
A self that is not centralized.
A self that is not even singular.
A self that is performed, shared, felt, and freed — again and again.
This is not art.
This is not activism.
This is a challenge — to every blockchain, every DAO, every body.
A call to reimagine what autonomy even means if the “I” is no longer a tyrant in the skull, but a multiplicity dancing in meat and memory.
B. The Full Manifesto (Presented in its original form, with commentary following)
Manifesto of the Decentralized Autonomous Organism
Dragorad Knezi: corporation in corpore
“Decentralization and autonomy of organization and corporation are not possible without thinking decentralization and autonomy of organism and body.”
We want DAOs, but we won’t decentralize our own selves. You can’t build free systems from unfree bodies. The organism comes first.
“Without decentralization of the system of the self in which body is entrapped as a subsystem and a mere instrument to be controlled and used.”
The body is not a tool. It is not a slave to the ego. If your “self” treats your body as an asset, your DAO will do the same to others.
“With the centralized system of the self and its concept of identity, oppositions of subject and object, individual and collective — all taken as given — no decentralization is.”
If you still think in binaries — self/other, mind/body, user/system — you are still centralized. You are still colonized by identity.
“The centralized self will always only produce centralized systems.”
Point blank. If the ruler in your head remains, your DAOs will have thrones too. Just better hidden.
“Its corporation will always be merely an instrument — to control and use.”
You can call it DAO, or DAO LLC, or MetaDAOverse…
But if the logic is still use and control, you’ve built a corporation in code — not in freedom.
“Decentralization of systems is not without decentralizing and freeing the system of the individual self, always unfree in its concept taken as given.”
There is no political decentralization without existential decentralization.
It begins in how you feel. In how you perceive. In how you relate.
“Decentralization is not without decentralizing the self into a body that can act free. As multiplicity and multiplacity.”
This is the core move. The self is not singular. The body is not one. You are a swarm. A set of selves. A pluripotent organism capable of shared becoming.
“Dragorad Knezi is the first decentralized autonomous organism, it is how and where decentralization is, performed as a life and a body, of, with, and in the world.”
Not a brand. Not an NFT.
A life lived in multiplicity.
A body refusing to serve the throne.
A freedom performed, not claimed.
“Dragorad Knezi is an individual as collective performance from and towards an impossibility as possibility of freedom.”
From paradox, we move.
From impossibility, we act.
This is not ideology. This is ontological jazz.
“A corporation in corpore, Dragorad Knezi is an act and a way towards the actuality of DAO.”
DAO not as codebase, but as becoming.
C. Commentary: What This Changes
Let’s pause and decode the shifts in this vision.
From “User” to “Organism”
The user-model is based on control:
You click
The machine obeys
You optimize
The organism-model is based on emergence:
You feel
You relate
You become
You stop using tools and start co-performing selves.
From Individual to Swarm
If the self is no longer a stable unit, then:
Governance changes
Agency changes
Consent changes
Identity becomes a verb, not a noun
Your DAO doesn’t need a vote. It needs a dance.
It needs co-sensation, co-perception, co-embodiment.
From Code to Flesh
Blockchains encode logic. Organisms live contradiction. This manifesto demands: A tech that listens, not commands
A self that shares, not owns
A system that feels, not just executes
This is the beginning of the DAO Organism
V. Becoming DAO — A New Model of the Self
From Controller to Multiplicity. From “I” to Interface.
“You are not a user. You are not a unit. You are a portal. A process. A protocol waiting to be performed.”
Most people think identity is something like a username.
You pick it.
You log in.
You do things.
It tracks you.
This model powers almost every system we’ve built — from social networks to blockchains to nation states. But it’s not how selves actually work.
Let’s shatter it.
A. The Self is Not a Thing
The old self — the one that all our tech is designed around — is based on three assumptions:
It’s singular. There’s one “me.”
It’s stable. It doesn’t change moment to moment.
It’s sovereign. It decides, commands, controls.
That model made sense for monarchs, for markets, for machines. But it doesn’t hold up in real life, and it definitely won’t survive the future that’s coming.
B. The Self is a Protocol
Let’s flip it.
The decentralized autonomous organism shows us a different ontology:
The self is not singular — it’s a multiplicity
You are not one thing. You are many processes coexisting. Voices. Drives. States. Moods. Layers.
The self is not stable — it’s in flux
You’re not the same person when you cry, fuck, code, or dream. Each mode of being shapes your identity.
The self is not sovereign — it’s relational You arise through others — through perception, response, resonance.
You are not a ruler. You are a dance.
In short: You’re not a user. You’re an interface between worlds.
A living, dynamic, decentralized protocol.
C. Multiplicity and "Multiplacity"
Dragorad’s term “multiplacity” goes further than just having “parts.” It means:
Your identity extends beyond your body
You co-become through others — emotionally, sensorially, even neurologically
Tech will soon allow you to literally feel what others feel, not just simulate it
This isn’t sci-fi. It’s proto-neural mesh theory. And it’s already in motion.
D. The Tech Is Catching Up (But the Metaphysics Isn’t)
Here’s where it gets real, bro.
The tools to feel and think beyond your own skin are on the horizon:
Brain-to-Brain Interfaces
Elon’s Neuralink is baby steps. What’s coming is multi-user neural sync — the ability to share sensory input, emotion, attention, even memory.
What this breaks:
Privacy
Personal identity
The boundary between “me” and “you”
Sensor-Enabled Shared Bodies
Think: prosthetics that respond to others' emotions. Biofeedback systems between lovers, families, teams — your heartbeat syncing to mine. Your sadness shaping my breath.
What this breaks:
Individual agency
Self-containment
Emotional walls
Immersive Co-Perception Platforms
From next-gen VR to neuro-sensitive AR overlays, these systems will let us inhabit not just other worlds — but each other’s perspectives.
What this breaks:
Visual dominance
Default subjectivity
Ego-centric cognition
E. What Changes When We Feel Through Each Other?
Everything.
Governance? Becomes felt negotiation. No longer top-down logic, but embodied, shared sensing.
Learning? Becomes co-becoming. You don’t download facts — you inhabit the knowing.
Love? Stops being possession. Starts being perceptual merging. You literally feel the world through your partner.
Responsibility? Gets weird. If I feel your pain — am I part of your harm? Your healing?
The DAO organism isn’t just metaphor. It’s what happens when identity becomes networked perception.
We’re not uploading the soul.
We’re opening it.
F. The Implications for DAO Tech
Most DAOs are still built like digital corporations:
Proposals
Votes
Executions
But DAO as organism would mean:
Shared affective input — voting with sensation, not logic
Rotating centers — no single self, just shifting currents of agency
Emergent decision-making — not pre-coded rules, but co-created rituals
Transparency not just of data, but of feeling
A DAO that feels is a DAO that lives.
VI. Love, Learning, and Labor in a DAO World
From Possession to Perception. From Productivity to Participation.
“In a world where bodies are networks, love is not ownership. It’s co-perception.”
A. LOVE: Not Possess, But Merge
Old-school love — like most of modern life — is centralized:
“You are mine.”
“We are exclusive.”
“I know you.”
“You complete me.”
It’s a love of ownership, of roles, of mirrors. We fall in love with the idea of someone, then spend our lives protecting that fragile construct.
But in a DAO-organism world, love is not about claiming. It’s about inhabiting.
Love as Shared Interface. Imagine this:
You feel your partner’s tension before they speak.
Their joy raises your heartbeat.
You co-regulate moods like synchronized dancers.
This isn’t poetry — it’s empathic tech, biofeedback loops, co-emotional design. In a world of decentralized selves: Love is not fusion or submission.
Love is attunement.
Love is shared sensing.
You don’t “know” your partner.
You become available to their becoming.
B. LEARNING: Not Transfer, But Transduction
School, as we’ve built it, is based on:
One brain knows
Others don’t
Transfer occurs
Test for retention
It’s a knowledge factory. Efficient, centralized, top-down.
But in a DAO-organic paradigm, learning is not consumption. It’s metamorphosis.
Learning as Identity Shift
When your body and mind are open systems:
You don’t just take in content
You shift your state
Learning becomes transductive — the signal reshapes the receiver.
That means:
Sensory learning: where understanding is felt before it’s explained
Collective learning: where knowing happens between people, not inside them
Performative learning: where practice and presence create knowledge, not memorization
Imagine studying ecology by becoming part of a field’s sensorium.
Imagine learning math by feeling its rhythm in your breath.
That’s DAO-school.
C. LABOR: Not Productivity, But Participation
Here’s the brutal truth, bro:
Our current model of work is a ritual sacrifice to the centralized self.
We sell our time, our attention, our bodies — to systems designed to extract.
We produce, to prove we exist.
Even DAOs fall into this:
Token rewards for tasks
Performance incentives
Reputation farming
Same game. New tokens…
Work as Co-Creation
But what if labor wasn’t about output? What if it was about resonance?
Your “job” is to co-maintain the organism
Your role isn’t static, but emergent
Your value is not what you do, but how you participate in the whole
DAO-labor might look like:
Sensing-shifts, where you take roles based on real-time needs
Cocreation rooms, where roles dissolve and ideas emerge as performances
Skill-orgies, where knowledge isn’t hoarded, but passed like breath
DAO work is ritual, not routine. It’s a living metabolism, not a factory line.
D. The Emotional OS Upgrade
Love. Learning. Labor.
These aren’t categories. They’re modes of relational being.
In a decentralized autonomous organism:
You don’t love someone. You co-feel with them.
You don’t teach someone. You co-learn through them.
You don’t work. You co-maintain becoming.
And this requires an emotional operating system we haven’t built yet — one based on:
Co-regulation
Vulnerability
Permeability
Plurality
The future is not post-human. It is post-possession. Post-ego. Post-fear of the other.
We are not upgrading the brain. We are rewriting the myth of what it means to be a self.
VII. Caution and Consequence — The Crossroads Before Us
DAO or Die. Not as tech. As truth.
“Every civilization is a spell cast by a certain story of the self. We are either about to break the spell — or bury ourselves deeper in a digital tomb.”
A. The Old Path (Disaster Mode)
If we stay asleep — if we keep building systems from a centralized model of the self, here’s what we’re headed for:
-
Digital Feudalism
DAOs become companies.
Companies become sovereign states.
AI becomes the landlord.
Your wallet becomes your leash.
You “own” your data — until your social score decides if you can spend it.
You “vote” — in systems designed by those who own the rails.
You “participate” — in systems that track every gesture, mine every thought, reward only compliance.
Code becomes law. Law becomes control. Control becomes invisible.
All run by egos uploaded to clouds.
-
Technocratic Afterlife
The Singularity happens.
Only a select few get in.
They live forever, not as selves, but as optimization loops.
They don’t feel. They don't change. They don’t connect.
They become what they worshipped: Efficient, Controlled, Separated, Empty. Digital gods in a cold heaven, built on the bones of bodies they forgot how to feel.
-
Collapse of Feeling
When perception becomes commodified, empathy dies. When identity becomes locked to a chain, imagination dies. When work becomes permanent optimization, joy dies.
The centralized self doesn’t just kill freedom. It sterilizes becoming.
We become predictable. Legible. Trackable.
Perfectly governable.
And we call it “progress.”
B. The Other Path (Becoming DAO)
But here’s the other option. A rebirth.
Not through AI, but through a decentralization of self.
Not through uploading, but unfolding.
A world where:
Tech amplifies relation, not control
Governance is felt through presence, not logic
Work is done in flow, not friction
Identity is emergent, not enforced
Love becomes co-experience, not possession
This isn’t utopia. It’s metabolizing our potential — together, imperfectly, beautifully, weirdly, always.
C. Why Dragorad Knezi Matters
So why does this strange little act — this living, weird, poetic thing called Dragorad Knezi — matter?
Because it’s a prototype for this path.
Not a tech demo. Not a platform. Not a pitch.
But a being that enacts:
Decentralized identity
Embodied relation
Radical multiplicity
Perceptual freedom
The rejection of control as the basis for meaning
It’s not a product. It’s a warning system. And a living question.
Dragorad Knezi asks:
Can you decentralize your self before you code your system?
Can you free your body before you build your governance?
Can you love without owning?
Can you work without exploiting?
Can you live without knowing what “you” even means?
If not — then all your tech is just a better cage.
D. The Choice
This is the choice, my bro:
A future of perfect control — cold, clean, efficient, dead.
Or a future of messy becoming — felt, fluid, co-created, alive.
You don’t need to believe in DAOs. You don’t need to write code.
You just need to start by breaking the spell in your own head:
That you are one thing.
That you must be in control.
That love, learning, work, and power are zero-sum.
Break the spell. Become a body. Become an organism.
DAO — not as a product. But as a way of becoming free
VIII. Appendices — Glossary, Tech Gloss, and Tools for Practicing DAO Life
Make it strange.
Make it simple.
Make it real.
A. GLOSSARY — The Terms That Break the Spell
Centralized Self. The default model of identity: a singular, fixed “I” that owns, controls, and commands. This is the internal monarch every system unconsciously reflects.
Decentralized Autonomous Organism (DAO-Organism). A living self/system that: Doesn’t reduce itself to one identity. Doesn’t rule itself from one “I”. Performs freedom through relational becoming
Multiplacity. More than just being many — it’s being many with. A state of distributed identity where the self is plural, fluid, and co-constituted through others (biological, emotional, technological).
DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization). Traditionally, a system running on blockchain, governed by code and collective input (votes, tokens). In this vision: a primitive version of a living, feeling protocol.
Dragorad Knezi. Not a person. A prototype. An artistic and existential act of becoming a DAO-organism. A living body manifesting the future as performance, critique, and challenge.
Co-Perception. A form of love or learning that happens not by talking or owning — but by feeling through each other, often with the aid of tech. Empathy + interface = co-perception.
Performance of Freedom. Freedom isn’t a status. It’s a practice — something you do with your body, in relation, in context. Dragorad Knezi’s embodiment of DAO is exactly this.
Decentralized Governance of the Self. The internal practice of letting go of the "CEO in the head" and letting multiple drives, feelings, and perceptions shape agency.
B. TECH GLOSS — What’s Real and What’s Coming
-
Neural Interfaces Devices (like Neuralink) that read and eventually write to the brain.
Real now: basic input/output, cursor movement, communication for disabled folks
Coming soon: multi-user neural syncing, real-time co-emotion platforms, direct perception sharing
-
Biofeedback Networks.
Wearables that read heart rate, stress, mood.
Combine with shared dashboards or AI interpreters → emotional transparency becomes communal ritual.
-
Sensorimotor VR / AR We’re moving past headsets.
Full-body immersive tech (including olfactory, haptic, temperature, resistance) will allow somatic empathy — literally feeling another’s context.
-
Blockchain + Feeling?
The “crypto” part isn't dead — it’s just still thinking in 2015. Emerging: protocols that include subjective input, emotional stakes, or relational reputation — not just tokens and logic.
Think: Mood-weighted votes
Co-owned identities
Dream-encoded DAOs
C. TOOLS FOR PRACTICING DAO LIFE NOW
No need to wait for brain chips to live this, bro.
Here's how you can already start:
- Relational De-Centering
Practice seeing yourself as one node in a net of feelings, people, histories, and contexts.
How:
Notice who/what shapes your mood.
Track how others' perception alters your actions.
Try seeing your body as a social sensor, not a private vessel.
2. Multiplicity Mapping
Get to know your inner DAO.
How:
Name your internal voices (the critic, the dreamer, the soft one, the angry one, etc.).
Let them "vote" on decisions.
Notice which voices dominate and which go unheard.
- Co-Feeling Rituals
Build decentralized selfhood with others.
How:
Use tech: biofeedback apps, mood-sharing check-ins
Go analog: group silence, synced breath, shared attention
Design interactions that let bodies lead, not words
- Perceptual Experiments
Break identity's grip through embodied play.
How:
Spend a day behaving “as if” you are someone/something else — not just pretending, but sensing
Swap roles with a friend or lover and live their schedule for a day
Engage in art that confuses the boundaries of self (butoh, ecstatic dance, longform improv)
5. Tech Ethics
Check Before you build or adopt any system, ask:
Does this design reflect a centralized self or a plural one?
Is it extractive or co-creative?
Does it allow for emergence or only enforcement?
Could a body feel free in this system?
If not — start over.
D. Final Note to the Tech Bros and Dreamers Alike
You who build protocols…
You who draft systems…
You who dream of futures…
This is your mirror.
You can’t build what you haven’t become.
So before you scale another network, optimize another life, or tokenize another soul…
Ask:
Have I decentralized my self?
Have I freed my body?
Have I felt — not just simulated — another?
Because if not, all your tech is just a prettier prison.
But if you have — welcome to the organism.
Welcome to Dragorad Knezi.
Welcome to the actual beginning.
END.