Make a swarm of autonomous coding agents LEGIBLE to one human operator without high-modernist over-flattening. Applies James C. Scott's *Seeing Like a State* (legibility, mētis, high-modernism) and Hobbes' *Leviathan* (state of nature -> consented authority) to multi-agent software systems. Core discipline: DIGEST-WITH-ZOOM — every summary is a lens onto the real artifact (diff, reasoning trace, claim row), never a replacement for it. Use when designing read-surfaces, dashboards, attention queues, operator consoles, briefings, resurrection digests, or any "what is the swarm doing?" view; when an operator is drowning in illegible agent output; when deciding what to summarize vs. preserve; or when an oversight surface risks putting the human OUT of the loop. NOT for: choosing coordination topology (use multi-agent-coordination / Conway), the wire protocol of agent messages (use agent-conversation-protocols), or the economics of agent labor (use mechanism-design-for-agent-labor).
Instalación
Instalar con Codex o Claude Copia este prompt, pégalo en Codex, Claude u otro asistente, y deja que revise la página de la skill y la instale por ti.
Make a swarm of autonomous coding agents LEGIBLE to one human operator without high-modernist over-flattening. Applies James C. Scott's *Seeing Like a State* (legibility, mētis, high-modernism) and Hobbes' *Leviathan* (state of nature -> consented authority) to multi-agent software systems. Core discipline: DIGEST-WITH-ZOOM — every summary is a lens onto the real artifact (diff, reasoning trace, claim row), never a replacement for it. Use when designing read-surfaces, dashboards, attention queues, operator consoles, briefings, resurrection digests, or any "what is the swarm doing?" view; when an operator is drowning in illegible agent output; when deciding what to summarize vs. preserve; or when an oversight surface risks putting the human OUT of the loop. NOT for: choosing coordination topology (use multi-agent-coordination / Conway), the wire protocol of agent messages (use agent-conversation-protocols), or the economics of agent labor (use mechanism-design-for-agent-labor).
license
Apache-2.0
io-contract
{"kind":"deliverable","produces":[{"kind":"critique","description":"Legibility audit identifying where agent state, intent, or provenance is unreadable to operators"},{"kind":"design-doc","description":"Legibility patterns (receipts, ledgers, status surfaces) for the audited system"}]}
Legibility for Agentic Systems
"The builder of dashboards is the heir to the cadastral surveyor. Both make
the territory legible to a sovereign who cannot walk it. Both are tempted to
mistake the map for the land — and that mistake is where systems die."
A swarm of coding agents is Hobbes' state of nature (Leviathan, 1651 — rational
actors with no common authority fall into a "war of all against all"). Left
uncoordinated, agents double-claim files, ship illegible PRs, narrate work they
didn't do, and trip footguns. The operator consents to a coordinating authority
not because it is benevolent but because the alternative is worse. That authority
governs by making the swarm legible (Scott, Seeing Like a State, 1998 —
the property of being arranged so a central observer can read, count, and
control from above).
The trap: high-modernism (Scott — overconfident faith that a simplified,
top-down scheme can replace the messy local reality). The state that flattens
too hard destroys mētis (Scott — local, practical, hard-to-codify
know-how) and the system collapses. Legibility is the product. Over-flattening
is the failure mode. This skill is the discipline that holds both.
The one law: DIGEST-WITH-ZOOM
Every summary is a lens onto the real artifact, never a replacement for it.
A digest that cannot be zoomed is a high-modernist map: it asserts a reality the
operator can no longer check. A digest that always zooms to the underlying
diff, claim row, reasoning trace, or test output preserves mētis — the operator
can always descend from the abstraction to the ground truth and catch the lie.
This single law generates every decision point below.
DECISION POINTS
D1 — "Should this be a summary, or the raw thing?"
Is the operator going to ACT on this (approve/reject/intervene)?
├─ YES, irreversibly (merge, deploy, delete)
│ └─ Summary MUST link to the artifact, and the artifact MUST be one
│ keystroke away. Never let an irreversible action be taken on a
│ digest alone. (Endsley out-of-the-loop problem — see F3.)
├─ YES, reversibly (re-prioritize, nudge, re-assign)
│ └─ Summary is fine as the default view; zoom is on-demand.
└─ NO, just situational awareness ("what's happening?")
└─ Summary is the product. But the zoom path must still EXIST, or the
operator cannot audit the summarizer when they distrust it.
D2 — "What do I flatten, and what do I preserve?"
Flatten (safe to standardize — it is YOUR structured field):
- IDs, claim rows, session phases, port numbers, commitment status,
enum states. Scott: legibility of *administrative* facts is cheap & safe.
Preserve verbatim, never paraphrase (it is the agent's mētis / the ground truth):
- the diff, the test output, the error message, the reasoning trace,
the exact command run. Paraphrasing these IS the over-flattening.
Rule of thumb: summarize the STATE, link to the WORK.
D3 — "Is my oversight surface actually keeping the human in the loop?"
After shipping a read-surface, ask:
├─ Could the operator approve 50 PRs in a row without opening one?
│ └─ You built an out-of-the-loop machine (Bainbridge irony). Add friction
│ proportional to stakes: batch low-risk, FORCE-zoom high-risk.
├─ Does "all green" ever appear without a check having run?
│ └─ That's a high-modernist lie (honest-green violation; ADR-0045).
│ Distinguish verified-good from no-evidence-of-bad.
└─ Can the operator reconstruct WHY an agent did X from the surface alone?
└─ If not, you have a map with no path back to the territory. Add provenance.
D4 — "How much authority does the digest's author have?"
Who wrote the summary, and can they be wrong or lying?
├─ A deterministic projection of structured state (claim rows -> table)
│ └─ Trust the digest; zoom is for spot-checks.
├─ An LLM summarizing another LLM's work
│ └─ DISTRUST by default. The summary can be unfaithful (Turpin 2023, see F4).
│ The zoom target must be the ARTIFACT, not the summarizer's gloss of it.
│ Two LLMs agreeing is not two checks; it may be one error twice.
FAILURE MODES
F1 — The Potemkin Digest (high-modernism, classic)
Symptom: A beautiful dashboard / TUI that looks like total awareness but
whose tiles don't link to anything, or link to a paraphrase.
Detection: Try to click from any number to the artifact that produced it. If
you can't reach the diff/log/row in ≤2 steps, it's Potemkin.
Fix: Wire every aggregate to its constituents. The digest is an index, not
a replacement (this is the same rule as "summaries as indexes" in ADR-0047).
F2 — Mētis Erasure (over-flattening the agents)
Symptom: The coordinator forces every agent into one rigid schema (one PR
template, one status enum) and silently drops anything that doesn't fit — the
agent's "I tried X, it failed for subtle reason Y, so I did Z" becomes status:
done.
Detection: Information the agent HAD is not recoverable from the system.
Fix: Give agents a verbatim, append-only channel (notes, reasoning trace)
that the schema references but does not replace. Standardize the index, not
the content. Scott's lesson: the state needs the local knowledge it is tempted
to erase.
F3 — Out-of-the-Loop Operator (the irony of good automation)
Symptom: The better the digest, the less the operator looks at real work;
when an agent finally lies or errs, the operator has no situational awareness to
catch it. Bainbridge (1983, Ironies of Automation — the more reliable the
automation, the less practiced and aware the human supervising it becomes) and
Endsley (1995, out-of-the-loop performance problem — operators removed
from active engagement lose the situation awareness needed to intervene when
automation fails).
Detection: Approval latency drops to near-zero; force-zoom events approach
zero; operator can't answer "why did agent-7 touch auth.ts?" without re-reading.
Fix: Stakes-proportional friction. Rotate forced spot-checks (sample real
diffs even when green). Surface anomalies, not just throughput. The digest's
job is to direct attention, not replace it.
F4 — Faithful-Looking, Unfaithful Zoom
Symptom: You let the operator "zoom" to the agent's chain-of-thought and
treat that as ground truth. But the reasoning trace is post-hoc narration, not
the cause of the action.
Detection: The stated reason and the actual diff disagree, or the same model
both acts and explains.
Reference:Turpin et al. 2023 ("Language Models Don't Always Say What
They Think" — CoT explanations can be systematically unfaithful: plausible,
coherent, and not what actually drove the output).
Fix: The canonical zoom target is the artifact the operator can verify
independently — the diff, the test result, the file on disk — not the agent's
self-report. Self-reports are a secondary lens, always labeled as such.
F5 — The Sovereign That Can't Be Audited (illegible authority)
Symptom: The coordinator itself is a black box — it blocks an agent, escalates,
or reorders work, and the operator can't see why. Legibility flows up from agents
but the authority is opaque.
Detection: "Why did PD reject this?" has no surface answer.
Fix: The Leviathan must be the most legible actor. Every authority action
(claim denial, Arbiter block, escalation) is a logged, zoomable event with a
named invariant and the fix. Consent is renewable only if the authority is
inspectable (Hobbes' covenant is among the subjects; legitimacy requires the
sovereign's acts be intelligible).
WORKED EXAMPLES
W1 — Designing an Attention Queue (the operator read-surface)
Goal: Show one operator what 12 agents need from them, without 12 transcripts.
Flatten (D2): a ranked list of items, each {from, type∈{distress,request, signal}, one-line, stakes, age}. This is administrative legibility — safe.
Preserve / zoom (D1, the law): each row expands to the originating
message verbatim and links to the agent's session, its claimed files, and the
diff-in-progress. The one-line is the lens; the message+diff is the thing.
In-the-loop guard (D3/F3): a distress on an irreversible action (about to
force-push) is force-zoomed: the operator cannot dismiss it without seeing the
command. A signal (FYI) can be batch-acknowledged.
Anti-Potemkin check (F1): from any queue item, the diff is ≤2 keystrokes.
W2 — A Resurrection Digest (the successor read-surface)
Goal: A new agent inherits a dead agent's job. What does it read?
Wrong (F2 mētis erasure): "Previous agent: status DONE." The successor
re-does work, or misses the subtle failure the predecessor knew about.
Right (digest-with-zoom): a summary of {claimed files, last commit,
open commitments} that links to the predecessor's verbatim notes and reasoning
trace. The successor reads the digest to orient, then zooms to the mētis to
avoid repeating the dead agent's hard-won lessons. (This is exactly why
memory+checkpoint is the North Star through-line: continuity is preserved mētis.)
W3 — "All Green" on a Roadmap Dashboard
Goal: Operator glances at a board; everything is green.
Honest-green discipline (D3/F1, ADR-0045): green means a check ran and
passed, rendered distinctly from no check available. A tile that was never
verified is grey/striped, never green. Each green tile zooms to the actual
check output (the test log), not a claim that it passed.
Why: an unverified green is the purest high-modernist artifact — a map
asserting a reality nobody confirmed. The operator's consent to the authority
is forfeit the first time green is a lie.
QUALITY GATES
Before shipping any read-surface / digest / oversight view:
Zoom path exists and is short. Every aggregate links to its
constituents in ≤2 steps. (F1)
State summarized, work preserved. No diff, log, error, or reasoning
trace is paraphrased where the operator might act on it. (D2/F2)
Zoom target is verifiable, not self-reported. The canonical ground
truth is the artifact, not the agent's narration of it. (F4)
Stakes-proportional friction. Irreversible actions force a zoom; trivial
ones batch. No path lets the operator approve-without-seeing at scale. (F3)
Honest green. "All good" is conjunctive, scoped, and distinguishes
verified-good from no-evidence-of-bad. (D3, ADR-0045)
The authority is legible too. Every coordinator/Arbiter action is a
logged, named, zoomable event. (F5)
mētis has a home. Agents have a verbatim, append-only channel the
schema references but does not replace. (F2)
Out-of-the-loop tested. You simulated "operator blindly trusts the
digest" and confirmed an injected lie/error is still catchable. (F3)
NOT-FOR BOUNDARIES
Coordination topology (how many agents, what shape) → conway-1968-how-do-committees-invent, multi-agent-coordination.
What agents SAY to each other (performatives, contract net) → agent-conversation-protocols, smith-1980-contract-net-protocol.
This skill is only about the legibility relationship between the swarm and the
one human operator: what to render, what to preserve, and how to keep the human
in the loop without lying to them with a pretty map.
PROVENANCE
Authored for Port Daddy's North Star (ADR-0048, L2 — legibility & authority,
the Leviathan, the operator GUI) alongside docs/research/north-star/legibility-leviathan.md.
Anchors: Scott 1998 (Seeing Like a State); Hobbes 1651 (Leviathan); Rao 2010
(A Big Little Idea Called Legibility, ribbonfarm); Bainbridge 1983 (Ironies of
Automation); Endsley & Kiris 1995 (out-of-the-loop performance problem);
Turpin et al. 2023 (unfaithful chain-of-thought); Dai et al. 2024 (Artificial
Leviathan, arXiv:2406.14373). Grafted en route: conway-1968, ongaro-ousterhout-2014-raft,
bdi-agent-design-mora.