Beyond Completeness: Designing DAO Governance for Ambiguity, Dissent, and Memory
Andrea Cesaretti ()
Chapter 7 in DAO Governance in Theory and Practice, 2025, pp 155-178 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract This chapter builds on Gödel’s incompleteness insights to argue that resilient decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) governanceDAO governancedelegation systems must embrace, rather than suppress, ambiguityAmbiguityinstitutional memory, dissent, and memory. Against the persistent fantasy of “complete governance,” the belief that every scenario can be encoded in advance, it shows why no protocol can fully resolve contextual, ethical, or narrative dilemmas. Instead, DAOs should be designed as open systems that accommodate uncertainty and pluralism. The chapter reframes forks, dissent, and contested interpretations not as failures but as generative dynamics. Drawing on quantum metaphors and institutional theory, it introduces the idea of governance without finality: decisions are provisional, continuously reinterpreted, and sustained through collective memory rather than immutability. Case studies and design templates illustrate how DAOs can integrate layered governance stacks, fork-ready protocols, and roles such as stewards, curators, and narrative facilitators to maintain coherence without closure. Ultimately, the chapter contends that incompleteness is a strength: ambiguityAmbiguityinstitutional memory fosters adaptabilityAdaptabilitygovernance flexibility, dissent signals institutional learning, and memory provides continuity across change. By designing with incompleteness in mind, DAOs evolve from brittle decision machines into living systems of collective sense-making, better equipped to navigate complexity and uncertainty over time.
Date: 2025
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-032-09675-3_7
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-032-09675-3_7
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