Lexon black on white. On paper.
There are a number of books out about Lexon for your wholesome offline reading pleasure that inspect different topics: Lexon in brief; in detail; the philosophy; the use case for fine art.
The Lexon Book
The Lexon Book has everything on Lexon to get started. 200 pages action-packed practical philosophy.
In non-technical terms, this book explains Digital Contracts: legally enforceable smart contracts that anyone can read. You do NOT need prior knowledge about blockchains or programming. Lexon also works without blockchains.
The book outlines the concept, gives examples, provides links to online tools that help to write, sign, deploy and manage digital contracts on the blockchain. Lexon’s grammar, vocabulary and document structure are illustrated. Its paradigm is explained, including how it differs from other programming languages, staying closer to human thought. Lexon’s relationship to Computational Law and AI is discussed and applications and benefits are detailed. The appendix lists notable prior steps towards human-readability by other programming languages.
Your perfect companion for take-off and landing.
200 pages. Non-technical, easy read.
Get it >Characteristica Universalis
In dialog with centuries of history, philosophy and logic, this book introduces a more useful approach to artificial intelligence that captures meaning and can execute a text like a program, to perform contracts, regulations, and law, in trustless or trusted settings.
It explains how this is safer, more result-oriented, fully aligned, precise, accessible, transparent, democratic, economic, and ecological; has a small footprint in terms of storage, processing power and energy consumption; is deeply rooted in the science of logic; and the urgent answer to the abuse of digitalization that degrades our political and civil societies. Its simplicity and divergence are described; the school of thought it comes from; the monadic and gestalt principles it is based on; its broad roster of use cases; its foreseeable economic and political impact; how it improves access to justice and the socio-economic status quo; what it contributes to general AI; how it differs from and is complementary to generative AI; and how it relates to logic, law, philosophy, and computer sciences. In particular, the contribution is defended as Leibniz’ illusive characteristica universalis and argues that the characteristica are specific categories.
Eureka moments.
150 pages. Philosophical, non-technical.
Get it >The Lexon BIBLE
The complete lore: everything the Lexon BOOK has, plus the language reference explaining the Lexon vocabulary, a tutorial, more examples, and some almost off-topic appendices on constructed natural languages.
A must-have for the connoisseur and history-conscious professional.
360 pages. Non-technical, easy read.
Get it >Lexon Art Chain
Art and Blockchain, it would be so nice. But the world of machines is just so anathema to the spirit of fine art – it’s difficult.
Lexon makes it easy. It is itself more art and craft than bits and bytes; at heart, linguistics, rather than software. It’s making machines understand us.
The whole idea behind this book is to imagine how much better the art business could work if contracts were on the one hand readable like normal English, and on the other hand ... unbreakable.
It sounds like magic. Like art, it is.
This book is focused on what really hurts artists and on what technology can really help with. The proposed solutions will be applied one day, one way or another. Just like everyone uses timepieces today. Even us artists.
This well-researched Lexon case study is a revelation for anyone interested in where the art market will be going.
Exquisite food for thought.
250 pages. Non-technical, easy read.
Get it >