Question
How do I practice authority audit?
Quick Answer
Take a single decision domain — health, career, finances, politics, or parenting. List every source that has shaped your current beliefs in that domain: specific people, publications, platforms, institutions, algorithms, and AI tools. For each, answer three questions: (1) Why do I trust this.
The most direct way to practice authority audit is through a focused exercise: Take a single decision domain — health, career, finances, politics, or parenting. List every source that has shaped your current beliefs in that domain: specific people, publications, platforms, institutions, algorithms, and AI tools. For each, answer three questions: (1) Why do I trust this source? (2) What is the scope of their actual expertise? (3) When did I last verify their claims against independent evidence? Notice which sources you trust by default versus which you trust by deliberation.
Common pitfall: Treating the audit as a purge — deciding you should trust nobody and think everything through from first principles. That's not sovereignty, it's epistemic isolation. The purpose of the audit is not to eliminate authority but to make your delegations conscious and proportionate. Another failure mode is doing the audit once and filing it away. Authority delegations drift constantly as your media diet shifts, new voices enter your feed, and old trusted sources change their positions without you noticing.
This practice connects to Phase 31 (Self-Authority) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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