Apply by November 3rd to explore civilizational sanity with us! We’ll tackle questions like: How can we make the social structures around us more human-friendly? What plays into low-sanity structures? How can we protect ourselves from corrosive dynamics or mitigate their damage? The event takes place in Mittelhof, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, from December 12th to 15th, 2025.
Many of us have experiences with friendships, romantic partnerships, friend groups and communities that are mutually supportive, nourishing and empowering. At the same time, we also live with broken-up friendships or families, bad experiences in educational and professional contexts, and communities that split up or fell apart. On a macro level, most of humanity is embedded in private institutions, governing structures and international networks that often don’t adequately address human needs.
These observations are important to us because we care about social environments that support cooperation, truth-seeking and well-being. We want event participants to gain a clearer understanding of how dynamics leading to dysfunction show up in our lives and how to raise the civilisational sanity of the social structures we're part of.
We use the term civilisational sanity here to refer to human-friendly societal designs. That might include physical structures, shared narratives and values, norms, customs, laws and other mechanisms supporting cooperation and high-quality decision-making that enable human (and non-human) flourishing. A sane society is one in which humans are happy to partake. What exactly characterises sane structures is up for debate, but we’d like to suggest the following heuristics: [1]
Using these heuristics, we can analyse dynamics that support sanity. Some possible examples are a search for fair compromises and Pareto improvements, accountability mechanisms, establishing feedback loops, transmission of tacit knowledge, and increasing members’ option space. We can also examine corrosive dynamics that lead to intellectual or physical isolation, deteriorating epistemics and well-being. That can include groupthink, evaporative cooling, gatekeeping resources, cult of personality, controlling information flow, diffusion of responsibility, frame control and status games.
The three central themes that we’ll be exploring during the event are:
What will the activities look like?
This event focuses on pragmatic approaches. We will look at case studies that display how civilisational sanity as well as civilisational insanity are proliferating, and share our experiences in small group discussions. For example, we might discuss our successful (and less successful) attempts to increase sanity. We will experiment with elements like games and role play.
Who are we?
This is an independently run event, partially funded by Epistea. Team members work on this event in their personal capacity.
Yulia Ponomarenko is the main organiser of the event. A programmer by day and an anthropologist by night, she has previously worked as an instructor for youth camps on rationality and epistemics. She did research on community dynamics in the Bay and has since extended her work, among other things as an Epistea resident in 2023.
Jonte Hünerbein designed a social deduction game about group rationality failures. He is deeply interested in the ideological failures of the totalitarian mass movements of the 20th century and the manipulation tactics of religious and political cults. He investigates fringe ideological online groups for fun.
Ashe Vazquez has a background in math and plays Go competitively at the top European level. Their other work includes thinking about the culture and philosophy of mathematicians and Go players. They are interested in abstractly modelling real things, card games, and learning about deception.
Who are you?
You’ll be a good fit for this event if you have opinions about the social environments you are part of and want to impact them. You may have observed local examples of low civilisational sanity and have ideas about what differentiates these structures from others that are more sane. Ideally, you are looking to experiment with influencing your social surroundings for the better. You could be thinking about these problems in a professional capacity, for example as a sociologist, but you could also be engaging with them on a personal level. In fact, we are looking for people with diverse backgrounds, so we can exchange experiences relating to civilisational sanity from a wide range of perspectives.
While there will be plenty of time to rest and sleep, the event will still demand your full attention, so you shouldn’t expect to be able to work on other things for its duration.
We don't accept applicants under the age of 18.
When?
Arrival starting afternoon 12th December 2025, departure on 15th December 2025 in the morning
Where?
In an idyllic villa in Mittelhof, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. Depending on participants’ preferences, there’ll be a meeting point in either Cologne or Düsseldorf from which a shuttle leaves for the venue.
How many participants?
We expect to accept 10-12 participants.
What is the cost of the event?
There’s a participation fee of 100 euros per participant.
What do we cover?
We will provide vegan meals for the duration of the event and cover accommodation as well as a shuttle from a meeting point to the venue and back. We will not cover insurance or other travel expenses.
How to apply?
Fill out the application form by November 3rd, 2025. We may reach out to some applicants for a follow-up interview. Applications will be evaluated on a rolling basis.
If you have any questions or suggestions about the application, the venue or our weekend plans, reach out in the comments or at sanity.weekend.info@gmail.com
Caveats apply for all of our heuristics, e.g. peacefulness would be limited by self-defence