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Thanks, I'm not unfamiliar with constitutional law and I do remember the triade a population, a government, a territory.
There is no answer on my second question of how your community of cypherpunks would administer and resolve disputes among themselves on a territory (?).
u shud read the article; it is not about constitutions as corporations either, it's about the common law of the land, one may also call these "nations," which is the same as "nationstate" or "state" with a lower case "s;"
after that, read @DarthCoin's guide about natural law and educate urself instead of freaking out;
in the conditions where every cypherpunk is equipped with the knowledge of running his own nation, there shall be regular international relations;
I believe I have read Leo Strauss's Natural Law & History.
This doesn't answer how you would solve conflict if let's say you and @Darthcoin have a conflict because you have both different interpretation of the "natural law".
Here I bet you're going to fall back in the millenary old intractable conflict between natural and positive law...
Read a lot on the subject, not only Strauss's book.
Bruno Leoni's Freedom and the Law is a great one too.
https://www.gktoday.in/montevideo-convention-on-the-rights-and-duties-of-states/
"Article 1 of the Montevideo Convention laid down four widely recognised criteria for the existence of a state:
These criteria have since been regarded as the customary definition of statehood in international law, widely referenced in both legal discourse and political practice."
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