The developer and co-founder of Ethereum, Vitalik Buterin has sparked a new conversation in the crypto community with him urging developers to prioritize a “good social philosophy” in Ethereum’s application layer instead of focusing on infrastructure.
In a recent post on Warpcast, Buterin argued that the future of Ethereum hinges not on its infrastructure but on the values provided by all the decentralized applications (dApps) built on top of it.
Buterin’s comments come at a pivotal moment for Ethereum, which has been grappling with stagnating activity and growing competition from rival blockchain networks. While Ethereum has long been a leader in the decentralized finance (DeFi) and smart contract space, critics have pointed out that the network is losing its position against newcomers like Solana and Avalanche.
Buterin, however, believes the solution to keep Ethereum atop lies in the app layer, where developers create dApps and the guiding principles behind them.
“Ethereum L1 is not quite in that position: someone who doesn’t believe in decentralization would not add light clients, or FOCIL, or (good forms of) account abstraction; someone who doesn’t mind energy waste would not spend half a decade moving to PoS.. But the EVM opcodes might have been roughly the same either way. So Ethereum is perhaps 50% general-purpose,” Buterin said.
He notes that apps are 80% special purpose, adding “What apps you build depends heavily on what ideas you have of what Ethereum apps, and Ethereum as a whole, are there to do for the world.”
According to him, a strong social philosophy is crucial for Ethereum so it fulfills its mission of creating meaningful value for society. Buterin also highlighted examples of such apps he considers aligned with Ethereum’s ethos, which are Railgun – a privacy-focused protocol – and Polymarket, a decentralized prediction market platform.
In examples of “bad social philosophy”, he criticized apps like Pumpdotfun – which he associated with zero-sum gambling – and the now-defunct FTX exchange, infamous for its fraudulent practices.
Buterin’s remarks also touched Ethereum’s infrastructure which is often referred to as Layer 1. While he acknowledged that Layer 1 is somewhat influenced by philosophical decisions – such as the transition to proof-of-stake (PoS) and support for light clients – he argued that the app layer is far more sensitive to ideological choices.
As Ethereum navigates this critical time frame, Buterin’s call for a renewed focus on social philosophy could set the tone for the next wave of development on the network.
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