Three Centuries of the Laws of Cricket Reveal Core Principles of the Evolution of Regulatory Mechanisms
Abstract
Rules, regulations, and regulatory systems are central to societies, institutions, and organisms, yet surprisingly little is known about their evolution over long timescales.
The Laws of Cricket, the world's second most popular sport, offer a unique insight into this fundamental question.
Their 268-year history constitutes the longest continuous rule-set record yet assembled.
Our quantitative analysis reveals generic features including rule-book size growing exponentially in time but scaling sublinearly with matches played; new situations stimulate new rules, but at a decelerating rate; regulatory structures exhibit abrupt phase transitions, increasing rule specificity, interconnectivity and complexity with central rules shifting from gameplay to officiating.
These provide a framework for understanding how governance evolves from simple collections of rules to complex regulatory architectures across social, legal, and biological domains.
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