The 111 Texts
The 111 texts – authored by Maksima’s founder, Frank Benjamin Horn Hartvedt, between October 2024 and May 2025 – are the authorized code that explains the ethical necessity behind the Maksima movement. They are your full access to the founder’s mind and the new ideology, Maksimalism.
The Foundation of Necessity
The public has seen only fragments. 35 of the texts are public through seven documents which you can download here. An additional four texts have been published here.
The remaining 72 texts are not public.
Before you judge, you must understand.
One of the 72 texts is titled «Bengt and Sat»:
«I don’t remember what led to the fight, but there was a big fuss. It was the kind of thing you see in movies. A crowd of kids standing in a ring around two boys hammering at each other. The whole street was there. I remember it was brutal. There was blood possibly. And for some reason, everyone took Sat’s side. Whether it was because he won the fight I don’t know, but I remember the hatred for Bengt was intense that afternoon. A bit strange really, he had a name. He was Bengt. We all stood on the small football field and watched the boy king shuffle away, beaten, toward the playground a short stone’s throw away. He sat down there, all alone. And I think he cried. And everyone looked at him. And everyone hailed Sat. But not Frank Benjamin. I left the field. And walked toward Bengt. And everyone saw it. … I will always remember that moment with Bengt. I stood up for the one who was my inspiration.»
Read this single text and the other 71 by gaining access to the archive.
To understand the coming actions – and why they are necessary – you must understand the ethical choices that shaped the founder.
Exclusive Knowledge
This is a selection of what you will find in the archive – the deep knowledge that is not public:
Fukuyama’s flaw: «The flaw in Fukuyama’s work is that he forgot an archetype on his monumental journey through history. The central archetype, if you ask me. Fukuyama failed to grasp what the caliphs and kings understood so deeply well. And that was that «maximum happiness at all times» is the meaning of life. If he had understood this, he would have urged people to choose «absolute» freedom sooner rather than later.»
Stirner’s insight: «Have you, in your lifetime, heard people say, ‘he’s so immature’ or ‘I hear what she’s saying; I was stupid at that age too’? I won’t go into Max Stirner’s entire line of reasoning, but let me put it simply: In our time, the egoist – or as I label the egoist, the «egoist» (since he or she can have an enormous positive force when encountering other people) – is regarded as immature. They simply lack some qualities and attributes that make one a «decent human being.» One is thus not mature, it is maintained. Stirner was tired of hearing it and wrote the book The Ego and Its Own. There, he used his considerable historical knowledge to state, by drawing parallels to societal developments in human history, that the world had been turned upside down. It was the egoist who was the mature one, Stirner explained. It was the egoist who had finally understood it.»
Self-respect: «And then I looked over at a shelf by the living room wall. My headset for the phone lay on top of it. It might sound strange, but the sight of it was «the turning point.» Do you know why? Because it reminded me of the urge to travel, of adventure, because it reminded me of planting, because it reminded me of the dynamic, because it reminded me of people operating across different geographical points – it reminded me of «the untrammeled delight in every possibility of existence.» All of this was greater than the trouble. A piece of advice from Frank Benjamin: Always put self-respect first. It is crucial for living powerfully.»
Ressentiment: «But that conversation quickly died too. Because when I asked what was worse – or most destructive – between women’s scorn and male envy, he fell completely silent. I hit a raw nerve. Hands down.»
The Price of Truth (Pricing & Access)
Access to all 111 texts is only for those willing to invest in the truth behind Maksimalism and the future of the Maksima movement (supporting the spearheading of the Maksima individual).
Note: The 111 texts are presented in their original Norwegian. This ensures the integrity of the authoritative source code. Modern AI tools allow for immediate, high-quality translation of the entire archive into your native language.
Standard Access
Immediate, locked access to all 111 texts + 2 new texts every month (Continuous Revelation).
799 NOK per month (Auto-renewal)
Annual Membership (Recommended)
Save roughly two months. Locks your allegiance for a full year and grants maximum insight.
6,990 NOK per year (One-time charge)
Premium Elite Package (Initiation)
Everything in Annual Membership + The Bound Compendium (the physical manifestation of the 111 texts, sent by mail).
8,990 NOK (One-time charge)
Launch Alert
Note: The payment function is currently INACTIVE.
The subscription to the 111 texts will become available for order in the wake of the implementation of Maksima’s five projects. Stay ready.
Action is the movement’s engine. The 111 texts are the map.