This text explores the concept of social decoherence arguing that humanitys fundamental hierarchy of needs has remained unchanged for hundreds of millennia while the ideological systems meant to satisfy them are inherently pathological.
Using the life and work of Saint-Simon as a primary case study the author describes how bright ideas and abstract constructs act like neoplasms or tumors which sever the direct biological connection between humans and their environment.
These systems eventually become parasitic prioritizing their own institutional growth and self-preservation over the actual satisfaction of human hunger safety and belonging.
The sources integrate complex systems theory and formal mathematical proofs to demonstrate that totalizing ideologies inevitably destroy the adaptive variance necessary for social health.
Ultimately the narrative advocates for a return to direct connection and localized mutual aid suggesting that the only true cure for systemic decay is the unmediated personal response to specific human needs.
Источник: rutube.ru