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Paperback Decoherence of Social Systems Book

ISBN: B0GXV3DPK9

ISBN13: 9798258041333

Decoherence of Social Systems

Why do the best ideas produce the worst outcomes? Saint-Simon sacrificed his fortune, his title, and his health to build a fairer world. Marx devoted his life to liberating the working class. The architects of liberal democracy genuinely believed in human dignity. Yet every system they created - however noble its origin - ended by devouring the people it promised to serve.
This book argues that the problem is not in the ideas. It is in the principle itself.
Human needs have not changed in three hundred thousand years. Man wants to eat, to be safe, to belong, to be recognized, to realize himself. These needs were satisfied through direct connections - person to person, hand to bread, neighbor to neighbor - long before anyone proposed a theory about how society should work.
Every "bright idea" - from Saint-Simon's industrial utopia to the free market, from democracy to communism - performs the same operation: it severs the direct connection between man and the satisfaction of his needs and inserts itself as mediator. And every mediator, once established, begins to serve itself.
Drawing on the formal persistence framework, the Asymmetry of Totalizing Ideals, the Theorem of Incompatible Truths, and the phase-transition model of social dynamics, this monograph demonstrates - with mathematical rigor - that ideological constructs are not failed medicines but structural pathologies: neoplasms that grow autonomously, consume the resources of their host, resist elimination, and metastasize across domains.
Saint-Simon is not the villain of this book. He is its most sympathetic figure - a good man caught in a principle that spares no one. Through his life, his teachings, and their aftermath, we see the anatomy of a disease that has afflicted every civilization: the belief that a correct idea can replace a living connection.
It cannot. And this book shows why.

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