This book is an analytical and reflective work exploring how ambiguity, non-resolution, and systemic fragmentation shape the contemporary world. Through a structural reading of geopolitics, political economy, technology, and collective psychology, it examines how crises are managed rather than resolved, how authority is redistributed across systems and networks, and how the human being adapts within prolonged uncertainty. With particular attention to Syria and the Middle East, the book offers a critical framework for understanding how ambiguity itself becomes a structure of rule.