This working paper examines the relationship between contingency and structural explanation in systems involving bounded cognition. It challenges accounts that attribute institutional or epistemic outcomes primarily to accidental events. The central claim is that contingency, while ubiquitous, is not sufficient as an explanatory category. Error and misestimation are treated as structural features of cognitive systems operating under constraint. The paper argues that systemic properties, rather than isolated incidents, determine propagation, amplification, and institutional consequence. The analysis draws upon systems theory, institutional design, and philosophical reflection to situate error as an invariant condition of cognition. Implications are discussed for higher education, governance, and contemporary technological systems.
Sencer Yeralan (Sat,) studied this question.