This paper extends Structural Intelligence (SI) into the macro-structural world of institutions, platforms, public systems, and civilization-scale coordination. Its central claim is simple: a civilization enters occupancy when its major structures remain active and coherent while their steering is captured by narrower substitute controllers than the purposes those structures claim to serve. Systems may continue to regulate, optimize, and reproduce themselves, yet do so under the governance of profit, optics, compliance, engagement, short-term survival, or procedural self-preservation rather than under answerable relation to the realities they were built to carry. The paper develops five connected claims. First, institutions are burden-bearing structures, not neutral procedures. Second, substitute controllers arise when a narrower internal logic captures the steering of a wider system. Third, institutional drift appears when operational coherence separates from answerability to the wider differentiated field. Fourth, civilizational debt accumulates when major systems preserve themselves through cost-export, delayed repair, and symbolic management rather than through burden-bearing revision. Fifth, the widely felt sense that “reality is disappearing” can be read structurally as the lived consequence of macro pilot severance: people inhabit systems that still function, yet no longer seem meaningfully steerable by human purposes. The result is a structural account of public distrust, institutional drift, substitute control, and the conditions of civilizational reorganization.
Vladisav Jovanovic (Mon,) studied this question.