This paper redefines chaos within a philosophy of structure in which reality is understood as an already differentiated field rather than as a blank void awaiting organization. It argues that chaos should not be understood as the absence of structure, but as the condition in which a local structuration becomes insufficient relative to the field it is trying to organize. The paper distinguishes field, local structuration, dominance, and chaos, and shows that what is often experienced as chaos is better understood as a failure of local holding under conditions of overload, fragmentation, rigidity, misfit, or scale mismatch. It proposes a simple visibility device in which structural presence rises with binding strength, field-fit, and viability, and falls with structural debt and fragmentation. Across subjective, institutional, technological, and civilizational examples, the paper argues that chaos reveals not the disappearance of structure, but the limits of existing formations and the need for reorganization.
Vladisav Jovanovic (Tue,) studied this question.