The Extraction Architecture: A Genealogy of a System Without a Mastermind reconstructs the long‑duration evolution of the global extraction system — a structure that governs modern life without central coordination, intentional design, or elite orchestration. Spanning seven eras (Agricultural, Imperial, Industrial, Corporate, Digital, Automated, and Post‑Governance), the paper demonstrates how surplus management, hierarchy formation, institutional drift, and optimization pressures produced a self‑replicating architecture that extracts value from human populations regardless of political ideology or leadership. The manuscript argues that contemporary institutions behave like a mastermind not because anyone controls them, but because structural incentives, infrastructural inertia, and recursive optimization pressures generate coordinated outcomes without coordination. The genealogy traces how empire logic was photocopied across states, corporations, algorithms, and automated systems, culminating in a post‑governance architecture that persists even when purpose, oversight, and legitimacy collapse. The paper concludes by outlining the only viable intervention pathways — constraints, buffers, and counter‑architecture — and provides a literature‑grounded justification for each. A companion empirical paper provides the quantitative evidence, forecasting architecture, and falsifiability conditions that operationalize the theoretical genealogy presented here.
Signal Rupture (Fri,) studied this question.