Abstract This paper examines two domains where regulatory latency — the delay between available information and responsive action — produces catastrophic outcomes. In civil governance, the phrase "we didn't know" functions as a post-hoc liability shield for failures that were documented, predictable, and preventable. In research governance, attractive theoretical programmes can consume decades of resources without producing falsifiable predictions or convergent results. Using the General Theory of Regulated Stability (GTRS) framework, we show that both phenomena share a common architecture: systems stuck in decoherence phase because the condensation nucleus required for recoherence is absent, damaged, or actively prevented from forming. The Camp Fire (Paradise, California, 2018) and the Lahaina Fire (Maui, Hawaii, 2023) serve as primary civil governance case studies. String theory serves as the research governance case study. This version (v1.2) incorporates four analytical extensions: (1) the ρ-Calculator, an operational protocol for quantifying wildfire governance coherence; (2) Normative Latency as a fourth category in the "we didn't know" taxonomy, explaining how inverted decision architectures produce action failure even when capacity exists; (3) the Activation Coefficient (α), formalising the distinction between capacity and deployment; and (4) a testable predictive claim that transforms GTRS from retrospective description into prospective risk scoring. The core insight: latency is not merely delay. Latency is regulatory failure with temporal character. Time spent in decoherence without recoherence is damage that compounds. In civil governance, that damage has body counts.
Smith et al. (Fri,) studied this question.