This paper proposes Participation Continuity — the structural condition in which humans can continue participating sustainably in relationships, environments, communities, work, care systems, and daily life without excessive friction, extraction pressure, nervous system destabilization, or participation exhaustion. The paper argues that contemporary societies increasingly operate within post-continuity participation environments, where participation itself remains constantly active while the environmental conditions necessary for sustainable continuity progressively deteriorate. Rather than focusing on increasing participation intensity, the framework proposes that long-term human sustainability may depend on restoring and protecting participation continuity through environmental design. Core concepts include: - Structural Friction - Quiet Infrastructure - Participation Fatigue - Continuity Fragmentation - Nervous System Sustainability - Cognitive Sustainability - Environmental Trust - Non-Extractive Architecture The paper further suggests that future AI-era societies may increasingly require systems capable not merely of stimulating participation, but of preserving participation continuity itself. Series: Participation Framework Author: Natsue Tanaka Independent Researcher Concept Originator of Maura Theory
Natsue Tanaka (Wed,) studied this question.