This paper extends the Wholonomics framework from the question of value into the question of governance. Wholonomics asks how value should circulate so that persons, communities, ecosystems, and future generations are strengthened rather than depleted. Wholotics asks how power, decision-making, law, participation, institutions, and responsibility should be organized so that the whole remains coherent. The central claim is that modern politics is not merely divided, inefficient, or ideologically polarized; it is structurally incoherent. Power detaches from responsibility. Value detaches from reciprocity. Knowledge detaches from truth. Technology detaches from dignity. Economy detaches from ecology. The present detaches from the future. Wholotics names the reversal of this condition. Wholotics defines politics as the art of preserving coherent relation among the living parts of the whole. It does not seek uniformity, centralized domination, or ideological consensus. It seeks a higher-order pattern in which dignity, difference, participation, ecological integrity, and future possibility can be held together. The paper develops this thesis through a theory of coherent government, a model of institutional organs, a coherence audit, a scale rule, a transition pathway, safeguards against false coherence, a mathematical-political grammar of symmetry and asymmetry, and a future-facing account of cosmic governance. The aim is not perfect politics. The aim is coherent civilization. Governance is legitimate to the degree that it preserves and increases coherent relation among the living parts of the whole while protecting dignity, difference, participation, ecological integrity, and future possibility. To summarize: Modern politics is fragmented. Fragmentation is a coherence failure. Wholonomics governs value-flow. Wholotics governs power-flow. Coherent Government is the practical institutional form. Cosmic Governance is the widest horizon of responsibility.
Philip Lilien (Fri,) studied this question.
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