Care and Feedback Collapse IX: From Resource Discovery to Resource FreezingCivilization Physics — Care Series — Volume IX This paper examines a late-stage structural consequence of care-dominant moral systems: the transition from resource discovery to resource freezing. Historically, civilizations operating under a justice-oriented moral framework treated the world as a field of latent order—chaotic but rich with undiscovered structure. Through risk tolerance, failure acceptance, and negative feedback, justice-driven systems converted breakdown into breakthrough, continually redefining what counted as a “resource.” The paper argues that when a care ethic becomes dominant and unbalanced, this exploratory feedback loop inverts. Rather than perceiving the environment as expandable through new structure and meaning-binding, care-centric systems increasingly treat resources as finite, fragile, and morally inviolable. Discovery gives way to preservation; exploration is replaced by protection; and risk-taking is reframed as harm. What was once latent order awaiting recognition becomes perceived scarcity demanding conservation. Drawing on systems theory and prior entries in the Care and Feedback Collapse series, the analysis shows how this shift produces a rigidity trap at the civilizational level. Failure tolerance collapses, structural imagination atrophies, and the capacity to re-bind meaning after breakdown disappears. Without justice’s willingness to dismantle obsolete configurations, societies lose the ability to define new resources—even when surrounded by untapped potential. Innovation stalls not because nature is exhausted, but because the moral operating system no longer permits discovery. The paper further examines how fear-driven preservation transforms technical questions into moral absolutes. Resource debates—particularly around energy, environment, and growth—become dominated by survival language, moral panic, and purity tests rather than analytic evaluation. In this state, precaution is elevated to dogma, and any proposal involving uncertainty or disruption is treated as existential threat. The result is resource freezing: a self-imposed contraction in how value, possibility, and abundance are defined. As the ninth installment of the Care and Feedback Collapse series, this work completes the arc from interpersonal feedback failure to full civilizational stagnation. It concludes that long-term sustainability does not arise from indefinite preservation, but from restoring balance—reintegrating justice’s structural daring with care’s protective impulse. Only by reactivating exploratory feedback can civilizations once again transform latent order into lived wealth. Keywords: Resource Discovery · Resource Freezing · Care Ethic · Justice Ethic · Feedback Collapse · Rigidity Trap · Structural Innovation · Moral Operating Systems · Civilization Physics
Xiangyu Guo (Wed,) studied this question.