Care and Feedback Collapse XI: The Emotionalization of Failure and the Collapse of Commercial FeedbackCivilization Physics — Care Series — Volume XI This paper examines a late-stage structural failure in modern economic systems: the collapse of commercial feedback under an emotionally dominant care ethic. In classical justice-oriented market systems, failure functions as an impersonal but essential regulator—ventures that do not create value are terminated, releasing capital, labor, and attention toward more coherent structures. The paper argues that contemporary commercial culture increasingly reinterprets failure not as a structural signal but as a personal emotional event, producing a feedback-inert economy. Under a care-dominant moral operating system, negative commercial signals—losses, burn rates, missed milestones, unviable business models—are buffered or re-narrated to preserve emotional safety. Failure becomes reframed as personal growth, resilience, or visionary sacrifice rather than as information demanding correction or termination. As a result, negative feedback is moralized as harm, and the act of delivering it is treated as betrayal, cruelty, or disloyalty. The paper traces how this emotionalization of failure transforms core economic mechanisms: Narrative-driven investment replaces structural evaluation, as capital flows toward emotionally resonant stories rather than demonstrable viability. Symbolic continuity allows ventures to persist in name and narrative long after functional coherence has collapsed. Moral taboo against termination discourages shutting down failing enterprises, converting creative destruction into indefinite preservation. Accountability drift emerges as performance metrics lose binding force and outcomes decouple from consequence. Resilience signaling replaces results, rewarding persistence and emotional legitimacy over adaptive learning. Drawing parallels with earlier analyses of justice collapse, educational feedback erosion, and resource freezing, the paper situates commercial feedback collapse within a broader pattern: when care ethics fully displace justice-based structure, systems retain warmth but lose calibration. Markets become emotionally safe yet structurally inert—rich in activity, narrative, and effort, but poor in value creation and adaptive evolution. As the eleventh installment of the Care and Feedback Collapse series, this work extends the analysis from interpersonal, legal, educational, and religious domains into the economic core of society. It concludes that care without feedback does not protect people—it traps them inside failing structures. Restoring commercial vitality requires reintegrating empathy with consequence, compassion with termination, and emotional support with structural truth. Keywords: Commercial Feedback · Emotionalization of Failure · Care Ethic · Justice Ethic · Symbolic Continuity · Narrative Investment · Accountability Drift · Market Discipline · Economic Stagnation · Care Series · Civilization Physics
Xiangyu Guo (Sun,) studied this question.