Care and Feedback Collapse X: Legal Freezing and the Collapse of Reproductive FeedbackCivilization Physics — Care Series — Volume X This paper analyzes one of the most consequential feedback failures in modern society: the collapse of reproductive feedback under a care-dominant moral and legal operating system. Reproduction is an irreversible output of human behavior, historically governed by strict boundaries, verification mechanisms, and proportional consequences. The paper argues that contemporary legal regimes increasingly sever reproduction from these feedback structures in the name of emotional harm minimization, producing a system that preserves symbolic continuity while eroding truth, trust, and agency. Under classical justice-led systems, reproductive responsibility was enforced through clear causal links between sexual behavior, biological parentage, and long-term obligation. Paternity verification, marital fidelity norms, and legal remedies for deception functioned as negative feedback loops, aligning agency with irreversible outcome. By contrast, the modern care-oriented legal framework redefines harm primarily in emotional terms and systematically suppresses feedback mechanisms—most notably through restrictions or prohibitions on paternity testing, conclusive marital presumptions, short statutes of limitation, and “best interest” doctrines that prioritize narrative stability over factual truth. The paper introduces the concept of legal freezing: a condition in which systems deliberately block corrective information to avoid short-term emotional disruption, thereby locking in a preferred narrative even when it contradicts reality. In reproductive governance, this manifests as symbolic fatherhood enforced by law, where legal paternity is assigned based on proximity and capacity rather than biological causality or informed consent. The resulting forced payer logic reallocates responsibility away from the source of reproduction and toward the most convenient or coercible party, dissolving reciprocal accountability. Through comparative legal analysis (including France, Germany, India, and multiple U.S. jurisdictions), the paper shows that the suppression of reproductive feedback produces predictable downstream effects: erosion of male trust in family law and marriage, withdrawal from formal family institutions, privatization or evasion of verification mechanisms, moral hazard in sexual behavior, and long-term demographic and relational instability. Importantly, the analysis frames these outcomes not as cultural pathologies or gendered conflicts, but as structural consequences of feedback collapse. When care ethics override justice entirely, systems lose the capacity to bind behavior to irreversible outcomes. Reproduction continues, but without truthful calibration, generating a slow accumulation of mistrust and resentment that cannot be resolved through narrative management or emotional appeals. As the tenth installment of the Care and Feedback Collapse series, this paper completes the progression from interpersonal miscalibration to institutional, legal, and civilizational breakdown. It concludes that no society can sustain trust in its most fundamental generative function if it forbids feedback on that function. Care without truth becomes control; care without accountability becomes coercion. Restoring reproductive stability requires reintegrating care with justice—reconnecting empathy to verification, protection to reciprocity, and compassion to truth. Keywords: Reproductive Governance · Paternity Law · Feedback Collapse · Care Ethic · Justice Ethic · Legal Freezing · Symbolic Continuity · Trust Erosion · Family Law · Civilization Physics
Xiangyu Guo (Mon,) studied this question.