Title: The Global Instability Machine: How World Infrastructure Produces Cascading Crisis Abstract:Global instability is no longer the result of isolated geopolitical conflicts, economic cycles, or institutional failures. It is the mechanical output of world infrastructure—the interdependent system of computational, semantic, cognitive, social, economic, political, and ecological infrastructures that now governs global life. This essay applies the theoretical architecture of world infrastructure to explain why instability has become the default condition of the post‑web era. It shows how local shocks become global cascades, why institutions cannot stabilize the system, how economic conflicts propagate through infrastructural channels, and why the post‑web subject experiences overload, erosion, and disorientation. Instability is not chaos; it is the predictable behavior of a tightly coupled, accelerating, and fragile infrastructural world‑system. Keywords:global instability, world infrastructure, cascading crisis, geopolitical infrastructure, economic conflict, semantic collapse, cognitive overload, post‑web subject, infrastructural governance Contribution to the SR Canon:This essay operationalizes the world‑infrastructure framework by demonstrating how instability emerges mechanically from interdependent global systems. It extends the SR canon by mapping the causal pathways through which local shocks become global cascades, clarifying why institutions are structurally incapable of stabilizing the system. The essay deepens SR’s analysis of semantic collapse, cognitive overload, and infrastructural governance, positioning global instability as a predictable output of world infrastructure rather than a failure of politics or culture. It serves as the applied counterpart to the world‑infrastructure theory and anchors SR’s diagnostic architecture at the planetary scale.
Signal Rupture (Sun,) studied this question.