Abstract: Cognitive suppression is not a failure of institutional design. Across documented historical contexts — from classical Athens to Soviet science to contemporary organisational life — institutions suppress the cognitive profiles they most need through the same mechanism they use to select for competence: the advancement criteria that identify reliable personnel also, systematically, filter out the analytical styles most associated with disruptive capacity. At its centre lies the threat-conformity spiral: how institutional threat progressively redefines intelligence itself in terms of conformity, until the suppression becomes invisible as suppression and legible only as meritocracy. Drawing on neurodiversity research, historical pattern analysis, and motivated cognition literature, the argument traces the structural logic through which individually rational selection decisions accumulate into collective cognitive impoverishment. The analytical profiles that most threaten institutional stability are, in the historical record, disproportionately responsible for the adaptations that rescue those same institutions in crisis.
Angel Analytical Publications (Fri,) studied this question.