The Cost of Disagreement develops a structural account of political conflict using the framework of Relational Structuralism. The paper argues that conservatism and liberalism are not moral opposites but competing coherence strategies: one stabilizes through constraint, the other adapts through expansion. When these strategies interact, the system absorbs the friction between them, producing attrition—the slow erosion of coherence through accumulated mismatch. The analysis shows how the two‑party system amplifies this cost by compressing a multidimensional population into a binary architecture that cannot represent its actual distribution of priorities. This compression manufactures disagreement, accelerates mismatch accumulation, and increases structural loss for both strategies. The paper distinguishes the environments in which each strategy loses more slowly: conservatism performs best under high‑stress conditions, while liberalism performs best under low‑stress conditions. Neither strategy “wins”; each incurs structural loss relative to the environment. The world is approaching a global hinge—a threshold where accumulated mismatch exceeds the system’s capacity to reorganize under its current constraints—and national political systems, including American democracy, are only partial contributors to this broader mismatch load. The central claim is that disagreement is a structural cost, not a democratic virtue. No ideology escapes attrition. The environment determines which strategy fails more slowly, and the future will be shaped not by ideological victory but by the structural necessity of re‑coherence.
Denis Bailey (Sat,) studied this question.
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