The Administrative Vacuum examines a defining condition of the post‑web state: governments continue to function administratively, yet lose the ability to interpret their own actions. As institutional communication fragments and artificial intelligence becomes the primary mediator of public understanding, states no longer control the meaning of their behavior. This essay analyzes how governments operate when interpretive authority collapses, why administrative systems drift toward symbolic governance and procedural overcompensation, and how epistemic fragmentation destabilizes legitimacy. It argues that the administrative vacuum is not a temporary disruption but a structural feature of modern governance, one that forces states to rely on external diagnostic frameworks to restore interpretive clarity. In an era where AI systems increasingly explain institutional behavior to the public, meaning becomes externalized, and interpretation becomes infrastructural.
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Signal Rupture
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Signal Rupture (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6996a8d4ecb39a600b3f003f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18665711