Erosion Fatigue: Why People Aren’t Disengaging — They’re Depleted examines contemporary disengagement as a structural condition produced by systemic overload rather than a cultural or psychological shift. The essay argues that individuals are not withdrawing from social, informational, or relational life by choice; they are being eroded by architectures that demand more cognitive, emotional, and interpretive labor than humans can sustainably supply. Building on the precursor concepts of the eroded subject, cognitive erosion, and ambient erosion, the work reframes inconsistent engagement, silence, and low responsiveness as diagnostic signals of infrastructural strain. The essay outlines how erosion fatigue emerges from systems that accelerate beyond human processing limits, externalize complexity onto individuals, collapse boundaries between work and life, and generate continuous informational noise. It introduces the eroded subject as an infrastructural artifact shaped by overload, and defines cognitive erosion as the chronic thinning of interpretive bandwidth under conditions of sustained systemic pressure. The work further situates ambient erosion as the background condition of modern life, produced by economic precarity, institutional instability, platform volatility, and crisis‑driven environments. By explaining how erosion fatigue manifests in inconsistent engagement patterns, reduced emotional availability, and the collapse of interpretive agency, the essay positions erosion fatigue as a collective social condition rather than an individual failure. It argues that what appears as apathy is actually depletion, and that rupture occurs when erosion reaches a threshold beyond which coherence cannot be maintained. The essay contributes a structural vocabulary for understanding the human consequences of living inside unstable infrastructures and establishes erosion fatigue as a foundational concept within the SignalRupture canon.
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Signal Rupture
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Signal Rupture (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/699fe3af95ddcd3a253e7c13 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18751463