Civilization is destabilizing not because its systems are malfunctioning, but because the shared meaning structures that make those systems possible have collapsed. Humans are not objects who can be aligned through persuasion, reform, or information. We are patterns—relational, interpretive, meaning‑dependent patterns—and patterns can only align through shared meaning. When distinctions, reference points, and interpretive rules diverge, communication becomes noise, institutions lose coherence, and coordination fails. This paper identifies the minimal structural invariants required for shared meaning and shows why their restoration is the only viable path to civilizational stability. The argument is not ideological or predictive. It is structural: a meaning‑dependent species can only survive through shared meaning, and shared meaning has a recoverable architecture.
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Denis Bailey
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Denis Bailey (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c08b6ba48f6b84677f8988 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19149194
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