Obsolete by Design examines how modern institutions produced their own epistemic and infrastructural failure through decades of intentional non‑maintenance. Drawing on foundational work in Science and Technology Studies, sociology of knowledge, philosophy of science, and critical pedagogy, the paper demonstrates that standardized testing, quantification metrics, and 20th‑century experimental methods were preserved not for their accuracy but for their stabilizing effects on institutional authority. The age of the critique—spanning the 1970s to the 1990s—is presented as empirical evidence of infrastructural decay rather than historical distance. The paper argues that institutions became obsolete by design: they ignored, scattered, or neutralized critique; they maintained cognitive infrastructures that produced predictable outputs; and they allowed methodological decay to accumulate into systemic distortion. Through case studies of Milgram, the Marshmallow Test, and Growth Mindset, the paper shows how institutional methods manufactured the very psychological effects they claimed to measure. By re‑estimating these models with structural variables, the paper demonstrates mathematically how the celebrated effects collapse once omitted conditions are included. Within the SignalRupture framework, Obsolete by Design maps how institutional self‑protection created infrastructural hygiene failure, how critique was scattered across disciplines, and how AI now exposes the obsolescence institutions produced through decades of deliberate oversight.
Signal Rupture (Sun,) studied this question.
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