This monograph is the twenty-fourth in the Cognitive Cybernetics Technical Monograph Series, building on Narrowing of Inference Space (CC-021), Why New Information Stops Helping (CC-022), and Structural Rigidity Without Error (CC-023). It addresses navigation failure without confusion—the condition where cognitive systems fail to move while maintaining clarity, challenging the common equation of cognitive failure with confusion. The work systematically establishes that cognitive failure is often equated with confusion—lack of clarity, incoherent responses, contradictory reasoning—but this assumption is structurally incorrect. Cognitive navigation can fail while clarity remains intact. Navigation failure is defined as occurring when a system cannot access alternative inference paths, cannot reframe evaluation criteria, or cannot transition between regimes. This failure concerns movement, not understanding. A system can be clear about its position, confident in its conclusions, and articulate in expression yet still be unable to move beyond a fixed trajectory; clarity does not imply navigational freedom. Confusion arises when signals conflict, evaluation is unstable, or closure is delayed. In navigation failure, conflict is suppressed, evaluation is stable, and closure is efficient—the system feels ordered. Navigation failure often appears as decisiveness, focus, discipline, and certainty, but these are artifacts of constrained motion. Navigation failure persists because feedback reinforces familiar paths, deviation is costly, alternatives decay, and correction mechanisms are inactive; the system stabilizes its immobility. Navigation failure becomes visible only when conditions shift, novelty exceeds the current corridor, or regime transitions are required—at that point, collapse is sudden. This pattern is substrate-independent, appearing in human reasoning, automated decision systems, and hybrid cognitive environments; the invariant lies in control restriction. If a system appears clear, resists reframing, repeats trajectories, and fails under novelty, navigation failure is present. Cognitive systems can be clear and immobile at the same time. Navigation failure is not confusion; it is loss of movement. Understanding cognition requires separating clarity from mobility.
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Kanna Amresh
Central Intelligence Agency
Cannuflow (United States)
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Kanna Amresh (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e472fc010ef96374d8ede5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19629748
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