There is an absurd and enduring paradox in the history of human political thought. One type of institution proclaims itself to be naturally good and incomparably powerful, yet every time a crisis strikes, it shrinks its head back, surrendering its decision-making authority to the very rival it most despises in ordinary times. The other type asserts that it can shoulder ultimate responsibility for the entire society, yet every time the crisis ends it is impatiently cast aside by the multitude, as if it had never existed. This is the strange struggle between electoral democracy and centralized rule. This article applies the stratification framework of ``total-loss order'' and ``individual-loss order'' developed in the author's meta-theory of order to political systems, arguing that this strange struggle arises from a deep evolutionary logic: electoral democracy is essentially an individual-loss order that emerges after predator release, whose core operation is the distribution of interests and whose precondition for survival is that ``the pie is still there''; when a survival threat descends and the entire population faces rigid collective-loss conditions, the distribution mechanism loses its object and democracy voluntarily withdraws. Centralized rule, by contrast, is the temporary carrier of total-loss order, summoned by all in times of crisis and abandoned by all once the crisis has passed. This is neither a failure of democracy nor a victory of centralization, but an evolutionary inevitability of the human cooperative system automatically switching its organizational mode under different intensities of threat. The article anchors its empirical analysis in three sets of comparative cases drawn from the political history of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries: the United States and the Soviet Union as two superpowers that embodied contrasting institutional logics across the Cold War divide; the European Union and Russia as regional orders defined by opposing threat environments; and Ukraine as a polity internally fractured by the very contradiction between its proclaimed democratic values and its resort to military coercion against its own minority populations. The article concludes that the effectiveness of any political institution is never determined by the rational blueprint of its designers, but screened by the intensity of threat in the survival environment within which it is embedded.
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Jiacheng Yang
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Jiacheng Yang (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69f04e5b727298f751e72497 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19777935
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