Abstract This paper proposes an organizational hypothesis concerning the energetic and regulatory implications of human load distribution under gravity. The central argument is that the human organism does not merely seek mechanical stability, but continuously resolves gravitational demand through organizational strategies carrying different energetic and regulatory costs. Within this framework, relatively reliable skeletal load conduction is interpreted as a mechanically distributed condition requiring comparatively reduced continuous stabilization demand, whereas compensatory stabilization is interpreted as a more energetically and regulatorily expensive organizational strategy dependent upon persistent neuromuscular management. Human Restoration Theory (HRT) proposes that chronic muscular holding may therefore represent not simply local muscular overactivity, but a long-term redistribution of energetic and regulatory burden across the organism. The paper further proposes that persistent stabilization may increase physiological maintenance requirements through continuous co-contraction, respiratory constraint, reduced movement variability, elevated anticipatory management, and ongoing soft-tissue recruitment under gravitational load. The framework does not claim that energy expenditure alone explains chronic disease, nor that all physiological dysregulation originates from biomechanics. Rather, it proposes that different load-bearing organizations may impose substantially different stabilization economies upon the organism over prolonged time scales.
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Israel Don
Centre for Healthy Start Initiative
Biomechanics Institute of Valencia
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Israel Don (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a168a090c924ddd1bd58bf7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20374865
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