Governed Reality-Intervention CapacityCivilization Physics — Agency, Order he remains answerable for the reality his actions create. A second major theoretical contribution is the concept of consequence-bearing. The paper argues that intervention alone is insufficient. True governance requires remaining inside the causal field one has altered. This creates a three-part distinction: Symbolic legitimacy speaks without consequence. Ungoverned intervention changes reality while displacing consequence. Governed intervention changes reality and bears consequence. This distinction serves as the paper’s central criterion for differentiating governance from coercion. At the individual level, consequence-bearing separates disciplined strength from volatility. A person capable of disruption but unwilling to carry its costs remains parasitic on existing order. A governed actor accepts responsibility for the outcomes of intervention. At the relationship level, the framework yields a relational hierarchy: Harmlessness < Raw Intervention < Strong Frame Harmlessness is associated with low intervention capacity, weak boundaries, and limited conflict competence. Raw intervention introduces energy, decisiveness, and visible agency but often produces instability, coercion, or volatility. Strong Frame combines intervention capacity with governance, creating a relational form that remains both effective and inhabitable. The paper grounds this distinction in contemporary relationship research. Several findings are integrated: Dominance can increase attraction under certain short-term conditions. Prestige consistently outperforms dominance in long-term relationship quality. Aggression weakens the attractiveness benefits associated with masculine cues. Assertiveness predicts improved relationship satisfaction and stability. Prestige-oriented influence tends to improve relationship outcomes, while dominance-oriented influence tends to degrade them. The resulting claim is that attraction and relationship quality often diverge. Raw intervention may outperform harmlessness in salience and excitement, but Strong Frame outperforms both because it combines competence, trustworthiness, and consequence-bearing capacity. At the political scale, the paper integrates Hobbes, Weber, legitimacy research, and state-capacity scholarship. Political systems are analyzed through the same hierarchy: Symbolic legitimacy includes declarations, resolutions, and moral authority. Ungoverned intervention includes coercion without durable legitimacy. Governed intervention combines enforceable power with recognized rightfulness. The distinction is illustrated through institutions such as the United Nations, the European Union, and modern states. The paper argues that declarations without enforcement remain aspirational, while force without governance becomes predatory. Effective institutions combine execution capacity with legitimacy, allowing compliance to emerge through both deterrence and voluntary cooperation. State-capacity research is used to reinforce this point. Administrative capacity, enforcement ability, fiscal extraction, legal implementation, and infrastructural power are treated as institutional forms of intervention capacity. Governance quality determines whether these capacities generate order or oppression. Several empirical hypotheses follow: Individuals high in intervention capacity and self-regulation should outperform those high only in dominance or passivity on measures of respect, reliability, and trust. Relationship outcomes should favor prestige and governed assertiveness over dominance and volatility. High-capacity institutions combined with legitimacy should outperform both weak states and coercive-but-illegitimate states on compliance, corruption control, and policy durability. Enforcement effectiveness should increase most where procedural legitimacy and implementation capacity reinforce one another. The paper concludes that many modern debates mistakenly oppose force and morality, capacity and virtue, or power and legitimacy. GRIC reframes the issue. Across individual life, intimate relationships, and political order, the decisive variable is neither harmlessness nor coercion. It is credible intervention capacity disciplined by governance and sustained through consequence-bearing responsibility. Within the Civilization Physics framework, GRIC functions as a general theory of how order emerges when causal power remains coupled to accountability rather than detached from it. Keywords: Governed Reality-Intervention Capacity · GRIC · Consequential Masculinity · Strong Frame · Prestige and Dominance · State Capacity · Legitimacy · Consequence-Bearing · Governance · Civilization Physics
Xiangyu Guo (Sat,) studied this question.
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