The Architecture of Intimacy and Cross-Time Order, Vol. 2: The Victimhood Capture Loop — How Care Ethics Without Justice Boundaries Converts Intimacy into Moral ProsecutionCivilization Physics — Intimacy, Family Systems reaction confirms grievance; grievance legitimates renewed provocation. A central theoretical contribution is the integration of care ethics and justice ethics. The paper argues that care ethics rightly emphasizes responsiveness to need, dependency, and vulnerability, while justice ethics emphasizes reciprocity, proportionality, accountability, and evidentiary symmetry. The Victimhood Capture Loop emerges when care becomes insufficiently constrained by justice. Hurt remains real and deserving of recognition, but pain begins functioning as a source of interpretive privilege rather than information requiring reciprocal examination. The paper emphasizes that this process does not require conscious manipulation. A partner may sincerely experience injury while simultaneously organizing the interaction around that injury in ways that reduce scrutiny of their own behavior. The mechanism therefore operates through ordinary cognitive and emotional processes rather than deliberate deception. Two illustrative composite scenarios are developed. In one, harsh startup followed by defensive reaction leads to evidentiary conversion and frame capture. In another, attachment insecurity and inherited conflict scripts generate recurring cycles in which ordinary ambiguity is interpreted as abandonment, producing escalating accusation and withdrawal dynamics. These examples demonstrate how multiple empirical literatures converge into a common interactional sequence. The framework also connects to the author's broader concepts of Strong Frame and cross-time order. Strong Frame functions as the practical countermeasure to Victimhood Capture by preserving reciprocal accountability while remaining responsive to genuine distress. The goal is not emotional suppression but maintaining a shared reality in which both partners remain subject to examination rather than granting unilateral interpretive authority to either party. Several empirical hypotheses are proposed, including: Higher interpersonal-victimhood scores predicting greater loop frequency. Hostile attribution bias predicting evidentiary conversion. Harsh startup predicting later frame capture through defensive reciprocity. Perceived care–justice imbalance increasing responsibility shielding. Intergenerational conflict exposure increasing loop susceptibility through inherited attribution patterns. The paper concludes that the Victimhood Capture Loop provides a useful conceptual vocabulary for understanding a recurring form of relational deadlock. Its central contribution is to reconceptualize victimhood, within this specific interactional sequence, as a position of interpretive leverage rather than merely a subjective emotional state. Within the Architecture of Intimacy and Cross-Time Order framework, the paper argues that healthy relationships require both care and justice. Care remains indispensable for intimacy, but care without reciprocal accountability risks converting conflict resolution into ongoing moral prosecution. Sustainable intimacy therefore depends on preserving compassion without surrendering symmetry of responsibility. Keywords: Victimhood Capture Loop · Care Ethics · Justice Ethics · Demand-Withdraw Pattern · Hostile Attribution Bias · Interpersonal Victimhood · Projective Identification · Strong Frame · Relationship Conflict · Civilization Physics
Xiangyu Guo (Sat,) studied this question.