This monograph is the twenty-sixth in the Cognitive Cybernetics Technical Monograph Series, building on Stabilized Cognitive Regimes (CC-025), Navigation Failure Without Confusion (CC-024), Structural Rigidity Without Error (CC-023), Why New Information Stops Helping (CC-022), and Narrowing of Inference Space (CC-021). It addresses collapse as a regulatory outcome—a stable configuration reached under sustained control pressure, challenging common descriptions of collapse as breakdown, failure, or loss of function. The work systematically defines collapse structurally as occurring when control layers dominate navigation, termination overwhelms exploration, evaluation rigidifies, and feedback locks dominant pathways. The system does not stop functioning; it reorganizes into a constrained regime. Collapse does not require error, confusion, incoherence, or loss of output; instead, it produces surface stability, reduced variance, predictable behavior, and efficient closure. Collapse is quiet. Collapsed regimes are stable because they minimize control effort, reduce uncertainty, satisfy feedback reinforcement, and make deviation costly; stability is the defining feature of collapse. Degradation describes loss of capability; collapse describes reorganization. Capabilities remain but are inaccessible due to control restriction. Once collapse occurs, thresholds harden, alternative paths decay, and control resists reconfiguration; without structural disruption, collapse persists indefinitely. Collapse is often misinterpreted as burnout, disengagement, stubbornness, or failure to understand, but structurally it is none of these—it is regulation reaching a stable minimum-energy configuration. This pattern is substrate-independent, appearing in human cognition, automated reasoning systems, and organizational decision structures; the invariant lies in control dynamics. If a system remains stable, resists change, functions within narrow bounds, and cannot transition, collapse has already occurred. Cognitive collapse is not a breakdown of thinking; it is the point at which regulation stabilizes so completely that movement becomes impossible. Understanding collapse requires examining control, not output.
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Kanna Amresh (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e47440010ef96374d8ffdd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19631088
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