Normativity as a Feature of Reality argues that normativity is not a moral construct but a structural property of systems that must maintain coherence across time. The paper reframes right and wrong as the system’s internal signals of alignment and misalignment, rather than as rules, virtues, or cultural prescriptions. It develops a model in which tension, relief, integrity, and fragmentation are understood as structural feedback, not psychological states or moral judgments.The work distinguishes structural normativity from moralism, showing that instruction can transmit rules but cannot generate the felt sense of coherence that makes agency possible. It outlines how the orientation system develops, how self‑correction functions, and why responsibility emerges from responsiveness to structural signals rather than obedience to external norms.The result is a non‑moralistic account of normative life grounded in architecture rather than authority: systems persist by maintaining compatible relations among their parts, and normativity is the human‑scale expression of this requirement.
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Denis Bailey
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Denis Bailey (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d896046c1944d70ce0728a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19474339
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