Modern deterrence theory has historically relied on physical destructive capability, retaliation potential, and strategic fear balance. While such frameworks have prevented certain large-scale conflicts, they remain fundamentally tied to the threat of violence and mutual destruction. This paper proposes a hypothetical alternative model of non-physical deterrence based on symbolic respect and cognitive friction. The proposed model suggests that the respectful presentation of culturally, politically, or spiritually significant symbols may create psychological hesitation within an opposing decision-making structure. Rather than physically preventing aggression, this approach seeks to introduce cognitive dissonance and symbolic resistance into the early stages of attack authorization. The central mechanism of this model relies on the possibility that an attacking side may experience internal conflict when military action risks violating its own symbolic values, sacred imagery, leadership mythology, or cultural taboos. This effect is expected to function primarily in pre-conflict or high-tension stages rather than during active warfare. The model is highly conditional and dependent upon accurate cultural understanding, shared symbolic recognition, and the perception of genuine respect rather than provocation. Misapplication may instead produce hostility, nationalist backlash, or symbolic contamination. This paper does not propose symbolic deterrence as a universal replacement for conventional defense systems. Instead, it explores the possibility that cultural understanding and symbolic cognition may function as limited forms of psychological friction capable of influencing human decision-making before conflict escalation.
明洋 山口 (Tue,) studied this question.