Efficiency, Rigidity, and Collapse: Structural Fragility in the Age of AICivilization Physics — Structural Stability & Governance Series This paper examines a central paradox of AI-driven modernization: systems optimized for maximum efficiency often become structurally fragile. While artificial intelligence dramatically enhances visibility, consistency, and rule enforcement, it simultaneously erodes the informal flexibility, discretion, and ambiguity that historically allowed complex social systems to absorb shocks without collapsing. Using the Law of Frame—Frame=Presence×Integrity×Rigidity the paper shows how excessive Rigidity, when unbalanced by human Presence and contextual judgment, produces brittle systems prone to cascading failure. AI increases formal Presence (surveillance, real-time monitoring) and Integrity (rule consistency), but often collapses qualitative presence: empathy, discretion, and situational understanding. The result is a trust structure that appears strong yet fractures under stress. The analysis traces how AI collapses historical “gray zones” that once functioned as safety buffers in law, labor, governance, and infrastructure. Automated enforcement transforms minor deviations into system-level events, eliminates informal forgiveness and delay mechanisms, and tightens coupling across institutions. Drawing on Normal Accident Theory, ecology analogies (monoculture fragility), and case studies from algorithmic management, transportation, finance, and public administration, the paper demonstrates how hyper-optimization trades resilience for output. A core contribution is the introduction of “breathable rigidity” as a design principle for AI governance. Rather than rejecting structure, breathable rigidity preserves accountability while reintroducing elasticity through: human-in-the-loop escalation for edge cases, deliberate decision delays and grace periods, tunable ambiguity and fuzzy thresholds, structured forgiveness and second-chance protocols, asymmetric rigidity across power hierarchies (stricter for institutions, more mercy for individuals). The paper argues that resilience emerges not from perfect enforcement, but from graceful degradation—systems that bend under stress instead of shattering. Efficiency without elasticity leads to legitimacy loss, adversarial gaming, public backlash, and eventual collapse. The conclusion is non-normative and structural: some inefficiency is not waste, but infrastructure. Slack, discretion, and human judgment are not legacy flaws to be eliminated, but essential components of stable, high-trust systems in the AI era. Designing AI to preserve these buffers is a prerequisite for sustainable governance, social legitimacy, and long-term civilizational stability. Keywords: AI Efficiency · Structural Fragility · Rigidity Trap · Law of Frame · Presence × Integrity × Rigidity · Normal Accident Theory · Human-in-the-Loop · Breathable Rigidity · Trust Collapse · Civilization Physics
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Xiangyu Guo (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6974616cbb9d90c67120b4d2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18335016
Xiangyu Guo
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