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Philosophy

[01] Disinformation Dynamics: Unified Framework

Part 1 — Executive Summary and Scope Modern communication systems—political, technological, and cognitive—operate as self-organising fields of feedback. Their coherence does not arise from authority, ideology, or truth, but from rhythm: the timing, repetition, and resonance of interaction. Disinformation exploits this rhythm. It is not merely falsehood, but a manipulation of synchrony, coherence, and recursion—the […]

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Philosophy

[02] Disinformation Dynamics: Recursive Harmonics

2.1 Coherence as a Function of Recursion Every communication system is recursive. It consists of elements that transmit signals influencing their own subsequent states. This self-reference produces coherence. A message gains meaning not because it exists but because it is repeated, referenced, and reinterpreted. Without recursion, meaning is static. With recursion, meaning becomes dynamic and […]

Categories
Philosophy

[04] Disinformation Dynamics: Operational Framework

4.1 Overview Disinformation interdiction is not the elimination of falsehood but the rebalancing of systemic coherence. It operates at the level of phase relationships—how signals align and reinforce one another—rather than semantic truth. The objective is to restore dynamic equilibrium: sufficient synchrony for stability, sufficient noise for adaptability. The system must breathe. Interdiction therefore proceeds […]

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Philosophy

[05] Disinformation Dynamics: Implementation and Resilience

5.1 The Principle of Reflexive Governance Governance within a recursive communication field cannot rely on static regulation. It must function as reflexive control—a governance system that perceives and adjusts its own influence in real time.Each intervention becomes a feedback signal: the regulator is part of the system, not external to it.This principle ensures adaptability without […]

Categories
Philosophy

[06] Disinformation Dynamics: Simulation,  Forecasting, Adaptation

6.1 The Need for Predictive Reflexivity Static policy and reactive moderation fail because communication systems evolve faster than any predefined rule.Disinformation interdiction therefore requires predictive reflexivity—a capacity to anticipate systemic states by modelling their feedback structures. Forecasting in this framework is not prediction of content but simulation of phase evolution: how coherence, entropy, and recursivity […]