The Mad King is usually treated as a personality problem. History supplies familiar figures. Erratic rulers, impulsive leaders, volatile decision makers whose behaviour appears to bend events. Yet this framing may be backwards. Instability at the top of power hierarchies may emerge not from individual psychology but from the structure of complex social systems themselves, […]
- Tags administrative incompetence, attention economy, authoritarian dynamics, civilisational tension, cognitive bias, communication systems, complex adaptive systems, complex systems, conflict dynamics, crisis dynamics, de-escalation, diplomacy, distributed cognition, escalation, geopolitical feedback loops, geopolitical risk, geopolitics, global order, global security, global tension, identity politics, instability dynamics, international relations, Iran, Iran retaliation, israel, Israeli military operations, leadership instability, leadership psychology, Mad King hypothesis, mass psychology, media amplification, Middle East, modern conflict, modern warfare, narrative warfare, oil markets, political psychology, political volatility, populism, populist leadership, power dynamics, socio-political instability, Strait of Hormuz, strategic ambiguity, strategic misalignment, structural conflict, systemic instability, systemic risk, technological mediation, US foreign policy, war, world politics