Complex systems in medicine, engineering, economics, and governance are typically managed through the regulation of observable variables. While effective in simple systems, this approach fails in complex adaptive systems, where behavior emerges from nonlinear, context-dependent interactions. As a result, interventions that stabilize observable outputs often increase internal strain and reduce long-term system viability.
This paper develops a constraint-based framework for understanding and managing such systems. Viability is defined not as a target state, but as a condition in which system trajectories remain within limits that preserve coherence among load, adaptation, reserve, and structure. These relationships are interpreted operationally through observable proxies, allowing system behavior to be assessed without direct measurement of the underlying constraint.
A dual-scale paradigm is introduced to distinguish between acute stabilization and longer-term navigation. While direct control is necessary to prevent immediate collapse, it must be followed by a transition to constraint-based intervention that reduces strain and restores capacity. The Viability Navigation Protocol formalizes this process by linking relational assessment to iterative action guided by system response.
The framework is demonstrated through a clinical case study and extended across engineered, economic, and governance systems, showing that similar patterns of failure arise from common structural mechanisms. These patterns are expressed as general conditions for persistence, emphasizing the preservation of reserve, regulation of load, limitation of adaptive effort, and maintenance of structural alignment over time.
The central result is that stability cannot be achieved through control of variables alone. It requires maintaining system trajectories within the constraints that allow coherent adaptation.










