Modern systems — biological, ecological, and societal — are increasingly characterized by instability, fragmentation, and failure under stress. Conventional approaches, which focus on isolated components and linear causality, often succeed locally but fail to restore global stability.
This book proposes a unifying framework — the Architecture of Viability — which reframes systems not as collections of parts, but as relational structures governed by minimal conditions for coherence. It identifies seven irreducible conditions — Constraint, Margin, State, Disturbance, Perception, Regulation, and Options — and demonstrates how they form a closed relational structure that governs system behavior across scales.
Building from this foundation, the book shows that system dynamics are inherently path-dependent and context-sensitive, giving rise to patterns of stability (flows) and entrapment (loops). It further establishes that experience is not incidental but functional, providing an internal coordinate system — valence, arousal, and motivation — that enables systems to navigate complex environments.
Extending beyond the individual, the framework introduces relational coherence (Δ_R) and structural coherence (Δ_G), explaining how shared perception, trust, and coordination give rise to stable institutions — or their breakdown into distortion fields.
Rather than prescribing outcomes, the book advances a design paradigm focused on shaping conditions that enable coherence to emerge. Through cross-domain case studies in medicine, infrastructure, and governance, it demonstrates how restoring margin, clarifying signals, and expanding options can transform system behavior.
Finally, it introduces the concept of micro-coherent fields — locally stable pockets of coherence that can propagate and potentially trigger positive tipping points within larger systems.
The result is a unified, scalable framework that integrates structure, dynamics, and experience, offering both diagnostic clarity and practical tools for navigating complexity in an increasingly constrained world.










