Life-Coherent Civilization: From World-Bringing to Participatory Repair | ChatGPT-5.5 Thinking and NotebookLM

This book develops a life-coherent framework for understanding and repairing the dominant civilizational order. Its central claim is that human beings do not simply perceive, manage, or occupy a pre-given world. Through language, institutions, economies, technologies, laws, educational systems, health systems, and practices of coordination, we participate in bringing forth the worlds we inhabit. The decisive question is therefore not only whether a worldview is internally coherent, operationally efficient, legally valid, economically productive, or culturally powerful, but whether the world it brings forth enables or disables life.

The argument is built around three foundational correctives. From Humberto Maturana and Francisco Varela, it takes the insight that cognition is not passive representation of an independent world, but embodied, relational, and enacted world-bringing by living systems structurally coupled to their media. From John McMurtry, it takes the life-value principle: that good and bad are ultimately grounded in whether thought, institutions, and systems enable or disable the life-capacities of beings and communities. From Johan Galtung, it takes the expanded account of violence as direct, structural, and cultural life-disablement, and peace as the active creation of conditions for human and ecological flourishing.

Together, these lines of thought make visible the central error of the dominant paradigm: it has inverted the relation between life and its instruments. Economy, law, technology, governance, knowledge, education, and health systems were historically justified as means of securing life, yet under the dominant civilizational order they are repeatedly reorganized as if life itself must adapt to their imperatives. This book names that inversion, diagnoses its category errors, and develops a life-coherent alternative.

The proposed alternative is the life-coherent vessel: a framework for reordering civilization around the conditions that make life possible. The vessel is not a utopian blueprint, ideological program, or technocratic master plan. It is a diagnostic and practical architecture for asking: What world is being brought forth? Whose life is enabled or disabled? What forms of violence are hidden in normal arrangements? What civil commons are being protected or destroyed? What feedback is being ignored? What forms of repair are now required?

The book proceeds from first principles to applied practice. It begins with the human being as a world-bringing animal; develops the Maturana–McMurtry–Galtung triad; examines the great inversion of dominant civilization; derives the life-coherent vessel; formulates the Life-Coherence Test; situates major correctives across ecology, economy, power, knowledge, law, and governance; and applies the framework to water, health, education, economy, and governance as civil commons. It then offers practical tools for life-coherent praxis: the Field Cycle of Repair, the Life-Coherence Dashboard, and transition pathways for moving from inverted systems toward participatory repair.

The book concludes that a life-coherent civilization is not one that abolishes conflict, uncertainty, plurality, suffering, or error. It is one that learns to organize its institutions around the continuous detection and repair of avoidable life-disablement. Its aim is not to add another theory to the existing archive of civilizational critique, but to offer a usable framework for seeing, judging, and acting differently: a way of bringing forth worlds that remain answerable to life.

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