The Architecture of Viability: A Grammar of Coherence for Life, Mind, Society, and Planet | ChatGPT 5.5 Thinking, Gemini and NotebookLM

The Architecture of Viability offers a comprehensive framework for understanding and navigating complex systems, from biological organisms to entire civilizations. The book introduces a novel conceptual structure known as the viability grammar, which connects seven core primitives: constraint, margin, state, disturbance, perception, regulation, and options. These elements form the foundation for assessing the viability of systems across scales, whether in ecology, health, governance, or society.

The book applies this framework to the global metacrisis, addressing interconnected challenges such as climate change, social inequality, health crises, and ecological degradation. Drawing on interdisciplinary insights, including those from systems theory, cognitive science, medical practice, and governance, the work advocates for life-value governance, where policies and actions are aligned with the long-term preservation and expansion of life-capacity.

By integrating Ostrom’s principles of commons governance, Friston’s active inference models, and the work of leading thinkers like McMurtry, Galtung, and Vervaeke, this book provides both a theoretical foundation and practical strategies for regenerative complexity, syndemic governance, and civilizational renewal. This work aims to empower readers to understand and respond to the complex, interdependent systems that govern life, offering a roadmap to navigate and renew systems under threat of collapse.

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The Field of Viability Framework: A Relational Life-Course Model of Health, Well-Being, and Collective Action | ChatGPT 5.5 Thinking, Gemini and NotebookLM

Modern medicine and public health have achieved extraordinary gains in diagnosis, acute care, infectious disease control, surgery, and the treatment of organ-specific pathology. Yet the dominant health paradigm remains poorly equipped for the chronic, developmental, relational, ecological, commercial, and political-economic conditions that increasingly shape contemporary disease and suffering. Chronic illness, multimorbidity, mental distress, developmental vulnerability, ecological degradation, social fragmentation, digital disorientation, and health inequity cannot be adequately understood through the isolated individual body alone, nor by adding social determinants as external background factors.

This white paper proposes The Field of Viability Framework, a relational life-course model of health, well-being, and collective action. The framework defines health as the life-course viability of the developing person-in-field: the capacity to continue, recover, develop, relate, participate, and flourish under changing biological, relational, institutional, ecological, cultural, commercial, and political-economic conditions. Its core diagnostic engine is a seven-primitives viability grammar: constraints, margins, state, disturbance, perception, regulation, and options. These primitives provide a portable language for understanding how conditions preserve, erode, restore, or expand life-capacity across scales.

The framework integrates insights from biomedicine, biopsychosocial medicine, life-course health development, social determinants of health, commercial determinants, exposome science, allostasis and allostatic load, early relational health, interoception, syndemics, planetary health, systems thinking, civil commons theory, and implementation science. It reframes disease as a trajectory of narrowing viability, healing as restoration of viable coupling between person and field, prevention as life-field design, policy as field regulation, and governance as the coordination of coordination in service of life-capacity.

The Field of Viability Framework does not replace biomedical diagnosis or public-health evidence. It situates them within a wider relational model that links embodied physiology, lived experience, field conditions, condition-generating systems, and collective action. Its aim is to provide clinicians, public-health practitioners, researchers, policymakers, communities, and institutions with a shared grammar for coordinating healing, prevention, policy, research, and governance around the preservation and expansion of viable life.

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