Order in the Fog: Entropy or Engineering?
History teaches us that collapse happens. Empires overextend. Economies miscalculate. Systems corrode under their own complexity. Entropy is not a theory — it is a law. Structures decay when maintenance fails. Institutions weaken when trust erodes. Disorder can be organic. But acceleration feels different from decay. Decay is gradual. Acceleration is layered. It feels as though crises do not replace one another — they stack. Economic tension overlaps with cultural fragmentation. Technological disruption overlaps with political volatility. Environmental instability overlaps with information overload. The sensation is not simply that something is falling apart. It is that something is being pushed forward at speed. So March asks a disciplined question: Are we witnessing random disorder — or systemic acceleration? This is not a call to paranoia. It is a call to pattern recognition. Entropy does not strategize. Design does. When confusion spreads, attention fractures. When attention fractu...