Why Breakdown Requires a Distinction
Not all failure is the same.
Biological systems routinely exhibit malfunctions:
- a disrupted pathway
- a damaged structure
- a temporary loss of function
Yet the system as a whole may continue to sustain its viability.
APS therefore draws a critical distinction:
Malfunction occurs within a system.
Breakdown occurs when the system itself can no longer be sustained.
This distinction is central to diagnosis.
Step 1 — Identifying the System Under Stress
Consider a biological system under severe perturbation:
- extreme dehydration
- sustained nutrient deprivation
- structural damage beyond repair
The system initially remains identifiable as an organised whole, even as conditions deteriorate.
Step 2 — Constraint Closure Under Degradation
Early in breakdown, constraint closure may still be present.
Processes may continue to:
- interact
- depend on one another
- maintain partial organisation
However, the system begins to lose its ability to regulate the conditions required for continued persistence.
This is the first diagnostic warning:
closure without effective viability-oriented regulation
For clarification, see Constraint Closure — What It Does and What It Does Not Do.
Step 3 — Failure of Perturbation Response
Under continued perturbation, the system’s response changes qualitatively.
Instead of reorganising activity:
- responses become weaker or absent
- coordination breaks down
- processes fail to restore viable conditions
The system shifts from:
- endogenous reorganisation
to - passive degradation
This marks the loss of biological agency.
Step 4 — Degradation of the Viability Gradient (VG)
As breakdown progresses:
- resilience declines
- recovery becomes incomplete or impossible
- persistence is no longer sustained
The system moves toward the lower end of the Viability Gradient.
At the limit:
viability is no longer maintained at all
For VG definition, see The Viability Gradient (VG).
Step 5 — Collapse of the Normativity Gradient (NG)
Normativity degrades alongside viability.
The system loses its ability to:
- differentiate viable from non-viable conditions
- modulate activity in a directed way
- correct deviations from persistence
Activity becomes:
- non-directional
- ineffective
- decoupled from viability
This marks the collapse of the Normativity Gradient.
For NG definition, see The Normativity Gradient (NG).
Step 6 — Loss of Cognitive Integration (CI)
Integration fails as processes decouple.
- coordination across the system breaks down
- responses become local or absent
- temporal continuity is lost
The system no longer operates as a coherent whole.
This is the collapse of Cognitive Integration.
For CI definition, see Cognitive Integration (CI).
Step 7 — The Transition from System to Non-System
At a critical point, the system undergoes a transition:
- organisation is no longer self-sustaining
- processes no longer contribute to continued persistence
- the system no longer maintains its own conditions of existence
What remains may still have structure or residual activity, but it is no longer a biological system in APS terms.
This is organisational collapse.
Why Closure Can Be Misleading
A key diagnostic insight is that closure may persist temporarily during breakdown.
Residual interactions can give the appearance of organisation, but:
- they no longer sustain viability
- they do not restore persistence
- they degrade over time
Diagnosis must therefore distinguish:
- apparent organisation
from - viability-oriented organisation
Breakdown Across Scale
Collapse is often uneven across scale.
A system may:
- lose global coherence while local processes continue
- maintain short-term activity while long-term persistence fails
Diagnosis must therefore assess:
- temporal continuity
- spatial coordination
- integration across processes
From Malfunction to Collapse
The transition from malfunction to collapse is not instantaneous.
It proceeds through stages:
- Local disruption
- Reduced regulatory capacity
- Loss of coordinated response
- Failure to restore viability
- Organisational collapse
Understanding this progression is essential for accurate diagnosis.
What Breakdown Reveals
Breakdown clarifies what defines life.
When viability-oriented organisation is lost:
- agency disappears
- normativity collapses
- integration fails
What remains is no longer a system that sustains itself.
This reveals that life is not defined by structure alone, but by the ongoing activity through which structure is maintained.
A Practical Summary
In cases of breakdown:
- VG declines as viability can no longer be sustained
- NG collapses as activity loses direction toward persistence
- CI fails as coordination across the system breaks down
Together, these changes mark the transition from:
viability-oriented organisation
to
organisational collapse