Tag Archives: reproductive desynchronisation

Ontological Desynchronisation: From Birthgaps and Behavioural Sinks to Algorithmic Capture

Ontological Desynchronisation offers a compelling synthesis of demographic, behavioural, and algorithmic dynamics to explain contemporary societal fragility. Building on reproductive desynchronisation and behavioural sink theory, it introduces ontological capture as a missing mechanism linking algorithmic governance to population collapse and civic erosion. The article is strongest in showing how temporal compression undermines judgement, coordination, and intergenerational continuity. While some remedies remain aspirational, the framework is original, integrative, and strategically valuable, reframing collapse not as decline in numbers alone but as a failure of shared time, attention, and becoming.

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Reproductive Desynchronisation: Birthgap, Behavioural Sink, and the Missing Mechanism in Population Collapse

Birthgap and the Illusion of Choice: Why Population Collapse and Behavioural Sink Are the Same Crisis Seen from Different Scales. This article argues that modern societies face a dual crisis that only appears contradictory: demographic decline alongside rising social and psychological overload. Drawing on demographic research, behavioural-sink theory, and the Birthgap thesis, it shows how delayed parenthood and declining fertility coexist with intensified competition, urban stress, and digital saturation. The core mechanism is reproductive and social desynchronisation, which produces biologically emptier societies that nevertheless feel increasingly crowded. Together, these dynamics reveal a structural failure of modern social organisation rather than a matter of individual choice. The illusion of choice is that there is a choice.

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