Published November 14, 2025 | Version v1
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The Ethics of Instability: Why Embracing Flux Solves Modern Crises

  • 1. ROR icon Singapore University of Social Sciences

Description

This presentation introduces "The Ethics of Instability," a novel ethical framework designed to address the profound complexity, uncertainty, and rapid change characterizing 21st-century challenges. It argues that traditional, stability-based ethical models—reliant on fixed principles, predictable outcomes, and static categories—are not only inadequate but counterproductive in this new reality. Grounded in process philosophy and a "fluctuational epistemology," this framework proposes that instability is not a problem to be solved but a generative condition to be embraced.

The core of the presentation outlines five interconnected principles for ethical action in conditions of radical uncertainty: Generative Flux, Dynamic Relationality, Productive Uncertainty, Intersectional Fluidity, and Transformative Adaptation. These principles shift the focus from individual moral agents to distributed relational networks, from seeking certainty to engaging in experimental learning, and from preserving existing structures to creating new possibilities. The practical application of this framework is demonstrated through case studies in climate adaptation, AI alignment, and social justice, where it is shown to achieve superior outcomes by working with, rather than against, the dynamic nature of modern crises. The Ethics of Instability thus offers a essential paradigm shift, providing a more effective and responsive approach to our most pressing global issues.

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