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Published November 26, 2025 | Version v1
Working paper Open

The Universal Robustness Trade-off: Entropic Forces vs. Structural Integrity in Scale-Free Systems

Description

Complex systems often exhibit a "Robust Yet Fragile" (RYF) paradox: structures optimized for specific functions are highly resilient to anticipated perturbations but vulnerable to unexpected ones. Concurrently, the prevalence of scale-free architectures with intermediate tail exponents ($2 < \gamma < 3$) contradicts naive Maximum Entropy (MaxEnt) predictions favoring maximal heterogeneity ($\gamma \to 2$). This paper resolves these contradictions by introducing a Duality Theory of Robustness and proving the Principle of Maximal Heterogeneity (PMH), formalized within Majorization Theory. We distinguish between Entropic Robustness (R-I, Schur-concave), resisting stochastic (Type-S) noise, and Structural Robustness (R-II, Schur-convex), resisting targeted (Type-T) stress. We rigorously prove that R-I manifests as a universal, accelerating (convex) information-theoretic force driving $\gamma \to 2$. Conversely, R-II drives the system toward order ($\gamma \to \infty$). The observed intermediate $\gamma^*$ represents an equilibrium optimizing the universal trade-off between these opposing forces. This framework provides a rigorous foundation for the RYF paradox and offers a falsifiable prediction: any deviation from $\gamma=2$ implies active optimization against Type-T structural constraints.

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The_Universal_Robustness_Trade_off__Entropic_Forces_vs__Structural_Integrity_in_Scale_Free_Systems.pdf

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Dates

Created
2025-11-26