Architectural Cost of Choosing Opacity in a Polarized Epistemic Environment
Authors/Creators
Description
This manuscript examines the architectural cost of choosing opacity in a polarized epistemic environment by identifying and analyzing the structural challenges inherent to polarized epistemic life. Using Forced‑Position Framing (FPF), the Epistemic Polarity Framework (EPF), and Supra‑Agency Theory (SAT), it demonstrates that opacity must solve a complex set of structural challenges simply to maintain stability, coherence, and continuity. These challenges are not cultural or historical; they are architectural consequences of selecting the opacity pole within a polarized epistemic system.
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Architectural Cost of Choosing Opacity V1.pdf
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Additional titles
- Subtitle (English)
- The Structural Challenges Inherent to Polarized Epistemic Life
References
- Warman, E. (2026). Forced-Position Framing (FPF) Theory: A Unified Architectural Model Explaining Coercive Communication and Psychological Entrapment. USA: Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18520214.
- Warman, E. (2026). Supra-Agency Theory: A Formal Epistemic Architecture. Extending the Foundations of Structural Transparency and Structural Opacity into Agentic Epistemic Systems. USA: Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18603110.
- Warman, E. (2026). The Epistemic Polarity Framework: Foundations of Transparency and Opacity in Epistemic Systems (1.0.0). USA: Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18526415.