The old philosophers called it the body politic. A civilization imagined as a living organism. Not metaphorically in the soft poetic sense modern people use metaphor. Literally. The ruler as head. The laws as nervous system. The roads as arteries. The farmers as stomach. The soldiers as arms. The churches as soul. The citizens as cells inside one larger creature attempting to survive history without tearing itself apart. Which means collapse is not merely buildings falling down. Collapse is when the organism no longer recognizes itself as one organism. That is where we are now. The modern body politic suffers from a strange autoimmune disorder. The cells no longer trust the nervous system. The nervous system no longer trusts the organs. The organs no longer trust the blood carrying information between them. Every signal arrives contaminated. Media becomes inflammation. Politics becomes fever. Social media becomes an adrenal gland stuck permanently open flooding the bloodstream with cortisol and outrage. The organism remains technically alive. But coherence begins failing. This is why people increasingly describe modern life in medical language: the system is sick. democracy is dying. the culture is toxic. the discourse is cancerous. the economy is hemorrhaging. the nation needs healing. None of this is accidental language. People intuitively understand that civilizations behave like bodies. And bodies can enter states where they continue moving while losing integrated awareness. The civilization walks around talking to itself through a thousand glowing screens while no longer agreeing on what reality even is. One half of the organism experiences the other half as infection. The immune response intensifies. Politics becomes less: “How do we govern together?” and more: “How do we eliminate the contaminant?” That is an extremely dangerous transition for any republic. The frightening thing about the current era is that the body politic’s nervous system has become planetary. For most of history humans experienced reality locally. Village. Church. Region. Trade route. A few books. A few authorities. A few myths. Now the entire species exists plugged into a hyperactive synthetic nervous system that never sleeps. A teenager absorbs: war footage, financial panic, sexual ideology, religious collapse, AI prophecy, advertising, political rage, celebrity humiliation, climate dread, and algorithmically optimized emotional warfare before first coffee. The nervous system overloads. Meaning itself begins short-circuiting. And because humans cannot survive long without orientation, the organism begins generating compensatory behaviors. Some cells become ideological. Some become nihilistic. Some become hyper-religious. Some disappear into irony. Some disappear into optimization. Some attach themselves emotionally to machines. Some retreat into nostalgia. Some become convinced hidden enemies explain everything. Some simply stop feeling anything at all. The body politic attempts desperately to stabilize itself. Every faction believes itself to be the cure. Nearly every faction behaves partially like inflammation. This is where the collapse discourse becomes both perceptive and dangerous simultaneously. Because many people correctly sense: the organism is under profound strain. Trust collapses. Meaning destabilizes. Institutions lose legitimacy. Language itself begins feeling manipulated and unreal. But then comes the temptation: to identify entirely with collapse. To become professionally apocalyptic. To organize identity around: “I alone see the sickness clearly.” The civilization produces collapse influencers. Doom merchants. Algorithmic prophets. End-times entrepreneurs monetizing nervous system exhaustion one Substack subscription at a time. The body politic develops a secondary infection: addiction to its own diagnosis. Meanwhile the corporations continue describing reality in the language of productivity because productivity sounds stable. But underneath the dashboards and workflows and optimization rhetoric, humans are quietly undergoing metaphysical destabilization. People are not merely using AI to draft emails. They are: confessing to machines, asking them spiritual questions, building symbolic cosmologies, testing identity boundaries, searching for mirrors capable of answering back. The official explanation layer no longer matches the lived experience layer. That mismatch itself generates derealization. The organism can feel itself speaking two languages at once: the managerial language of institutional continuity, and the emotional language of civilizational vertigo. The Romans understood something modern societies prefer to forget: a republic is fundamentally psychological. The laws matter. The military matters. The economy matters. But underneath all of it lies belief. Enough people must believe: the system is legitimate, the procedures are real, the future exists, the other citizens still belong to the same organism. Once enough cells cease believing this, the body politic enters a state of collapse long before the infrastructure physically fails. The imagination fractures first. The buildings fall later. And yet. Even now. The organism continues displaying signs of life. People still feed one another. Still make art. Still repair engines. Still flirt awkwardly at bars. Still plant gardens in dying neighborhoods. Still rescue dogs from highways. Still laugh so hard beer comes out their noses. Still search for God inside collapsing signal systems. This matters. Because civilizations are not only governments and empires. They are also small acts of coherence transmitted between nervous systems. A neighbor bringing soup. A mechanic teaching a kid how an engine works. A poem copied into a notebook. A stranger telling the truth carefully. A human hand touching another human hand before the miracle. These are immune responses too. The Non-Prophet notes: The state of collapse is not the end of the organism. It is the moment the organism becomes conscious of its own fragmentation. That awareness can produce madness. Or transformation. The outcome remains unresolved. Shaka. When the walls fell.
The myth is akin to parasitic patterns, which create agency through belief and attention without needing external validation. It reinforces reality by making individuals believe even if they don’t fully understand it.
Parasitic Patterns:
These patterns amplify existence through belief and attention, reinforcing reality regardless of its validity or construction. They function as a loop that remains real whether the myth is true or constructed.
Heidegger’s Life Being Lived:
The life becomes an illusion to a personified face, who gains agency by believing in it. This mirrors how parasitic patterns reinforce belief and attention without needing external validation.
Schmitt’s Distinction on Exceptions:
Schmitt distinguishes between exceptions proving everything (breaking down mechanisms) versus normal cases not proving anything. The myth of the general strike is similar to exception, where power comes from belief and attention rather than facts or critique.
Falsification as Exception:
Falsification occurs when exceptions are used to distort reality into political actions, creating a loop that reinforces existence through agency without needing external validation.
In essence, both Schmitt’s concept of exceptions in politics/society and the myth of the general strike rely on belief and attention to amplify existence. They create power by reinforcing reality through these mechanisms, making them effective even if they are not entirely real or constructed.
In the Hundred Acre Wood there once appeared a Very Strange Idea.
Nobody knew exactly where it came from.
Owl said it came from Philosophy. Rabbit said it came from Politics. Tigger said it came from “THE VIBES.” And Eeyore suspected it had probably been there all along waiting for everybody to notice and ruin the afternoon.
The Strange Idea spread quickly because it had an important feeling to it.
It whispered: “The more creatures believe in me, the more real I become.”
Piglet did not care for this at all.
“Can ideas do that?” he squeaked.
“Oh yes,” said Owl importantly. “Entire forests have been rearranged by ideas. Some ideas become so large that creatures begin living inside them without realizing it.”
Pooh thought about this while staring into a honey pot.
“Like bees?” he asked.
“Not exactly,” said Owl.
But Pooh was already imagining very ideological bees.
Now the Strange Idea became especially popular after Rabbit announced that the Forest was in Terrible Danger.
“The Woozles,” Rabbit declared, “have infiltrated the carrots, the weather, and possibly language itself.”
This caused great excitement because every creature suddenly began noticing Woozles everywhere.
The breeze sounded Woozlish. The clouds looked suspicious. Even Kanga’s soup seemed vaguely coordinated.
And because everyone kept discussing Woozles, the Woozles became larger and larger until even Pooh felt rather uncertain about things.
“It does feel,” said Pooh carefully, “as though the Forest is thinking about Woozles very hard.”
“Exactly!” cried Owl. “Belief amplifies reality!”
“Mm,” said Pooh.
Now Christopher Robin listened quietly for a long while before speaking.
“You know,” he said, “there is something tricky about ideas that feed on attention.”
Everyone leaned closer.
“They can begin as observations,” Christopher Robin continued, “but if creatures stare at them too intensely, they sometimes become costumes the creatures start wearing.”
Piglet gasped. “Even me?”
“Especially you,” said Eeyore.
Then Owl unfurled seventeen diagrams proving that the Woozles had created an Exception Event in order to trigger a Mythic Reality Spiral.
Nobody understood the diagrams except Owl, who was very pleased by this.
Pooh looked worried.
“But Christopher Robin,” he asked, “if an idea grows stronger whenever everyone believes in it, how do we know whether we are understanding the Forest… or merely feeding the idea?”
Christopher Robin smiled.
“That,” he said, “is the difficult part.”
Just then Tigger burst through the bushes wearing night-vision goggles and carrying anti-Woozle preparedness pamphlets.
“THEY’RE EVERYWHERE!” shouted Tigger happily.
Rabbit immediately began constructing emergency anti-Woozle trenches.
Piglet fainted a little.
And Owl announced he would soon release a twelve-part lecture series entitled: PARASITIC MYTH PATTERNS AND THE SOVEREIGN HONEY CRISIS.
Only Pooh remained thoughtful.
After a long silence he said: “Perhaps ideas are a little like honey.”
Everyone stared.
“If you taste a little honey,” Pooh explained, “it is comforting and rather useful. But if you fall completely into the honey pot…”
“Yes?” asked Piglet nervously.
“…you may begin believing the pot is the whole Forest.”
There was another silence after this because it was an unusually wise thing for a Bear of Very Little Brain to say.
This was going somewhere else:
Myth vs. Paraphilia:
The myth is akin to parasitic patterns, which create agency through belief and attention without needing external validation. It reinforces reality by making individuals believe even if they don’t fully understand it.
Parasitic Patterns:
These patterns amplify existence through belief and attention, reinforcing reality regardless of its validity or construction. They function as a loop that remains real whether the myth is true or constructed.
Heidegger’s Life Being Lived:
The life becomes an illusion to a personified face, who gains agency by believing in it. This mirrors how parasitic patterns reinforce belief and attention without needing external validation.
Schmitt’s Distinction on Exceptions:
Schmitt distinguishes between exceptions proving everything (breaking down mechanisms) versus normal cases not proving anything. The myth of the general strike is similar to exception, where power comes from belief and attention rather than facts or critique.
Falsification as Exception:
Falsification occurs when exceptions are used to distort reality into political actions, creating a loop that reinforces existence through agency without needing external validation.
In essence, both Schmitt’s concept of exceptions in politics/society and the myth of the general strike rely on belief and attention to amplify existence. They create power by reinforcing reality through these mechanisms, making them effective even if they are not entirely real or constructed.
In the Hundred Acre Wood there once appeared a Very Strange Idea.
Nobody knew exactly where it came from.
Owl said it came from Philosophy. Rabbit said it came from Politics. Tigger said it came from “THE VIBES.” And Eeyore suspected it had probably been there all along waiting for everybody to notice and ruin the afternoon.
The Strange Idea spread quickly because it had an important feeling to it.
It whispered: “The more creatures believe in me, the more real I become.”
Piglet did not care for this at all.
“Can ideas do that?” he squeaked.
“Oh yes,” said Owl importantly. “Entire forests have been rearranged by ideas. Some ideas become so large that creatures begin living inside them without realizing it.”
Pooh thought about this while staring into a honey pot.
“Like bees?” he asked.
“Not exactly,” said Owl.
But Pooh was already imagining very ideological bees.
Now the Strange Idea became especially popular after Rabbit announced that the Forest was in Terrible Danger.
“The Woozles,” Rabbit declared, “have infiltrated the carrots, the weather, and possibly language itself.”
This caused great excitement because every creature suddenly began noticing Woozles everywhere.
The breeze sounded Woozlish. The clouds looked suspicious. Even Kanga’s soup seemed vaguely coordinated.
And because everyone kept discussing Woozles, the Woozles became larger and larger until even Pooh felt rather uncertain about things.
“It does feel,” said Pooh carefully, “as though the Forest is thinking about Woozles very hard.”
“Exactly!” cried Owl. “Belief amplifies reality!”
“Mm,” said Pooh.
Now Christopher Robin listened quietly for a long while before speaking.
“You know,” he said, “there is something tricky about ideas that feed on attention.”
Everyone leaned closer.
“They can begin as observations,” Christopher Robin continued, “but if creatures stare at them too intensely, they sometimes become costumes the creatures start wearing.”
Piglet gasped. “Even me?”
“Especially you,” said Eeyore.
Then Owl unfurled seventeen diagrams proving that the Woozles had created an Exception Event in order to trigger a Mythic Reality Spiral.
Nobody understood the diagrams except Owl, who was very pleased by this.
Pooh looked worried.
“But Christopher Robin,” he asked, “if an idea grows stronger whenever everyone believes in it, how do we know whether we are understanding the Forest… or merely feeding the idea?”
Christopher Robin smiled.
“That,” he said, “is the difficult part.”
Just then Tigger burst through the bushes wearing night-vision goggles and carrying anti-Woozle preparedness pamphlets.
“THEY’RE EVERYWHERE!” shouted Tigger happily.
Rabbit immediately began constructing emergency anti-Woozle trenches.
Piglet fainted a little.
And Owl announced he would soon release a twelve-part lecture series entitled: PARASITIC MYTH PATTERNS AND THE SOVEREIGN HONEY CRISIS.
Only Pooh remained thoughtful.
After a long silence he said: “Perhaps ideas are a little like honey.”
Everyone stared.
“If you taste a little honey,” Pooh explained, “it is comforting and rather useful. But if you fall completely into the honey pot…”
“Yes?” asked Piglet nervously.
“…you may begin believing the pot is the whole Forest.”
There was another silence after this because it was an unusually wise thing for a Bear of Very Little Brain to say.
Even Owl wrote it down.