Friday, May 27, 2022

The Fear Instinct Causes Suboptimal Resource Allocation

This study examines how resources can be optimally allocated to support feasible activities and promote harmonic balance within a system platform. The goal is to configure ideal protocols aligning with efficiency and systemic equilibrium.
Systems Owners often prioritize resource distribution based on perceived threats rather than ethical or equitable principles. This tendency stems from the activation of the Fear Instinct, which overrides the pursuit of balanced and righteous asset sharing. A set of algorithmic behaviors, the Network of Competitive Instincts, emerges to protect the system from external disruptions. However, these mechanisms may obscure predictable and sustainable designs that would otherwise support harmonious and productive system operations.
In the first case scenario, suboptimal asset sharing reduces security across system layers and diminishes satisfaction for internal and external stakeholders. When resources are ineffectively distributed, some components risk entering breakdown states, while others experience increased insecurity, anxiety, and systemic imbalance.
System Owners, driven by the Fear Instinct, tend to centralize financial control and deprioritize optimal resource allocation to maintain operational resilience. The Survival Instinct reinforces this behavior by attempting to rescue the Fear Instinct from entering an open-loop cycle or a perceived starvation mode in the Subconscious Component.
Meanwhile, the aggressive impulses of the Network of Competitive Instincts influence system design decisions without relying on rational data within the Conscious Component. As a result, the decision-making process lacks coherent, rational codes, leading to suboptimal outcomes despite intentions to secure the system platform.
 
Observation:
Suboptimal resource allocation within social contexts and communities can lead to growing inequality, gradually destabilizing social harmony. Over time, this imbalance may sustain systemic dysfunction and ultimately trigger processes of collapse or profound transformation.

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