CONCEPT
The Dictatorship of No Alternatives
The pervasive conviction that current institutional arrangements are the only possible ones—false necessity's political expression, operating through imagination foreclosure rather than coercion.
The dictatorship of no alternatives is
Unger's name for the political regime of naturalized necessity—the systematic suppression of
institutional imagination through the conviction that existing arrangements are the only feasible ones, that the choice is
between the given framework and chaos, that questioning fundamental structures is fantasy rather than rigorous democratic thought. This dictatorship operates without dictators—no central authority enforces it, no conspiracy maintains it. It is reproduced daily by institutions presenting themselves as permanent, by theories justifying existing arrangements as optimal, by the gravitational
weight of habit making alternatives literally unimaginable to those who have never encountered them. The AI transition demonstrates the dictatorship operating at
acceleration: within months of
Claude Code's breakthrough, specific arrangements (platform models, individual augmented production, prompt-and-judgment workflows) are being discussed not as contingent choices but as
inevitable responses to technological capability—"this is how AI-augmented work must be organized." Breaking the dictatorship requires not merely critique but construction: the active exercise of institutional imagination building working alternatives that demonstrate the given is not the