CONCEPT
The Pulsing Paradigm
Odum's 1995 thesis that
all complex systems pulse — growing, peaking, releasing, reorganizing, and growing again — and that the quality of structures built during growth determines whether the release produces renewal or collapse.
The Odums proposed the pulsing paradigm as the fundamental rhythm of all sustainable complex systems. Forests do not grow to steady states and remain there; they accumulate biomass over decades, then release it through fire or storm, then reorganize and grow again, each cycle building on the nutrient base the previous cycle deposited. The four stages — growth, conservation, release,
reorganization — map onto
the adaptive cycle in ecological theory and onto the stages
Edo Segal describes in every technological transition. The pulse is
inevitable. What is not inevitable is what is built during the growth phase. Systems that accumulate diverse reserves regenerate rapidly after release; systems that maximize flow at the expense of storage collapse instead.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Odum derived the principle from decades of observation across systems at every scale. Mangrove forests, tropical ecosystems, industrial economies, and civilizations all exhibited the same rhythm: resource accumulation during growth, release triggered by