CONCEPT
Connectivity and Collapse (Holling's Warning)
Holling's <em>final public warning</em> — rising global connectivity increases the risk of deep collapse that cascades across adaptive cycles.
Near the end of his life, Holling warned that 'rapidly rising connectivity within global systems, both economic and technological, increases the risk of deep collapse' — a collapse that cascades across adaptive cycles at different scales. The warning synthesizes his life's work: connectivity is the mechanism through which revolt propagates upward, and tightly coupled global systems amplify small disturbances into systemic crises. The AI transition is a connectivity event of extraordinary magnitude, propagating disruption across scales faster than remember functions can respond.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The warning has specific structure. Connectivity is not simply bad — it is the mechanism through which efficient coordination, learning, and innovation occur. The danger arises when connectivity increases without corresponding increases in the system's capacity to absorb disturbance across scales. In healthy panarchies, larger, slower scales provide remember functions that cushion smaller-scale disturbances. In highly connected systems under rigidity, the remember functions are outpaced and the revolt propagates unimpeded.
The AI transition exhibits this pathology in pure form. The disruption propagates from task to worker