Full-Stack Civilizational Engineering: The Most Dangerous Thing Humans Do
What happens when someone tries to engineer an entire civilization from first principles?
This episode of Mechanism Realism examines full-stack civilizational engineering: the attempt to connect ontology, language, diagnosis, mechanism design, and institutional reform into one coherent system. It is the most powerful thing a human mind can attempt, because it operates at the level that determines how millions of people coordinate. It is also the most dangerous, because a full stack is an amplifier. If the core ontology is wrong, the error does not stay in a book, theory, or policy memo. It spreads into law, administration, language, institutions, and social life.
The episode walks through historical attempts: Xunzi and the Qin state, Bentham’s utility calculus, Marxism and the Soviet Union, Saint-Simon and Comte’s scientific administration, Technocracy Inc.’s energy accounting, and Stafford Beer’s Cybersyn. Across the cases, recurring failure modes appear: capture, political irrelevance, legibility traps, and self-sealing systems that treat dissent as proof of their own correctness.
The deeper claim is that every full-stack civilizational system is an institutional superintelligence. It has a world model, an optimization target, and the power to reshape its environment. The catastrophes of the past were alignment failures: systems optimized for proxies while destroying the substrate they were meant to preserve.
The question is not whether civilizational engineering is dangerous. It is. The question is whether the alternative — leaving civilization to drift through mechanisms nobody designs, measures, or repairs — is more dangerous still.
https://kunnas.com/articles/full-stack-civilizational-engineering [https://kunnas.com/articles/full-stack-civilizational-engineering]