The global order has entered a rupture rather than a transition. Institutions, rules, and economic narratives that once coordinated stability now persist without delivering the outcomes they promise. This white paper offers a disciplined diagnosis of that rupture by identifying the core false assumptions — economic, monetary, political, and institutional — that continue to guide policy despite mounting evidence of their failure.
Integrating life-value onto-axiology, modern monetary realism, and central-bank operational knowledge, the paper distinguishes real constraints from artificial ones and reframes stability in terms of life capacity rather than rule compliance or financial throughput. It argues that the persistence of a rules-based vocabulary without life-coherent outcomes constitutes a form of objective falsity: systems appear functional by internal metrics while undermining the conditions of their own reproduction.
Moving beyond critique, the paper outlines a life-coherent alternative grounded in honest measurement, shared resilience, and capacity-building under ecological limits. Written for policymakers, central bankers, and institutional leaders, it seeks not to assign blame but to restore coherence between what is known, what is said, and what is done — so that governance can once again serve the conditions of life across time.










