The Limits of Moral Governance: Why Institutions Drift from Reality Under Scale

Abstract

Large-scale governance inevitably introduces abstraction. As societies grow beyond direct interpersonal discernment, mediation becomes necessary, and with it the risk that authority ceases to track lived reality and instead begins to define it. This paper argues that the recurrent moral and political failures of modern institutions are not primarily the result of bad actors, insufficient virtue, or flawed ideologies, but of structural misalignment produced by abstraction under scale. I develop a diagnostic framework identifying the minimal conditions under which moral agency can survive institutional mediation. These include proximity to reality, publicly legible and adjudicable objectives, embodied cultural and institutional memory, smooth transfer of power, and continuous feedback from the governed. When these conditions are violated, institutions accumulate what I term “coherence debt”: unresolved contradictions between lived experience and institutional representations. As coherence debt grows, systems increasingly reinterpret moral correction as threat, leading to the suppression of exemplars and the substitution of obedience for conscience. Rather than proposing a new ideal system, this paper establishes failure boundaries applicable across political, economic, religious, and technological forms of governance. By examining liberal proceduralism, technocracy, market fundamentalism, authoritarian developmentalism, religious legalism, decentralization, and AI-mediated governance through this lens, I show that mainstream approaches fail predictably when they sever feedback loops and monopolize interpretation. Moral rupture, on this account, is not anomalous but structurally inevitable once abstraction outpaces correction. The paper concludes by reframing institutional success not as permanence or moral perfection, but as the capacity for early correction and graceful degradation. Moral agency survives not where institutions enforce virtue, but where they never compel individuals to deny what they can directly perceive and inwardly align with.

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2026-01-29

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