
The Law of Alignment
The Law of Alignment is a structural principle describing how finite systems sustain coherence — or drift toward collapse — when accumulation and integrative capacity fall out of proportion.
From philosophy to empirical modeling, this site presents the formal law, its foundation in Post-Performance Philosophy, and its mathematical articulation through the Alignment Formula.
A Structural Framework
The Law of Alignment identifies a recurring structural pattern observable across domains: systems accumulate change relative to finite integrative capacity.
When proportional deviation persists, instability compounds. The breach appears sudden — but the misalignment has been compiling long before it becomes visible.
Whether in corporate finance, institutional systems, ecological networks, or individual psychology, sustained proportional deviation increases the likelihood of structural breach.
The Framework
The Law
Post-Performance Philosophy
The Formula
The formal articulation of structural misalignment and its collapse dynamics.
The philosophical foundation examining the structural cost of performance-driven systems.
The mathematical expression of cumulative deviation and empirical testing.
Why Alignment Matters
Modern systems are optimized for speed, scale, and performance. Yet performance alone does not guarantee resilience. Collapse emerges when internal capacity can no longer integrate accumulated structural change.
The Law of Alignment offers a unified lens for understanding systemic fragility before the boundary is breached.
Ramzi Najjar
Ramzi Najjar is a system theorist exploring the structural foundations of coherence and collapse. His work integrates philosophical inquiry with structural modeling, tracing a single invariant across domains: misalignment accumulates.