Category Foundational Methodology

A methodology for building systems based on existential rights and the functions of entities, establishing a balanced and just environment.

The Crisis of Confronting Hegemony: Between the Imperial Dimension and the Civilizational Dimension

Hegemony is not merely military or economic power imposed directly; it is a composite system that gains stability when imperial power converges with civilizational capacity to shape minds through shared language and standards. Here lies the crisis of confrontation: armed or economic resistance, no matter how strong, cannot alone secure lasting independence unless it is coupled with a civilizational project capable of protecting humanity from cultural and cognitive penetration and of providing a unifying alternative that transcends internal divisions.

The Foundational Method: Toward Rebuilding Systems on Stable Rational–Takamolya Grounds

Traditional methods—whether historical, ideological, or systemic—have failed to produce stable and effective systems. They either recycle accumulated crises, rely on unproven assumptions, or merely manage symptoms without addressing roots.

The essential problem, then, is: How can we design new systems that do not reproduce old errors, but are instead built upon rational–Takamolya foundations that safeguard human function and existential rights?
(See: From Existential Rights to System Design.)

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