Microanomics

Micro-Anomics is an individual-scale structural analysis of non-settlement that examines how modern roles prevent completion, discharge, and exit without invoking psychology, motivation, or moral failure. Treating individuals strictly as role-bearers, the book shows how institutional settlement failure is transmitted into role configurations that require persistent participation while rendering terminal success structurally unsafe. Using the core variables of settlement capacity and interpretive load under conditions of irreversible time, Micro-Anomics identifies negative role systems, proceduralized roles, identity without discharge, insight without decision, temporal non-settlement, and ambient unfinishability as stable role-level outcomes of anomic saturation. The analysis specifies how effort, responsibility, interpretation, and exposure accumulate without authorized conclusion, and it terminates without prescription, reform, or appeal to interior experience.

Micro-Anomics — Preface

ANOMICS FIELD DEFINITION

Diagnostic Orientation: How to Use Micro-Anomics

Chapter 1 — Roles as Structural Units

Chapter 2 — Completion, Discharge, and Exit

Chapter 3 — Interpretive Load at the Individual Level

Chapter 4 — Micro-Anomic Saturation

Chapter 5 — Negative Role Systems

Chapter 6 — Terminal Role Incompatibility

Chapter 7 — Discouraged Completion Roles

Chapter 8 — Process Without Arrival

Chapter 9 — Identity Without Discharge

Chapter 10 — Insight Without Decision

Chapter 11 — Proceduralized Roles

Chapter 12 — Temporal Non-Settlement

Chapter 13 — Ambient Unfinishability

Chapter 14 — Individual Effects of Micro-Anomic Saturation

Chapter 15 — Micro → Macro Boundary

Chapter 16 - Conclusion

Appendix: Counterexample Roles and Boundary Conditions