When facts do matter but the conflict persists, the cause is usually broken communication loops or historical betrayal. Example: A team agrees on a plan but accuses each other of bad faith.
occurs when the source of the resistance is not a lack of information, not a misheard instruction, nor a zero-sum resource constraint—but a fundamental clash of underlying belief systems.
represents the encounter with the "Other"—a conflicting ideology, a stubborn fact, or a material reality that refuses to bend to the ideology’s will.
While ideology is often viewed as a static set of beliefs—a lens through which we view the world—the treats it as a dynamic process. It maps the journey of a belief as it collides with reality, opposition, or contradictory data. This article serves as a deep dive into this theoretical framework, breaking down how the flowchart works, why it is essential for understanding modern polarization, and how it can be used to predict outcomes in social and political conflicts.
Examples of pure ideological friction:
In the world of Ideology in Friction the story follows , two elite knights known as "Inquisitors" who are tasked with defending the last bastions of humanity against a tide of demonic invaders
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