If coherence is good — measurably, physically, across every domain — then how did Western culture arrive at a place where tearing down structure is called liberation?
This isn't a mystery. It's a process. And it has a physics description: entropy marketing itself as freedom.
Isaiah described the phenomenon 2,700 years ago. Now we can describe the mechanism.
The Vocabulary Swap
Every word was inverted. What physics measures as coherence got relabeled as oppression. What physics measures as decoherence got relabeled as freedom. Watch:
Every line above is coherence relabeled as oppression and decoherence relabeled as freedom. The physics didn't change. The vocabulary did.
The Mechanisms of Inversion
This didn't happen by accident. There are specific, identifiable mechanisms by which entropy sells itself as liberation. Each one exploits a real feature of human psychology.
Coherence requires effort. Structure takes energy to build and maintain — the Second Law guarantees this. Decoherence is the path of least resistance. It feels like relief. The brain rewards the removal of constraint with a dopamine hit.
This is why "breaking free" feels good in the moment even when it destroys you long-term. The neurochemistry rewards entropy. Every addiction is this mechanism in miniature — short-term dopamine from long-term decoherence.
Entropy feels like autonomy. When you reject structure, you briefly feel like you're "choosing for yourself." But what you're actually doing is removing the coherence field that was giving you degrees of freedom in the first place.
A fish that "liberates" itself from water hasn't gained freedom — it's gained death. Structure enables freedom. Removing structure kills it. The piano has 88 keys constrained in a specific tuning. Remove the constraints and you don't get "free music" — you get noise.
Once you deny that truth is objective (informational decoherence), everything downstream collapses. If truth is subjective, then morality is subjective. If morality is subjective, then beauty is subjective. If beauty is subjective, then meaning is subjective.
Each step feels "tolerant" and "open-minded." But what's actually happening is a cascade of decoherence across domains. The signal is being replaced by noise, frame by frame, until nothing has structure.
Physics has a word for maximum relativism: heat death. Every particle at the same temperature. No gradients. No structure. No information. No life. That's what "everything is equally valid" looks like when you follow it to completion.
The final move: anyone who defends coherence is accused of being the source of decoherence. "You're causing harm by insisting on truth." "Your boundaries are violence." "Your standards are exclusion."
This is diagnostically precise. It's the immune system being told it's the disease. In biology, this is called an autoimmune disorder — when the body's defense mechanisms are tricked into attacking the body itself. The Great Inversion is a civilizational autoimmune disorder.
The Physics Diagnosis
None of this is philosophically subtle. In physics terms:
The Great Inversion is a civilization-scale increase in entropy, disguised as moral progress, driven by the neurochemical reward of constraint removal.
It isn't liberating anyone. It's dissolving the coherence structures that make freedom, meaning, beauty, and life possible.
And here's the part that should terrify: this is exactly what the Second Law predicts. Without external input, systems move toward maximum entropy. The Great Inversion isn't a moral failing — it's the default behavior of any system that disconnects from its coherence source.
The only thing that reverses entropy is external energy input. The only thing that reverses moral decoherence is external coherence input. Physics calls it negentropy. Theology calls it grace.
"Lawlessness" is moral decoherence. "Love growing cold" is relational decoherence. Jesus described entropy in human terms two thousand years before Clausius formalized it in physical terms. Same phenomenon. Different instrument.
The Test
If the Inversion thesis is correct — if what our culture calls "progress" is actually decoherence — then there should be measurable consequences. The same way you can measure a system's entropy, you should be able to measure the decoherence of a civilization. And you can:
Rising rates of anxiety, depression, suicide, addiction, loneliness, institutional distrust, family dissolution, meaning-crisis. Every metric of human flourishing has declined as the Inversion advanced. The data is the measurement. The culture is the experiment. And entropy is winning.
Unless something outside the system holds it open.