From Chaos to Progress: Behavioral Disorders as Catalysts of Universal Flux

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Abstract

The universe is defined by relentless flux, where no system-from quantum particles to human societies-permits stasis (Prigogine & Stengers, 1984; Smolin, 2013). This essay argues that behavioral disorders, specifically psychopathy and narcissism, act as super-efficient catalysts of universal flux within organizational systems-defined as dynamic networks of systemic factors across biological, physical, and human domains-triggering transformative change with minimal input, akin to a domino cascade (Conceptual Example 1.2; Kayser, 2025a). Grounded in complexity, chaos, and systems theory, it explores how these disorders drive non-linear disruptions, as seen in the 20th century in Germany, the Soviet Union, and China, where psychopathic and narcissistic leadership caused approximately 105 million deaths and devastating trauma yet enabled renewal in Western Germany's economic miracle (1965-1989), Russia's resurgence under Putin, and China's reforms under Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao (Bullock, 1991; Pei, 2016). Static mathematical models, assuming equilibrium or homeostasis, fail to capture flux as absolute driver. These erroneous parameters result inevitably in the failure of economic and sociopolitical models but also enable the establishment of centralized, bureaucratic systems that are ideal for psychopathic exploitation due to their inherent unaccountability (Lorenz, 1963; Barabási, 2016). Contemporary failures in Western democracies-UK's imprisonment of over 3,200 citizens for silent prayer and social media posts, France's jailing of an opposition leader, the EU's manipulation of the Romanian elections, or Spain's corrupt land expropriations for solar farms (2025)-highlight traditional governance's vulnerability to disordered leadership in contemporary context. Freedom-oriented, meritocratic systems are empirically proving in Argentina and El Salvador that highly efficient alternatives are known and available: transparency, accountability, and successbased reimbursement have the potential to turn the psychopathic catalysts into evolutionary progress (Kayser, 2025b; Rothbard, 1973; Hoppe, 2001). This study reframes behavioral disorders therefore as powerful drivers of societal evolution, surpassing even technological innovation in shaping history's greatest changes.