Disordered Inputs Extend Integration Time and Increase Tax
Inputs do not arrive in a resolved state.
When inputs lack order, integration requires additional time.
This extended process introduces increased tax.
1. Inputs Without Order Require Initial Structuring
When inputs enter without defined order:
- relationships are unclear
- priority is not established
- sequencing is absent
Before integration can proceed, the system must impose structure.
2. Structuring Demand Extends Integration Time
The absence of order introduces additional steps:
- identifying relationships
- establishing sequence
- resolving conflicts
These steps increase the duration of integration.
3. Extended Duration Sustains System Load
As integration time increases:
- resolution demand persists longer
- system resources remain engaged
- load is sustained over time
The system operates under prolonged demand.
4. Sustained Load Converts Into Tax
When load is extended:
- demand stabilizes
- cost persists beyond initial interaction
- temporary strain becomes continuous
This continuity converts load into tax.
5. Disorder Increases Interaction Complexity
Without order:
- inputs intersect unpredictably
- conflicts multiply
- resolution pathways expand
Complexity increases beyond necessary levels.
6. Increased Complexity Further Extends Integration
As complexity grows:
- resolution slows
- alignment becomes more difficult
- additional time is required
The system enters a reinforcing cycle of delay.
7. Ordered Inputs Reduce Time and Limit Tax
When inputs are structured:
- sequencing is clear
- interactions are predictable
- resolution proceeds efficiently
Integration time reduces, and tax remains limited.
Summary
Disordered inputs require additional structuring before integration.
This extends integration time and sustains system load.
Sustained load stabilizes into tax.
Increased complexity further amplifies this effect. Lack of order converts time into tax during integration.