Strategic Interference Theory
Phase Interference and Strategic Collapse: A Quantum-Inspired Framework for Decision-Making in Complex Dynamic Systems Abstract This paper explores the physical essence of decision-making behavior within complex dynamic systems. By introducing the concept of “phase interference” from quantum mechanics, it redefines the intersection of nuclear deterrence, political public relations, and game theory. The central thesis is that decision-making at critical nodes is not merely a probabilistic choice but a modulation of the system’s wave function. Effective strategic alignment generates constructive interference, converting latent energy into decisive influence; conversely, it leads to destructive interference or wave function collapse, triggering systemic collapse of the situation. The paper introduces four core mechanisms— phase detection , phase anchoring , active collapse , and the Quantum Zeno Effect —and establishes a three-tier application framework spanning political decisi...