
Give the Gift of Choice!
Too many options? Treat your friends and family to their favourite stores with a Bayshore Shopping Centre gift card, redeemable at participating retailers throughout the centre. Click below to purchase yours today!Purchase HereHome
Everything Feels Broken Because the World Is Glitching-What Comes After Human Operating Systems?
Coles
Loading Inventory...
Everything Feels Broken Because the World Is Glitching-What Comes After Human Operating Systems? in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $9.99


By None
Everything Feels Broken Because the World Is Glitching-What Comes After Human Operating Systems? in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $9.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
The operating system that once structured human life is failing. Institutions no longer coordinate, narratives no longer cohere, and the world no longer behaves according to the rules that governed the last century. What looks like chaos is the predictable breakdown of a system that has reached its limits.
This book explains the transition.
It shows why the old architecture is collapsing, how the new one is forming, and what it means to live in the overlap between them. It reveals the mechanics behind institutional failure, the rise of automated coordination, and the return of human‑scale meaning.
You will learn:
Why the world feels unstable even when nothing "big" is happening
How glitches signal structural limits rather than temporary crises
Why prediction fails in nonlinear environments
How to rebuild control when the system can no longer provide it
Why meaning is decentralizing and returning to competence, community, and alignment
What life looks like after the operating system that shaped the modern world goes offline
This is not a book about collapse.
It is a book about navigation — how to remain stable while the environment reorganizes itself, how to build coherence without institutional scripts, and how to operate in a world where the human role is shifting from administration to judgment.
The old operating system is ending.
What comes next is not a new version of the past.
It is a different category of world — one that requires a new form of clarity, a new form of control, and a new form of meaning.
If you want to understand the transition rather than be overwhelmed by it, this book is the map.
The operating system that once structured human life is failing. Institutions no longer coordinate, narratives no longer cohere, and the world no longer behaves according to the rules that governed the last century. What looks like chaos is the predictable breakdown of a system that has reached its limits.
This book explains the transition.
It shows why the old architecture is collapsing, how the new one is forming, and what it means to live in the overlap between them. It reveals the mechanics behind institutional failure, the rise of automated coordination, and the return of human‑scale meaning.
You will learn:
Why the world feels unstable even when nothing "big" is happening
How glitches signal structural limits rather than temporary crises
Why prediction fails in nonlinear environments
How to rebuild control when the system can no longer provide it
Why meaning is decentralizing and returning to competence, community, and alignment
What life looks like after the operating system that shaped the modern world goes offline
This is not a book about collapse.
It is a book about navigation — how to remain stable while the environment reorganizes itself, how to build coherence without institutional scripts, and how to operate in a world where the human role is shifting from administration to judgment.
The old operating system is ending.
What comes next is not a new version of the past.
It is a different category of world — one that requires a new form of clarity, a new form of control, and a new form of meaning.
If you want to understand the transition rather than be overwhelmed by it, this book is the map.

















