Decision-Making and Telos Drift

Decision-making suffers telos drift when the visible standards of the act remain intact while the governing end quietly shifts toward convenience, image, speed, status, or survival instead of the good the decision was supposed to serve.

Introduction

One of the hardest decision failures to detect is telos drift.

The procedure can still look sound. The criteria can still look legitimate. The decision can still appear competent. The deeper problem is that the act has begun serving the wrong end.

How telos drift appears

A hiring decision drifts from finding the right person toward avoiding internal conflict.

A strategic decision drifts from long-term integrity toward short-term optics.

A personal decision drifts from truth toward relief.

In each case, the outward process may remain orderly while the inner direction has changed.

Why this matters

Most decision advice concentrates on method. This site can add something more structural: a method can remain intact while the end becomes distorted.

That is why technically competent decisions can still be deeply wrong.

Why telos drift is hard to catch

The system often keeps speaking the language of the original purpose. That is what makes drift persuasive.

The end changes first in practice and only later, if ever, in stated language.

Testing for drift

What is this decision actually serving now? What would success really mean in practice? If the visible process succeeds, who or what is it truly protecting, promoting, or preserving?

These questions make telos explicit again.

Why this belongs in the cluster

The Decision-Making layer needs a telos page or it will become too procedural. This page keeps the cluster tied to the deeper model.

FAQ

What is telos drift in decision-making? It is the shift of the governing end while the visible process still looks intact.

Why is it dangerous? Because technically sound decisions can be directed toward the wrong good.

What helps detect it? Asking explicitly what the decision is now for.

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Frequently asked questions

What is telos drift in decision-making?

It is the shift of the governing end while the visible process still looks intact.

Why is it dangerous?

Because technically sound decisions can be directed toward the wrong good.

What helps detect it?

Asking explicitly what the decision is now for.

What is telos drift in decision-making?

It is the shift of the governing end while the visible process still looks intact.

Why is it dangerous?

Because technically sound decisions can be directed toward the wrong good.

What helps detect it?

Asking explicitly what the decision is now for.