Clonal governance
Take any system where:
- units can self-replicate
- units mutate over time
- units form a higher-level cooperative body / swarm / superorganism
- selection pressures exist both inside the collective and at the collective level
“Maximum fitness” at the unit level selects for defection, over-replication, resource capture, and escape from specialization.
“Maximum cooperation” is a metastable attractor that has to be actively maintained by policing, bottlenecks, surveillance, differentiation, apoptosis/sacrifice norms, reproductive suppression, memory limits, spatial constraints, immune cleanup, etc.
The life or death question is:
How long can a clonal collective keep the maximum-cooperation replicator state from collapsing back toward the maximum-fitness replicator state?
So the analogical family for cellular senescence is broader than just multicellular bodies:
- tumors and transmissible cancers
- eusocial colonies, partially
- von Neumann probe swarms
- self-replicating AI/robot ecologies
- Horatio-like clone civilizations
- any sticky, mutating replicator collective trying to remain a “we” instead of dissolving into competing “I” lineages
- And aging biology becomes one special case: the body’s anti-defector regime accumulates costs, locks in containment states, suppresses plasticity, accepts defensive sabotage, and eventually pays for loyalty with competence.