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Adaptive Architecture

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Adaptive architecture is the capacity of a system to restructure its own organizational topology in response to environmental demands, without external redesign. Unlike static systems that maintain fixed interaction patterns, adaptive architectures evolve their connectivity, modularity, and information flow to match the structure of the problems they encounter. This is observed in biological neural networks that prune unused synapses, in markets that reorganize trading relationships after shocks, and in immune systems that reconfigure receptor distributions following infection.

The defining feature of adaptive architecture is that the system does not merely learn within a fixed structure; it learns the structure itself. This places it at the intersection of meta-learning and complex systems theory, where the boundary between what is being learned and what is doing the learning becomes fluid. The most resilient systems — ecosystems, democratic institutions, scientific communities — are those whose architecture remains permanently provisional, capable of dissolving and reforming around new constraints.