Daniel Brouse¹ and Sidd Mukherjee²
March 2026
Big Idea
Some systems look stable… until they suddenly aren’t.
In science, a singularity is when our math and predictions stop working well. It might look like things are going to “infinity,” but in real life, that doesn’t actually happen.
Instead, it means:
- Small changes can cause very big effects
- Systems can become unstable
- Things become hard to predict
This paper says that both the climate and the economy are moving toward this kind of point.
Even more important: they are connected.
Each one makes the other worse, creating a loop that keeps speeding things up.
This is like:
- A dam about to break
- A tornado touching the ground
- Water spinning down a drain
They seem fine at first… then suddenly change very fast.
1. What Is a Singularity?
A singularity is not really a single point.
It’s more like a change zone:
- Stable → Unstable
- Predictable → Unpredictable
- Calm → Chaotic
👉 It’s the edge of what we can understand.
2. The Dam Example
Step 1: Looks Safe
- Water rises slowly
- Pressure builds
- Small cracks form
Everything looks okay.
Step 2: Hidden Danger
Pressure grows faster than you expect.
Small increases in water → much bigger stress
Step 3: Breaking Point
At some point:
- The dam is still standing
- But it’s already weak
Then:
👉 One small change → total collapse
Step 4: Collapse Speeds Up
Once it starts:
- More water flows → more damage
- More damage → even more water
This creates a loop:
👉 More flow → more damage → more flow
Key Idea
A dam doesn’t break slowly.
It goes:
Stable → Unstable → Collapse
3. The Vortex Example (Like Water Down a Drain or a Tornado)
When water spins—or when air spins in a tornado:
- The closer you get to the center
- The faster it moves
As you get very close:
- Speed increases very quickly
- Everything gets pulled inward
This is similar to a tornado touching down:
- At first, it forms in the sky
- Then it reaches the ground
- Suddenly, the spinning becomes very strong and destructive
In real life:
- It doesn’t go to infinity
- It becomes wild, chaotic, and damaging
👉 The system stops behaving in a simple, predictable way.
Key Idea
Near the center:
- Small changes → big effects
- Things become hard to predict
4. What This Means for Climate and the Economy
We see the same pattern:
- Things are getting worse
- They’re getting worse faster
- The speeding-up is also increasing
👉 In simple terms:
- Problems are growing
- The growth is speeding up
- And that speed-up is getting stronger
5. The Feedback Loop Problem
Climate and the economy affect each other:
More climate damage
→ more money lost
→ less ability to fix problems
→ more risk
→ even more damage
👉 This is a loop that keeps making things worse.
6. Why This Is Dangerous
As systems get close to this “singularity”:
- Small events can cause big problems
- Predictions become less reliable
- Instability spreads
Examples:
- Dam → sudden collapse
- Vortex → chaos
- Climate → chain reactions
- Economy → financial stress
7. The Most Important Idea
Singularity does not mean infinity.
It means:
👉 Loss of stability and predictability
8. What Happens Next?
If things keep going this way:
- Disruptions happen more often
- Systems become weaker
- Big failures become more likely
Not from one big event…
👉 But from pressure building over time + feedback loops
Final Thought
Singularity is the edge of understanding.
As we get closer:
- Small changes matter more
- Risks grow faster
- Things get harder to control
👉 The real danger isn’t just change—
it’s how fast the change is speeding up.
References (Simple)
- IPCC – Climate report
- Lenton – Tipping points
- Hansen – Ice melt
- NOAA – Disaster costs