Three-Law Governance: The Deconstruction and Reconstruction of Politics, Management, and Law proposes a foundational reset of governance for an era of systemic complexity. Instead of treating governance as the control of people, resources, or rules, this book argues that governance operates at a deeper generative level: the running of three "meaning laws"-the Law of Feature (creation and order-making), the Law of Freedom (path selection and adaptive possibility), and the Law of Happiness (tension conversion and sustainable release). From this premise, politics, management, and law are no longer separate disciplines competing for authority. They are three modalities of a single governance process, each emphasizing a distinct regulatory state. Politics functions as particle-state governance, stabilizing identity, legitimacy, and systemic boundaries. Management operates as wave-state governance, tuning trajectories, speed, and organizational viscosity to enable innovation and coordination. Law acts as field-state governance, structuring connections, sequences, and the legitimate release of social tension. Within this tri-modal framework, familiar ideals such as democracy, freedom, and justice are reinterpreted-not as fixed values to be discovered and enforced, but as outcomes continuously generated through the balanced operation of the three laws.
To translate theory into practice, the book develops a structured governance atlas. A Nine-Grid framework maps core governance tasks across the three laws and three control dimensions, while an expanded Twenty-Seven-Grid traces the stages of emergence, development, and transformation in real organizational, educational, and national governance settings. These tools allow abstract principles to be directly applied to institutional design and reform. Ultimately, Three-Law Governance advances a civilizational shift-from a value-centered civilization to a meaning-centered civilization. In this new paradigm, the purpose of governance is not merely stability, efficiency, or rule compliance, but the continuous generation of truth (knowledge), goodness (technology and cooperation), and beauty (culture and harmony). The book offers a comprehensive theoretical foundation and an actionable roadmap for rethinking governance in the twenty-first century.