Systems act.
People explain.
This book examines a quiet yet consequential shift:
**intent** has ceased to steer action and now survives only as a retrospective narrative.
In a world of functioning systems, automated decisions, and structural effectiveness, outcomes emerge without wanting. Results stabilise without anyone having intended them. Intent appears only in hindsight - as interpretation, not as cause.
"Intent Without Agency" is neither a book about the loss of meaning nor an attack on significance. It is a reconstruction: how intent moved from being the engine of action to becoming an interpretative infrastructure. Why leadership turned into explanation, strategy into narrative, and motivation into illusion. And why systems no longer require intent - while humans still require stories.
Rethinka writes from the perspective after the fact. Not to condemn intent, but to show with precision what happens when meaning no longer precedes action, but follows it.
This book does not explain what was intended.
It shows why that question has lost its steering power.