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fragilità

Fragilité is the quality of being easily damaged, broken, or harmed by stress, strain, or perturbations. The term derives from the French fragilité, which itself comes from the Latin fragilis, meaning breakable. In practice, fragility conveys vulnerability rather than a fixed state: something fragile can fail under relatively small shocks, whereas more robust systems resist such failures.

In the physical and engineering sense, fragility refers to materials or structures that are prone to fracture

In health and biology, fragilité is used to describe vulnerability, particularly among older adults or individuals

In social and economic contexts, fragility denotes the susceptibility of systems—such as states, institutions, or supply

Fragility is often discussed alongside resilience and antifragility. While fragility highlights vulnerability, resilience refers to the

or
sudden
rupture.
Glass,
ceramics,
and
certain
composites
are
commonly
cited
as
fragile
because
they
lack
ductility
and
can
fail
catastrophically
under
stress.
Engineers
study
factors
such
as
flaws,
stress
concentration,
and
fracture
toughness
to
assess
and
mitigate
fragility,
aiming
to
design
components
and
buildings
that
withstand
shocks
and
loads.
with
chronic
illness.
Clinically,
frailty
is
a
syndrome
characterized
by
weakness,
reduced
physiological
reserve,
and
greater
susceptibility
to
adverse
outcomes
after
minor
health
stressors.
This
usage
highlights
how
fragility
relates
to
whole-organism
resilience
and
functional
capacity.
chains—to
crises,
shocks,
or
stressors.
Fragile
systems
may
exhibit
tipping
points,
cascading
failures,
or
slow
recovery
from
disturbances,
emphasizing
the
importance
of
resilience
and
redundancy
in
mitigating
risk.
ability
to
absorb
shocks
and
recover,
and
antifragility
describes
systems
that
improve
when
exposed
to
volatility.