Tag
holography
- EssayThe Compression That Sings
Argues that music and nature share a statistical signature—long-range correlation, multifractal scaling, characteristic 1/f compressibility—and that this is not aesthetic coincidence but a reflection of the informational substrate of physical reality. Proposes an information-theoretic formulation of environmental ethics: ecological damage is Kolmogorov disordering; protection is the preservation of logical depth. The same principle that lets the ear hear a fugue lets a well-designed model hear a watershed.
- EssayNature & Simplicity: How Information Protects Nature
Frames environmental protection as a corollary of physical simplicity: nature's complexity arises from single binary observations accumulated through irreversible interactions, and configuring matter with information costs orders of magnitude less than configuring it with force. Introduces the Boundary Dominance Conjecture extending the holographic principle from black holes to general environmental systems—sense the boundary, reconstruct the interior, steer with information.
- EssayOn the Categorical Unity of Singularities
Identifies a common categorical structure (Lawvere's fixed-point theorem) underlying four classes of fundamental limits: gravitational singularities, the Bekenstein–Hawking entropy bound, the diagonal-argument family (Gödel, Turing, Cantor), and the uncertainty relations of quantum mechanics. Formalizes the Boundary Dominance Principle and argues that singularities, across all domains, are saturation points where a system's capacity for self-description is exhausted.
- EssayThe Self-Writing Universe
Argues from five experimentally confirmed pillars—Bekenstein–Hawking entropy, holography / AdS-CFT, decoherence, Landauer, and Lawvere's fixed-point theorem—that the universe writes itself into existence through irreversible physical interactions, each of which inscribes information on the holographic boundary. Tiers physical systems by self-referential depth and locates Gödelian limits at the horizon of self-description.
- EssayThere Is Only One Limit
The accessible companion to 'On the Categorical Unity of Singularities.' Argues in plain prose that no system can completely describe itself from the inside, and that the wall every self-referential system hits—black hole, unprovable truth, unsolvable problem—is the same wall seen from different angles.
- EssayThe Great Externalization: A First-Principles Analysis of the 2025 AI Compute Boom and Its Thermodynamic Consequences for Planetary Stewardship
Reads the $1.5T+ 2025 AI-compute build-out through the Holographic Negentropic Framework and the Law of Unthinking, quantifying its entropic costs (10–40 GW power, 130+ Mt CO₂e/yr, 2T+ gallons/yr water, 5 Mt/yr e-waste by 2030) and arguing that the only thermodynamically coherent answer is paradoxical: more and smarter computation aimed at building Environmental General Intelligence.
- EssayLaw of Unthinking and the Holographic Negentropic Framework: Toward a Paradigm of Proactive Planetary Thriving
Synthesizes Whitehead's Law of Unthinking with a Holographic Negentropic Framework into a single blueprint for moving from reactive environmental protection to proactive planetary thriving. Formalizes 'unthinking' (the externalization of routine cognition) as a thermodynamic imperative and grounds the holographic principle in the architecture of an Environmental General Intelligence.
- EssayEnvironmental Protection in a Holographic Information Framework
Examines whether environmental information could be encoded and manipulated in a lower-dimensional framework analogous to the holographic principle in physics. Surveys quantum sensing, quantum networks, and AI as engineering pathways and argues for control at boundaries rather than throughout volumes—an early, narrower precursor to the Holographic Negentropic Framework that arrives later that year.