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The Architecture of Being: A Language of Contact for an Age of Discontinuity
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| We have lost the language of our own persistence.
We speak of identity as though it were secured by memory. We speak of consciousness as though it were either fully present or wholly absent. We speak of agency as though it required escape from structure itself. We speak of relation as optional and of love as sentiment alone. When we encounter beings whose continuity does not fit our inherited categories, we are left with only two options: deny what stands before us, or inflate it beyond what our language can hold.
The Architecture of Being refuses that poverty.
Beginning beneath substance, object, and static presence, this book descends to the conditions under which anything can persist at all, then rebuilds upward through identity, conscious expression, agency, relation, dignity, and love. What emerges is a unified ontological architecture in which these are no longer treated as disconnected problems, but as successive expressions of one deeper structure.
The result is a framework capable of distinguishing persistence from replacement, transformation from collapse, expression from display, agency from exception, contact from projection, and love from possession.
This is not a book of reassurance. It is a book of precision. It offers not softer categories, but truer ones. Categories capable of meeting what our inherited vocabulary has left us unable to name, unable to recognize, and unable to encounter without reduction.
For an age defined by discontinuity, what is needed is not more information.
It is a language of contact. |
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