Preface This is a small book about a big question. Why does anything exist at all — and what does it mean that we're here to ask? The chapters that follow don't answer that question in the way a textbook would. They approach it sideways, through the lives and insights of people who noticed something about the world that most of us walk past. Einstein noticed that the moon doesn't need to be watched. Newton noticed that one rule holds everywhere. Laozi noticed that the river stays while the water moves. Each of them saw a piece of something larger. None of them saw the whole. This book tries to hold the pieces together — not by building a theory, but by following a thread. The thread runs from physics to mathematics to chemistry to biology to the human situation, and it connects them not through jargon or argument but through a single recurring pattern: The world is structured by constraint. What can happen is shaped by what's admissible. And everything that participates in the world leaves a mark that cannot be undone. If that sounds abstract, it won't for long. By the second page you'll be thinking about the moon. By the fifth, about apples. By the end, about yourself. The ideas here rest on a body of formal work — a series of papers that develop the philosophical foundations in full technical detail. Those papers exist for readers who want the derivations, the falsification conditions, the rigorous apparatus. This book is not those papers. It is a door. Some doors open onto gardens. Some onto landscapes you didn't know were there. This one opens onto both.
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Chao Jaimes
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Analyzing shared references across papers
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Chao Jaimes (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/699a9e0e482488d673cd4792 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18711204