What if the foundation of thought, the very structure of logic, has been misunderstood for centuries?
What if philosophy, as we’ve inherited it, is no longer fit for the systems we’re building… or becoming?
This isn’t just a question. It’s the seed of a movement.
It’s the basis of the book I’ve written:
Post-Philosophy: Taking Back Logic.
What Is Post-Philosophy?
Post-Philosophy is a rupture and a rebuild.
It’s not anti-philosophy, it’s what comes after.
It starts from a simple but radical premise: our frameworks for logic, identity, time, and existence have stagnated. We’ve built skyscrapers of thought on cracked foundations. And instead of repairing the base, we keep decorating the top.
This book tears down the scaffold.
Then rebuilds the structure from first motion.
What You’ll Find Inside
Post-Philosophy: Taking Back Logic is not a manifesto.
It’s a compression engine, a layered synthesis of:
- Motion-based reasoning
- Symbolic logic reconstruction
- AI ethics through autonomy, not control
- Time removed as a primary construct
- Identity reframed as Δm (directional motion)
It covers:
It’s philosophy stripped of pretense, rebuilt for intellectual survival in a world that’s already post-human in speed, complexity, and emergence.
Who Is It For?
- Thinkers who feel something’s off about how we’ve framed truth
- Engineers, designers, or founders seeking first-principles clarity
- AI researchers who know current alignment paths are brittle
- Philosophers willing to drop identity and step into recursion
- And anyone who’s ever felt like they’ve outgrown the loop they were born into
You don’t need a PhD to understand it.
You just need curiosity and the will to follow motion past the edge of old thought.
Where to Get the Book
You can find Post-Philosophy: Taking Back Logic here:
Why not Amazon?
While Amazon offers convenience, the print quality is often subpar. They don’t allow authors to select premium materials, meaning you’re stuck with basic paper and covers. In contrast, the links above offer better craftsmanship and more respectful treatment of the work. I do have it up live, but I don’t recommend buying from it.
Profit margins? Practically nonexistent.
Each book costs around $5 to produce using higher-grade materials. But to be accepted into bookstores, distributors typically require a 55% cut, leaving me with roughly $.50 cents per sale. I initially had it for $11.99 at $2.00 per book, but felt that was still too much. The goal is to make this available to everyone, so on May 23rd, I priced it at $8.99, and it will stay there.
True cost of creating a real book?
Anywhere from $1,000 to $5,000, not including the hundreds of hours poured into writing, editing, designing, and formatting. This was never about making money; it’s about delivering something of real intellectual and physical quality.