
A reflection on how the authority of knowledge appears self-evident, as if truth naturally resides in the places where it is most formally organized—institutions, disciplines, experts, and increasingly, systems that aggregate and filter information on our behalf.
This essay explores why human meaning, lived experience, and context cannot be fully reproduced by artificial intelligence. It argues that intelligence is more than data processing—it is shaped by embodiment, history, and the way humans experience time and meaning.
Neither science nor theology provides conclusive evidence regarding ultimate reality, as both rely on unprovable assumptions. The individual is therefore tasked not with discovering a definitive cosmology, but with constructing one that is cognitively coherent, emotionally viable, and durationally stable.
Selfing Aesthetics™ is a biocognitive model that views aesthetic medicine not simply as changing appearance, but as influencing how people experience and express their sense of self, confidence, vitality, and well-being. The model explores how aligning outward appearance with lived identity can affect emotional regulation, social engagement, and quality of life beyond cosmetic change alone. emotionally viable, and durationally stable.
A biocognitive framework proposing that evolution involves the progressive expansion of epistemological complexity through which organisms organize meaning, contextual relevance, and consciousness from biological process to existential awareness.
A biocognitive framework proposing that healthy longevity emerges not from reduction of complexity, but from the organism’s capacity to develop compensatory meaning-based adaptations that preserve coherence, resilience, and biological regulation across time. Integrating centenarian research, psychoneuroimmunology, and GlycanAge findings, this paper advances compensatory complexity as a model linking perception, emotion, and inflammatory regulation in healthy aging.
Departing from classical existentialism and contemporary meaning-centered psychology, the framework reframes existential tensions—such as finitude, mortality, and absoluteness—not as problems to be solved, but as terrains to be embodied. Meaning is treated as a context-dependent strategy rather than a universal requirement, while courage and gratitude are reconceptualized as temporal skills enacted through lived duration.
If exceptional development is achieved by outliers, who do outliers model? This monograph introduces recursive modeling as the epistemology of selfing and explores how human development proceeds when no adequate model exists. Drawing upon observations of centenarians and exceptional aging, it examines outliership, prescribed horizons, epistemological complexity, and the self-in-the-world as the recursive existent.