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Featured Articles

Sentimentalism in the Post-Human Shadow
Sentimentalism in the Post-Human Shadow
Jul 10, 2026
30 mins
30
0
How Fear, False Hope and Hollow Metacontent Distort Authenticity in the Age of ‘AI’ This article examines the rise of sentimentalism in the post-phenomenological age, where human experience is increasingly mediated by technology, platforms, algorithms and artificial intelligence. It begins by inhabiting a dramatic fear now circulating widely: that humanity is being weakened, destabilised and prepared to accept a post-human future. Rather than dismissing this fear outright, the article rec...
When Capacity Is at Stake
Jul 9, 2026
40 mins
46
0
Responsibility, ‘Victim Blaming’ and the Discernment of Incapacity, Incapacitation and Compensation When Capacity Is at Stake examines the morally confused terrain between victim blaming and responsibility. It argues that responsibility must never be reduced to blame, but neither should compassion freeze people, groups or nations in permanent victimhood. Drawing on the capacity discourse, the article distinguishes between incapacity, where the capacity required by life has not yet been bu...
Sovereignty Without Submission: Capacity, Intention and the Reconstructive Path Beyond Dependency and Defiance
Jul 8, 2026
40 mins
97
1
Contextualising Capacity Discourse, Integrative Polarity Capacity and Dynamic Polarity Dialectic Sovereignty Without Submission examines Iran’s strategic dilemma as more than a political dispute between negotiation and resistance. Using Iran as a concrete case, the article contextualises Capacity Discourse, Integrative Polarity Capacity and Dynamic Polarity Dialectic within a deeper civilisational question: how a nation relates to power, threat, dependence, sovereignty, intention and capaci...
The City on the Hill and the Shadows It Casts
Jul 7, 2026
15 mins
63
0
The Light We Celebrate and the Shadows We Refuse to See In an age captivated by innovation, entrepreneurship and the pursuit of success, we have become remarkably good at celebrating achievement and surprisingly reluctant to examine its consequences. The City on the Hill begins with a simple but unsettling question: What is success for? Drawing inspiration from a patriotic celebration of American greatness, this essay moves beyond questions of nationalism and ideology to explore a deepe...
Awareness and Meta-awareness: Two Distinct Capacities for Human Observation and Participation
Jun 21, 2026
53 mins
327
3
Accessing Reality and Examining the Structures of Sense-making This article explores the distinction and relationship between Awareness and Meta-awareness as two fundamental capacities of human participation. Drawing on the Being Framework, the Metacontent discourse, the Nested Theory of Sense-making and the Authentic Sustainability Framework, it argues that awareness and meta-awareness, while closely related, operate at different levels. Awareness concerns our access to knowing and unders...
The Ontology of Convenience
Jun 8, 2026
360 mins
503
2
How Convenience Has Become the Hidden ‘Religion’ of Modern Life The Ontology of Convenience is a philosophical exploration of one of the most influential yet least examined forces shaping modern life: convenience. While convenience has undoubtedly improved human life by reducing friction, expanding access and increasing efficiency, this article argues that it has increasingly become more than a practical tool. It has become a value, and in many cases, one of the dominant lenses through...
What Are Your Actions Really Serving?
Jun 7, 2026
120 mins
568
3
Introducing AIM: A practical Model for aligning Actions, Intention and Meaning In a culture obsessed with action, productivity and goal-setting, it is easy to mistake movement for direction. People, teams and organisations are often busy, ambitious and constantly in motion, yet their actions may not consistently serve a well-developed intention, and their intention may not be anchored in meaning deep enough to sustain real transformation. This article introduces AIM, a practical developmen...
The One Who Keeps the Fire Burning
May 15, 2026
60 mins
562
1
On Intention, Meaning, Capacity and the Invisible Responsibility Holding Human Systems Together This article explores a quiet but essential truth behind every living system: nothing meaningful sustains itself without care. Families, relationships, organisations, institutions, communities, and societies all eventually depend on at least one person who chooses to prioritise their preservation when convenience, fatigue, distraction, or indifference would allow deterioration to begin. The arti...
The Empty Hand
May 14, 2026
180 mins
743
0
Vision, Leadership and the People Civilisation Quietly Consumes The Empty Hand begins with the darkly comic image of a dog in an obedience competition, staring with sacred devotion at the handler’s empty hand, still hoping for a treat that may never come. From that absurd and strangely tender scene, the article moves into a deeper reflection on vision, leadership, sacrifice, and the people who become captivated by “The Vision” until it begins to consume them. Through humour, irony, a...
The Entitlement Economy: When One Person’s Right Becomes Another Person’s Burden
May 14, 2026
60 mins
613
1
Why Modern Life Is Producing Fewer Custodians, More Overwhelmed Individuals and a Growing Inability to Carry the Responsibilities That Make Rights Possible This article examines entitlement not as a simple moral failure, generational weakness, or political complaint, but as a deeper breakdown in the relationship between rights, responsibility, and capacity. It argues that rights, protections, welfare, employment standards, leave entitlements, and care-based systems were created for valid reas...
Psychometrics and Ontometrics
Apr 24, 2026
20 mins
1.3k
4
Statistical Position, Developmental Orientation and the Nature of the Being Profile This article clarifies an important distinction that is often overlooked in conversations about human assessment. While psychometric tools are designed to measure and compare relatively stable traits, behaviours, or cognitive patterns against a broader population, ontometric tools operate on a different premise. They are concerned less with statistical position and more with developmental orientation, coherenc...
Why Frameworks Matter: The Real Reason Your Effort Isn't Compounding
Apr 9, 2026
30 mins
871
2
What if the friction you feel isn't due to a lack of hard work, but gaps in your invisible architecture? Capable individuals frequently find themselves trapped in a cycle of instability and reactive decision-making. The culprit isn't a lack of talent or drive, but the absence of a coherent underlying framework. Without a reliable mental map to organise experience, even the greatest efforts remain fragmented, leading to high mental load and stalled progress. Explicit frameworks are the cat...

Featured Articles

Sentimentalism in the Post-Human Shadow
Jul 10, 2026
30 mins
30
0
How Fear, False Hope and Hollow Metacontent Distort Authenticity in the Age of ‘AI’ This article examines the rise of sentimentalism in the post-phenomenological age, where human experience is increasingly mediated by technology, platforms, algorithms and artificial intelligence. It begins by inhabiting a dramatic fear now circulating widely: that humanity is being weakened, destabilised and prepared to accept a post-human future. Rather than dismissing this fear outright, the article rec...
When Capacity Is at Stake
Jul 9, 2026
40 mins
46
0
Responsibility, ‘Victim Blaming’ and the Discernment of Incapacity, Incapacitation and Compensation When Capacity Is at Stake examines the morally confused terrain between victim blaming and responsibility. It argues that responsibility must never be reduced to blame, but neither should compassion freeze people, groups or nations in permanent victimhood. Drawing on the capacity discourse, the article distinguishes between incapacity, where the capacity required by life has not yet been bu...
Sovereignty Without Submission: Capacity, Intention and the Reconstructive Path Beyond Dependency and Defiance
Jul 8, 2026
40 mins
97
1
Contextualising Capacity Discourse, Integrative Polarity Capacity and Dynamic Polarity Dialectic Sovereignty Without Submission examines Iran’s strategic dilemma as more than a political dispute between negotiation and resistance. Using Iran as a concrete case, the article contextualises Capacity Discourse, Integrative Polarity Capacity and Dynamic Polarity Dialectic within a deeper civilisational question: how a nation relates to power, threat, dependence, sovereignty, intention and capaci...
The City on the Hill and the Shadows It Casts
Jul 7, 2026
15 mins
63
0
The Light We Celebrate and the Shadows We Refuse to See In an age captivated by innovation, entrepreneurship and the pursuit of success, we have become remarkably good at celebrating achievement and surprisingly reluctant to examine its consequences. The City on the Hill begins with a simple but unsettling question: What is success for? Drawing inspiration from a patriotic celebration of American greatness, this essay moves beyond questions of nationalism and ideology to explore a deepe...
Awareness and Meta-awareness: Two Distinct Capacities for Human Observation and Participation
Jun 21, 2026
53 mins
327
3
Accessing Reality and Examining the Structures of Sense-making This article explores the distinction and relationship between Awareness and Meta-awareness as two fundamental capacities of human participation. Drawing on the Being Framework, the Metacontent discourse, the Nested Theory of Sense-making and the Authentic Sustainability Framework, it argues that awareness and meta-awareness, while closely related, operate at different levels. Awareness concerns our access to knowing and unders...
The Ontology of Convenience
Jun 8, 2026
360 mins
503
2
How Convenience Has Become the Hidden ‘Religion’ of Modern Life The Ontology of Convenience is a philosophical exploration of one of the most influential yet least examined forces shaping modern life: convenience. While convenience has undoubtedly improved human life by reducing friction, expanding access and increasing efficiency, this article argues that it has increasingly become more than a practical tool. It has become a value, and in many cases, one of the dominant lenses through...
What Are Your Actions Really Serving?
Jun 7, 2026
120 mins
568
3
Introducing AIM: A practical Model for aligning Actions, Intention and Meaning In a culture obsessed with action, productivity and goal-setting, it is easy to mistake movement for direction. People, teams and organisations are often busy, ambitious and constantly in motion, yet their actions may not consistently serve a well-developed intention, and their intention may not be anchored in meaning deep enough to sustain real transformation. This article introduces AIM, a practical developmen...
The One Who Keeps the Fire Burning
May 15, 2026
60 mins
562
1
On Intention, Meaning, Capacity and the Invisible Responsibility Holding Human Systems Together This article explores a quiet but essential truth behind every living system: nothing meaningful sustains itself without care. Families, relationships, organisations, institutions, communities, and societies all eventually depend on at least one person who chooses to prioritise their preservation when convenience, fatigue, distraction, or indifference would allow deterioration to begin. The arti...
The Empty Hand
May 14, 2026
180 mins
743
0
Vision, Leadership and the People Civilisation Quietly Consumes The Empty Hand begins with the darkly comic image of a dog in an obedience competition, staring with sacred devotion at the handler’s empty hand, still hoping for a treat that may never come. From that absurd and strangely tender scene, the article moves into a deeper reflection on vision, leadership, sacrifice, and the people who become captivated by “The Vision” until it begins to consume them. Through humour, irony, a...
The Entitlement Economy: When One Person’s Right Becomes Another Person’s Burden
May 14, 2026
60 mins
613
1
Why Modern Life Is Producing Fewer Custodians, More Overwhelmed Individuals and a Growing Inability to Carry the Responsibilities That Make Rights Possible This article examines entitlement not as a simple moral failure, generational weakness, or political complaint, but as a deeper breakdown in the relationship between rights, responsibility, and capacity. It argues that rights, protections, welfare, employment standards, leave entitlements, and care-based systems were created for valid reas...
Psychometrics and Ontometrics
Apr 24, 2026
20 mins
1.3k
4
Statistical Position, Developmental Orientation and the Nature of the Being Profile This article clarifies an important distinction that is often overlooked in conversations about human assessment. While psychometric tools are designed to measure and compare relatively stable traits, behaviours, or cognitive patterns against a broader population, ontometric tools operate on a different premise. They are concerned less with statistical position and more with developmental orientation, coherenc...
Why Frameworks Matter: The Real Reason Your Effort Isn't Compounding
Apr 9, 2026
30 mins
871
2
What if the friction you feel isn't due to a lack of hard work, but gaps in your invisible architecture? Capable individuals frequently find themselves trapped in a cycle of instability and reactive decision-making. The culprit isn't a lack of talent or drive, but the absence of a coherent underlying framework. Without a reliable mental map to organise experience, even the greatest efforts remain fragmented, leading to high mental load and stalled progress. Explicit frameworks are the cat...

All Articles

Most RecentMost Viewed
View All
Most RecentMost Viewed
Sentimentalism in the Post-Human Shadow
Jul 10, 2026
30 mins
30
0
How Fear, False Hope and Hollow Metacontent Distort Authenticity in the Age of ‘AI’ This article examines the rise of sentimentalism in the post-phenomenological age, where human experience is increasingly mediated by technology, platforms, algorithms and artificial intelligence. It begins by inhabiting a dramatic fear now circulating widely: that humanity is being weakened, destabilised and prepared to accept a post-human future. Rather than dismissing this fear outright, the article rec...
View All
What We Forgot About Food
Jul 9, 2026
36 mins
15
0
How place, culture and memory come to the table We rarely think about what meals are actually doing. This essay asks a fundamental question: what if meals have always done far more than feed us? Drawing on childhood memories, family migration, travel, anthropology and everyday observations of modern life, Dr Jordan Marijana Alexander explores how meals quietly shape identity, preserve culture and sustain the invisible human infrastructure that helps us become—and remain—deeply human. Movi...
When Capacity Is at Stake
Jul 9, 2026
40 mins
46
0
Responsibility, ‘Victim Blaming’ and the Discernment of Incapacity, Incapacitation and Compensation When Capacity Is at Stake examines the morally confused terrain between victim blaming and responsibility. It argues that responsibility must never be reduced to blame, but neither should compassion freeze people, groups or nations in permanent victimhood. Drawing on the capacity discourse, the article distinguishes between incapacity, where the capacity required by life has not yet been bu...
Sovereignty Without Submission: Capacity, Intention and the Reconstructive Path Beyond Dependency and Defiance
Jul 8, 2026
40 mins
97
1
Contextualising Capacity Discourse, Integrative Polarity Capacity and Dynamic Polarity Dialectic Sovereignty Without Submission examines Iran’s strategic dilemma as more than a political dispute between negotiation and resistance. Using Iran as a concrete case, the article contextualises Capacity Discourse, Integrative Polarity Capacity and Dynamic Polarity Dialectic within a deeper civilisational question: how a nation relates to power, threat, dependence, sovereignty, intention and capaci...
The City on the Hill and the Shadows It Casts
Jul 7, 2026
15 mins
63
0
The Light We Celebrate and the Shadows We Refuse to See In an age captivated by innovation, entrepreneurship and the pursuit of success, we have become remarkably good at celebrating achievement and surprisingly reluctant to examine its consequences. The City on the Hill begins with a simple but unsettling question: What is success for? Drawing inspiration from a patriotic celebration of American greatness, this essay moves beyond questions of nationalism and ideology to explore a deepe...
Midlife and the Three Mirrors of Comparison
Jun 27, 2026
23 mins
180
2
If belonging was always the need, how did comparison become the strategy? Comparison is often treated as a natural part of being human. This essay asks a more fundamental question: what if comparison was never the need, but a strategy we learned in our search for belonging? Drawing on memories of university, reflections on midlife, developmental psychology and everyday observations of modern life, Dr Jordan Marijana Alexander explores how appearance, achievement and affection become the mirro...
Awareness and Meta-awareness: Two Distinct Capacities for Human Observation and Participation
Jun 21, 2026
53 mins
327
3
Accessing Reality and Examining the Structures of Sense-making This article explores the distinction and relationship between Awareness and Meta-awareness as two fundamental capacities of human participation. Drawing on the Being Framework, the Metacontent discourse, the Nested Theory of Sense-making and the Authentic Sustainability Framework, it argues that awareness and meta-awareness, while closely related, operate at different levels. Awareness concerns our access to knowing and unders...
What’s Your Background?
Jun 19, 2026
24 mins
252
1
Long before the CV, something was already shaping you Identity emerges through our relationship with the places, people and stories that shape us. Going beyond modern identity theories focused on individual values, beliefs and motivations, this essay asks a more fundamental question: where did those identities take shape? Drawing on a moment early in her career, decades of inquiry, experiences of migration, and research into spiritual landscapes, Dr Jordan Marijana Alexander explores how plac...
Why navigating gravity felt safer than a boardroom
Jun 12, 2026
20 mins
223
1
The places where we become ourselves Why can navigating rapids, standing on the edge of a bungee platform, or sitting beside a wild lake feel safer than walking into a boardroom? Drawing on childhood memories of Lake Ontario, experiences of leadership, and conversations around kitchen tables, Dr Jordan Marijana Alexander explores a different understanding of safety: one rooted not in the absence of risk, but in the absence of fragmentation. Moving between landscapes, workplaces and human rela...
The Netflix Problem
Jun 10, 2026
24 mins
342
0
Why people are remarkably reluctant to cancel futures What do a Netflix subscription, a coaching credential and an unworn sweater have in common? In this relatable essay, Dr Jordan Marijana Alexander explores why people are remarkably reluctant to cancel futures. Moving from streaming services and professional memberships to identity, belonging and transformation, the article examines the hidden costs of maintaining versions of ourselves that no longer participate in our lives. Part cultural ...
The Ontology of Convenience
Jun 8, 2026
360 mins
503
2
How Convenience Has Become the Hidden ‘Religion’ of Modern Life The Ontology of Convenience is a philosophical exploration of one of the most influential yet least examined forces shaping modern life: convenience. While convenience has undoubtedly improved human life by reducing friction, expanding access and increasing efficiency, this article argues that it has increasingly become more than a practical tool. It has become a value, and in many cases, one of the dominant lenses through...
What Are Your Actions Really Serving?
Jun 7, 2026
120 mins
568
3
Introducing AIM: A practical Model for aligning Actions, Intention and Meaning In a culture obsessed with action, productivity and goal-setting, it is easy to mistake movement for direction. People, teams and organisations are often busy, ambitious and constantly in motion, yet their actions may not consistently serve a well-developed intention, and their intention may not be anchored in meaning deep enough to sustain real transformation. This article introduces AIM, a practical developmen...

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