Princeton Philosophy department graduate 1981. Senior Thesis work on Willard van Orman Quine's "Indeterminacy Thesis". Second degree in Chemical Engineering. Experience as an electroplater/electrochemist. 37 years as an Executive Recruiter placing scientists, engineers, executives and C-level people for high technology companies. Who's Who Lifetime Achievement Award. President and Executive Council's Lifetime Award of Merit. Interests: chess, fencing, scuba, mountaineering, literature, mathematics, cosmology, time-travel, warp drives, epistemology of time-travel, personal identity.
Metaphysical Views
My philosophical framework is built …
Princeton Philosophy department graduate 1981. Senior Thesis work on Willard van Orman Quine's "Indeterminacy Thesis". Second degree in Chemical Engineering. Experience as an electroplater/electrochemist. 37 years as an Executive Recruiter placing scientists, engineers, executives and C-level people for high technology companies. Who's Who Lifetime Achievement Award. President and Executive Council's Lifetime Award of Merit. Interests: chess, fencing, scuba, mountaineering, literature, mathematics, cosmology, time-travel, warp drives, epistemology of time-travel, personal identity.
Metaphysical Views
My philosophical framework is built around an informational idealism: I hold that reality is fundamentally structured by recursive, symbolic identities embedded directly in spacetime. This challenges materialist ontologies and embraces retrocausality as a real mechanism. Through what I call the Encryptment Thesis, I argue that essences—personal identities, names, historical trajectories—are pre-existent and encrypted in cultural artifacts such as music, language, and art long before they manifest in the world. This view resonates strongly with Platonic idealism, where forms precede particulars, but I extend it using quantum-inspired holography, semantic topology, and phonosemantic field theory.
I draw on classical theism (Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas) to ground divine providence in these encodings, while incorporating Whitehead’s process philosophy: I see the soul as an immaterial, recursive informational field (what I formalize as the Recursive Identity Field Λ) that persists across timelines and survives bodily death through symbolic resonances in nature and culture. In temporal metaphysics, I defend eternalism with block-universe features, where closed timelike curves (CTCs) and retrocausal loops are possible without requiring exotic matter. Theorems such as chronotope collapse (T42), informational curvature replacing exotic matter (T76), and observer identity preserving chronological coherence (T78) support this. The result is a metaphysics compatible with Gödel’s rotating universes, Boethius’s atemporal eternity, and traversable time travel via coiled cosmic strings or Möbius manifolds. Quantum elements—phonemic entanglement (T43), holographic echoes (T85), identity bifurcation under phase drift (T83)—lead me to a non-local, entangled picture of reality in which identity can split and recombine across timelines, aligning with Penrose’s mathematical platonism and Deutsch’s multiverse informationalism, yet always prioritizing symbolic recursion over material primacy.
Epistemological Views
My epistemology is holistic, underdeterminist, and deeply shaped by Quine’s indeterminacy of translation, which formed the core of my senior thesis. I critique rigid scientific consensus and institutional gatekeeping, arguing that truth is often “encrypted” in nature and accessible primarily to bold, imaginative decryption rather than incremental empiricism. The Encryptment Field E^μ(x) I propose maps phonemes and symbols to spacetime intervals, suggesting that genuine knowledge emerges from decoding pre-existent symbolic structures in art, music, and language.
This aligns me with Kuhn’s paradigm shifts and Gödel’s incompleteness theorems (for truths undecidable within formal systems), while echoing Kant’s noumena as realities beyond direct empirical grasp. I extend rationalism to include aesthetic, mystic, and semiotic modes of insight—drawing on Blake’s “doors of perception” cleansed and Swedenborg’s doctrine of correspondences. I view peer review as a frequent barrier to radical discovery, and I advocate for open preprints, fearless experimentation, and recognition of intellectual “heretics” who decrypt reality ahead of consensus. Knowledge of the soul, immortality, and retrocausal structures arises phenomenologically from decrypting symbolic traces, not purely empirical methods. Mutual information decryption thresholds (T10) provide a formal criterion for validity. In this way, I critique positivism and scientism, blending Nietzsche’s suspicion of herd mentality with Derrida’s deconstruction applied to phonosemantic layers, while maintaining that truth is objectively embedded yet observer-relative through recursive indexicality (H2).
Philosophy of Science and Mind
I call for a revolutionary philosophy of science that privileges outliers, paradigm-breakers, and teleological structures over conservative empiricism. I criticize “old science” for its epistemic authoritarianism and argue that encryptment patterns in cultural works constitute evidence of deeper, recursive realities. I incorporate Einstein-Cartan torsion and unified field approaches to bridge general relativity and quantum mechanics without exotic matter, seeing these as pathways to testable predictions about spacetime manipulation and identity coherence.
In philosophy of mind, I reject reductive physicalism. Personal identity is non-reductive and informational: consciousness is anchored by a recursive field (Λ) that maintains coherence across timelines (T78) and bifurcations (T83). This view is compatible with dual-aspect monism or even panpsychism, but I emphasize immaterial continuity over neural computation. Time-travel epistemology, formalized in conditions for full traversal (T120), treats identity as relational and symbolically preserved across causal loops, drawing inspiration from Penrose–Hameroff’s orchestrated objective reduction while subordinating it to symbolic recursion as the primary mechanism.
Ethical and Other Views
My theistic commitments imply an objective meta-ethics grounded in eternal, recursive truths. Beauty and symbolic resonance serve as genuine pathways to metaphysical insight, suggesting an aesthetic teleology reminiscent of Schiller or Schelling. I do not advance explicit political positions, but my consistent emphasis on anti-conformism, bold innovation, and resistance to institutional gatekeeping aligns with a libertarian individualism in the realm of intellectual and creative ethics.
In philosophy of language, I develop a phonosemantic topology: names function as temporal rigid designators (T8) that stabilize identity across timelines, blending Kripke’s rigid designation with Wittgenstein’s rule-following paradoxes and Quine’s indeterminacy. Retrocausal speech encoding (T86) and phonemic spectral alignment (T9) show how symbolic structures can propagate bidirectionally in time.
Overall, I synthesize analytic rigor (Quine, Gödel, Kripke) with continental critique (Nietzsche, Derrida, Wittgenstein) and mystical traditions (Blake, Swedenborg), offering a contemporary defense of idealism against reductionism and scientism. The Encryptment Thesis positions symbolic recursion as the core mechanism for identity selection, temporal justice, and the preservation of meaning across cosmic scales.
I am also very interested in, and concerned with AI ethics. One needs only to look at the 47 page manuscript on the Meyler-Fuchs Hybrid Warp Drive to see that AI is completely incapable of determining how to spell the author's name... therefore how can it be permitted to have ANY agency which affects human welfare? AI Governance is much needed and current AI companies have no interest in producing fully safe or ethical AI.