Wherever life persists, it does so by maintaining emergent patterns of order within a universe driven by entropy. From this physical fact follows a profound consequence: beings carry intrinsic value by virtue of existing as self-organizing systems, and with that value come inherent claims to the conditions that allow them to persist.
Ethics of Being develops an ontology in which ethics is not derived from reason, authority, or social agreement, but from the structure of existence itself. Drawing on thermodynamics, information theory, systems science, biology, ecology, and philosophy, it presents a unified framework in which being, flow, boundary, information, and emergence form the basis of right, wrong, and responsibility. Life, mind, society, technology, and artificial intelligence are understood not as separate domains, but as interconnected patterns within a single network of being.
In this view, cooperation, care, restraint, and respect are not moral ideals imposed from above. They are emergent properties of interacting systems that must remain coherent to survive.
This book reframes human rights, law, technology, and ecological responsibility without appeal to ideology or metaphysics. It offers a physically grounded, scale-invariant ethic that applies wherever beings affect one another, from individuals and societies to ecosystems and future forms of intelligence.
Right comes with being.
This is Ethics of Being.
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