I am a business owner, inventor, writer, and independent physics theorist whose work centers on understanding time as a foundational structure of reality rather than a background measurement. My interest in time is not academic in the traditional sense, nor is it purely philosophical. It emerged from long-term pattern recognition across systems, disciplines, and lived experience.
I have spent years observing how systems behave under pressure, how stability forms and breaks, and how feedback loops shape outcomes across physics, biology, human behavior, and economics. Over time, a consistent pattern emerged. Time is not passive. It organizes, constrains, and enables everything that exists.
This realization led to the development of what I refer to as the Chronos framework.
I am openly dyslexic and autistic. These are not side notes in my work. They are central to how I perceive and process information.
I do not experience ideas sequentially. I experience them structurally and relationally. Instead of thinking in straight lines, I think in clusters, feedback loops, and spatial patterns. This has made traditional educational pathways difficult at times, but it has also allowed me to see connections across domains that are often treated as unrelated.
Autism sharpened my sensitivity to inconsistency. Dyslexia forced me to rely less on rote symbols and more on meaning, structure, and coherence. Together, they shaped a way of thinking that prioritizes pattern integrity over surface explanation.
Chronos did not begin as an attempt to create a theory. It began as an attempt to resolve contradictions that would not go away.
Chronos is a framework that treats time as an active, structured field rather than a passive dimension or bookkeeping parameter. In this view, time is not merely something that things move through. It is something that exerts influence, creates order, and regulates change.
My work explores time as energy, time as structure, and time as a stabilizing and destabilizing force across systems. This includes theoretical physics, mathematical modeling, and philosophical analysis, but also extends into biology, cognition, and artificial intelligence.
Rather than asking how time measures change, Chronos asks how time enables change to exist at all.
This approach challenges conventional assumptions but remains grounded in logic, internal consistency, and testable implications. Chronos is not positioned as a finished theory. It is a working framework intended to evolve through scrutiny, experimentation, and collaboration.
I work independently by both choice and circumstance, while remaining open to collaboration where goals, rigor, and intent are aligned. Working independently allows ideas to be pursued without premature constraint, institutional pressure, or disciplinary silos, but it does not imply isolation. Meaningful collaboration is welcome when it strengthens clarity, testing, or application.
My methodology emphasizes coherence over authority. An idea must hold together across scales, behave consistently across systems, and withstand contradiction. Valid insight must emerge from structure and logic, not from reputation or consensus alone.
I am skeptical by nature, including of my own conclusions. Chronos exists not because I sought to create a theory, but because repeated attempts to discard its core principles failed under careful examination.
Alongside theoretical work, I am a business owner and inventor. I have designed products, managed logistics, navigated risk, and dealt directly with the constraints of manufacturing, markets, and human behavior.
This experience matters. Business exposes theory to reality quickly. There is no abstraction buffer. Systems either function or they fail.
Entrepreneurship taught me that feedback is not optional and that stability is earned, not assumed. These lessons heavily influenced how I approach physics and systems theory. A framework that cannot survive pressure, complexity, and unintended consequences is incomplete.
Chronos is shaped by this reality-first mindset.
Some ideas cannot live solely in equations or technical language. Writing allows translation.
My books explore time, meaning, memory, and growth through a human lens. They are not instructional manuals and they are not belief systems. They are reflections meant to help readers notice patterns they may already sense but lack language for.
The Creating Golden Roots series begins with The Seed of Remembering, which focuses on beginnings, awareness, and the foundations of personal development. Astronauts of Time explores consciousness, memory, and humanity’s relationship with time itself.
These works are not separate from Chronos. They are expressions of the same inquiry, translated into experiential language.
Chronos exists to provide a coherent framework for understanding time as an organizing force across disciplines.
It is not intended to replace existing theories, but to address gaps where current models treat time inconsistently or as a placeholder rather than a physical influence. Chronos invites scrutiny, skepticism, and refinement.
This site exists to document work openly, share progress, and create space for interdisciplinary dialogue. Some visitors will approach Chronos mathematically. Others philosophically. Others intuitively. All approaches are valid if they are honest and rigorous.
I do not claim final answers. I claim careful observation, disciplined reasoning, and a willingness to follow implications wherever they lead.
Chronos is not about certainty. It is about coherence.
Time shapes everything. Understanding it more clearly changes how we understand matter, consciousness, systems, and ourselves.
This work is ongoing.
We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.