The Original Scale Competence Draft: Where the ISL Idea Was Born
The original, unpolished draft of scale competence theory — preserved as a document of how a major idea evolves from a raw intuition into formal structure.
विचारांचं मौन, लेखनातलं आवाज
The original, unpolished draft of scale competence theory — preserved as a document of how a major idea evolves from a raw intuition into formal structure.
The extended treatment of scale competence — the formal theory of how observers expand their information capacity across scales over time.
The most abstract and rigorous essay in the series: seven axioms that govern any finite information-bearing system, with three derived theorems on saturation and refusal.
Critics have challenged aspects of Hawking’s work on black holes and cosmology. This essay defends his framework — and shows it is even stronger when read through ISL.
The formal paper establishing that attractive gravity is not a contingent feature of our universe but a structural necessity in any variational spacetime theory.
A popular science essay with a killer premise: if you reverse the sign of gravity, you don’t get a strange universe — you get a mathematical corpse.
What would Feynman have made of ISL saturation — the idea that every finite system has a maximum information state? This essay imagines exactly that conversation.
Why was Feynman so brilliantly effective? This essay argues imagination — not calculation — was his primary tool, and explores what that means for the ISL observer framework.
A point-by-point engagement with Penrose’s positions on time, consciousness, and quantum mechanics — and the precise places where ISL agrees, disagrees, and advances.
Penrose’s deepest conviction is that the universe is fundamentally geometric. This essay examines that claim and shows where ISL extends — and refines — it.