Books & Long-Form Research
I have written and published three books. They are the result of extended research and analysis into how complex systems function, where they fail, and why well-intended solutions often fall short in practice. Rather than focusing on ideology or short-term debate, this work examines root causes across governance, economics, technology, and social structures, with an emphasis on clarity, realism, and long-term responsibility. The goal is not to provide quick answers, but to document problems carefully and outline practical frameworks that can inform better decision-making over time. All books are available on Amazon.

The Nova Terra Project is a long-form exploration of why modern systems repeatedly fail to deliver the outcomes they promise — and how they might be redesigned to function more effectively. Drawing on years of research and analysis, the book examines governance, economics, technology, and social structures through a systems lens, focusing on root causes rather than surface-level symptoms. Rather than proposing a single ideology or prescriptive solution, it outlines practical frameworks for rethinking how societies organize, make decisions, and adapt over time. The project is intended as a foundation for serious discussion, critical examination, and long-term problem solving — not a manifesto, but a working document aimed at understanding what comes next.

How Global Efficiency Could Save the World examines how inefficiency — not a lack of resources or innovation — has become one of the primary drivers of global dysfunction. Drawing on systems analysis across supply chains, governance, infrastructure, and resource use, the book explores how fragmented decision-making and misaligned incentives lead to waste, delay, and unnecessary conflict. Rather than advocating sweeping ideological change, it focuses on practical ways improved coordination, transparency, and accountability could dramatically reduce costs, environmental strain, and human suffering. The central argument is simple: many of the world’s hardest problems persist not because they are unsolvable, but because we have not yet organized ourselves to solve them efficiently.

Out of the Cave explores how perception, belief, and inherited assumptions shape the way individuals and societies understand reality. Drawing inspiration from Plato’s allegory, the book examines how modern systems — media, institutions, incentives, and narratives — can quietly limit independent thought, even in open societies. Rather than offering a polemic or a set of prescribed answers, it invites careful reflection on how people come to accept certain ideas as truth, and what it takes to question them responsibly. The focus is not on rejection or rebellion, but on awareness, discernment, and the difficult process of seeing clearly once familiar frameworks begin to dissolve.