The Relational Anthropology of Everything
Why Our Lives, Cultures, Conflicts, and Collapses All Follow the Same Pattern
What if the universe isn’t made of “things” at all?
What if everything we experience — from atoms to families to religions to civilizations — is shaped by the same underlying force?
Relation.
The Relational Anthropology of Everything argues that the universe is not a collection of objects but a living field of relationships. Coherence, meaning, identity, culture, and collapse all emerge from how well (or how poorly) systems stay in relation with one another. When relation is strong, systems thrive. When relation breaks, systems drift, rigidify, and eventually collapse.
The book traces that pattern across every scale of existence:
- Cosmology: how the early universe formed coherence through relational fields.
- Biology: how cells communicate, cooperate, and sometimes turn cancerous — a perfect mirror of human societies.
- Geology: how the Earth records the consequences of relational overreach and ecological disconnection.
- Human evolution: how our species accelerated because we were the most relational organism on the planet.
- Spirituality and religion: how direct attunement to the field becomes institutionalized, scripted, and eventually weaponized.
- Family systems: how scapegoating, roles, and unspoken rules replicate the same collapse patterns as empires.
- Social control: how SCRRIPPTT (Practice, Performance, Talk, Text) keeps disrelated systems running long after they’ve lost coherence.
- Collapse: how drift, rigidity, brittleness, and narrative failure follow a predictable sequence across all human systems.
- Reattunement: how sensing, reciprocity, and distributed authority restore coherence before or after collapse.
At its core, the book makes a simple but radical claim:
Everything that works, works because it is in relation. Everything that breaks, breaks because relation breaks.
This isn’t a metaphor.
It’s a structural law.
By mapping the same relational mechanics across physics, biology, psychology, religion, politics, and culture, The Relational Anthropology of Everything offers a unified theory of human systems — why they flourish, why they fracture, and how they can be repaired.
It’s not a book about belief.
It’s a book about pattern.
And once you see the pattern, you start seeing it everywhere.
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