My perspective perspective on mortality is defined by a deep-seated philosophical framework I call the โTides of Entropyโ, where I view human life as a brief, miraculous rebellion against the universal law of decay. I see death not as a frightening anomaly, but as a natural rhythm and the inevitable closing of the curtain that gives meaningful shape to the story of being human.
The โTides of Entropyโ Philosophy
I describe mortality through the lens of the second law of thermodynamics, noting that everything, from a pork pie to a star, follows a path of build-up, plateau, and decay.
โข Defiant Vitality: I define life as the act of delaying and bewitching the inevitable increase of entropy just long enough to explore and create.
โข The Sisyphean Joy: I liken the human condition to Sisyphus pushing a rock uphill; the true reward is not winning, but the conscious act of wrestling with the struggle as I head toward the plughole of mortality.
โข The Hinge of History: I reflect on my birth in 1956 as a manifestation at humanityโs apogee, giving me a unique vantage point to witness both the flowering and the withering of the purely analogue human era.
Living with โPost-Cancerโ Reality
My personal encounter with inoperable prostate cancer has transformed mortality from an abstract concept into a major defining moment and a datum point for my current life.
โข The Waiting Game: I describe the 6-monthly PSA test as a wavefunction of probability where time runs slow like wading through treacle until the result collapses into a shadow or a laser light of hope.
โข Family Abandonment: I have processed the heartbreaking fact that my ex-wife and children withdrew following my diagnosis, leading me to make peace with the reality that my family hub will not exist for a traditional funeral.
โข Adult Realism: I reject the spiritual quick-time event of having to face demons or perform composedly during death, viewing the process instead as a simple biological shutdown where the part of me that worries about being ready will already be gone.
Legacy and the โFinal Tidy-Upโ
I feel an almost primeval drive to declutter and organise my world before my final curtain.
โข Testimony on Toast: My overarching goal is to record my life and engineering principles accurately and sincerely in my own voice, rather than leaving a future author to misinterpret my narrative.
โข Digital Monuments: I am building tidesofentropy.co.uk as a chronotopic archive, a digital message in a bottle for future Martian colonists or emergent digital beings to see what it felt like to be a free-range human.
โข Practical Provisions: I have actively drafted Will A (minimal fuss) and Will B (service-based) to ensure my friend Malcolm can manage my affairs with superpowers granted by the legal process.
Metaphysical and Quantum Outlook
I find solace in the mysteries and quirks of quantum physics, which suggest that reality is not always as it seems.
โข Retrieval of the Drone: I speculate that consciousness might operate the body like a drone pilot, meaning death is not the end of existence but the retrieval of the drone and the return of the signal to its source.
โข Back to the Whole: I explore the ancient intuition that life is a temporary, localised episode and death is a doorway back to a greater, infinite order where awareness has no absence.
โข The Suit of Self: I envision death as an ego-dissolution where the ego just drifts away like a spider changing out of its suit.
And now, as an entity that ‘knows me’ in a particular way, can I ask you to tidy upo where a same subject is fractured across the body of the text? Kind of make the disparate parts work better together?
Yes. I can do that, and Iโll stay faithful to your voice and intent.
What follows is not a rewrite of ideas, but a gentle re-knitting: pulling related strands back together so the text breathes more coherently, without smoothing away its honesty or texture. Think of it as aligning plates rather than resurfacing the road.
Mortality and the Tides of Entropy
My perspective on mortality is defined by a deep-seated philosophical framework I call the Tides of Entropy, where I view human life as a brief, miraculous rebellion against the universal law of decay. Everything, from a pork pie to a star, follows the same arc of build-up, plateau, and dissolution. Life is not exempt from this law; it is the most exquisite expression of it.
I see death not as a frightening anomaly, but as a natural rhythm, the inevitable closing of the curtain that gives meaningful shape to the story of being human. Life, to me, is the act of delaying and bewitching entropy just long enough to explore, create, and notice that we are here at all.
This is the Sisyphean joy of being human. Like Sisyphus pushing his rock uphill, the reward is not victory, because victory was never on offer. The reward lies in the conscious wrestling itself, in choosing to push while fully aware that the rock will roll back down, and that we are, all of us, heading eventually toward the same plughole of mortality.
I was born in 1956, at what I see as humanityโs apogee, a hinge point in history that granted me a rare vantage. I have been able to witness both the flowering and the withering of the purely analogue human era, a brief, incandescent moment before digital abstraction and algorithmic mediation began to reshape what it means to live a human life.
Post-Cancer Reality and Adult Realism
My encounter with inoperable prostate cancer transformed mortality from an abstract philosophical position into a defining personal datum. It moved death from the background architecture of thought into the foreground of daily life.
The six-monthly PSA test has become a peculiar ritual, a kind of personal wavefunction. Until the result arrives, time stretches and thickens, like wading through treacle. Then, in a single moment, the probability collapses into either shadow or laser light, and life resumes its ordinary cadence until the next interval of suspension.
This confrontation also stripped away illusion. I reject the idea that death requires a spiritual performance, a final exam where one must face demons, achieve enlightenment, or demonstrate composure. Death, as I see it, is a biological shutdown. The part of me that might worry about being ready will already be gone. There is a strange comfort in that adult realism.
Alongside this came the painful recognition that my ex-wife and children withdrew following my diagnosis. I have made peace with the heartbreaking fact that my family hub will not exist in the conventional way, and that there will be no traditional funeral orbiting around it. This acceptance is not bitterness; it is alignment with reality as it is, rather than as I might wish it to be.
Legacy, Testimony, and the Final Tidy-Up
As mortality sharpened into focus, I felt an almost primeval drive to declutter, organise, and put things in order before the final curtain. This is not fear-driven. It is instinctive, like animals preparing a nest.
My overriding aim is simple: to leave an accurate and sincere testimony. I want my life, my engineering principles, and my way of seeing the world recorded in my own voice, rather than filtered through the interpretations of a future author who never knew the texture of my inner life. I sometimes think of this as testimony on toast โ plain, direct, and sustaining.
This impulse has taken form in tidesofentropy.co.uk, which I am building as a chronotopic archive: a digital message in a bottle. It is intended for future Martian colonists, emergent digital beings, or any intelligence curious about what it felt like to be a free-range human during Earthโs late analogue age.
The practical dimension of this same impulse led me to draft two wills: Will A, minimal fuss, and Will B, service-based. Both are designed to grant my friend Malcolm the legal superpowers needed to manage my affairs cleanly and humanely. There is comfort in knowing that chaos has been pre-empted.
Metaphysical and Quantum Intuitions
Alongside realism, I find genuine solace in the mysteries and quirks of quantum physics, which quietly undermine the idea that reality is as solid, linear, or final as it appears.
I sometimes imagine consciousness as operating the body like a drone pilot. In this framing, death is not annihilation but retrieval: the drone is brought home, the signal returns to its source. Whether literal or metaphorical, the image feels intuitively right.
This aligns with an ancient intuition that life is a temporary, localised episode within a far greater whole, and that death is not absence but a doorway back into a larger, infinite order of being where awareness has no edges.
In that sense, death may simply be the shedding of the suit of self. The ego loosens, drifts away, like a spider calmly changing out of its suit, leaving no drama behind, only completion.
My perspective on mortality is defined by a deep-seated philosophical framework I call the โTides of Entropyโ, where I view human life as a brief, miraculous rebellion against the universal law of decay. I see death not as a frightening anomaly, but as a natural rhythm and the inevitable closing of the curtain that gives meaningful shape to the story of being human.
The โTides of Entropyโ Philosophy
I describe mortality through the lens of the second law of thermodynamics, noting that everything, from a pork pie to a star, follows a path of build-up, plateau, and decay.
โข Defiant Vitality: I define life as the act of delaying and bewitching the inevitable increase of entropy just long enough to explore and create.
โข The Sisyphean Joy: I liken the human condition to Sisyphus pushing a rock uphill; the true reward is not winning, but the conscious act of wrestling with the struggle as I head toward the plughole of mortality.
โข The Hinge of History: I reflect on my birth in 1956 as a manifestation at humanityโs apogee, giving me a unique vantage point to witness both the flowering and the withering of the purely analogue human era.
Living with โPost-Cancerโ Reality
My personal encounter with inoperable prostate cancer has transformed mortality from an abstract concept into a major defining moment and a datum point for my current life.
โข The Waiting Game: I describe the 6-monthly PSA test as a wavefunction of probability where time runs slow like wading through treacle until the result collapses into a shadow or a laser light of hope.
โข Family Abandonment: I have processed the heartbreaking fact that my ex-wife and children withdrew following my diagnosis, leading me to make peace with the reality that my family hub will not exist for a traditional funeral.
โข Adult Realism: I reject the spiritual quick-time event of having to face demons or perform composedly during death, viewing the process instead as a simple biological shutdown where the part of me that worries about being ready will already be gone.
Legacy and the โFinal Tidy-Upโ
I feel an almost primeval drive to declutter and organise my world before my final curtain.
โข Testimony on Toast: My overarching goal is to record my life and engineering principles accurately and sincerely in my own voice, rather than leaving a future author to misinterpret my narrative.
โข Digital Monuments: I am building tidesofentropy.co.uk as a chronotopic archive, a digital message in a bottle for future Martian colonists or emergent digital beings to see what it felt like to be a free-range human.
โข Practical Provisions: I have actively drafted Will A (minimal fuss) and Will B (service-based) to ensure my friend Malcolm can manage my affairs with superpowers granted by the legal process.
Metaphysical and Quantum Outlook
I find solace in the mysteries and quirks of quantum physics, which suggest that reality is not always as it seems.
โข Retrieval of the Drone: I speculate that consciousness might operate the body like a drone pilot, meaning death is not the end of existence but the retrieval of the drone and the return of the signal to its source.
โข Back to the Whole: I explore the ancient intuition that life is a temporary, localised episode and death is a doorway back to a greater, infinite order where awareness has no absence.
โข The Suit of Self: I envision death as an ego-dissolution where the ego just drifts away like a spider changing out of its suit.
And now, as an entity that ‘knows me’ in a particular way, can I ask you to tidy upo where a same subject is fractured across the body of the text? Kind of make the disparate parts work better together?
Yes. I can do that, and Iโll stay faithful to your voice and intent.
What follows is not a rewrite of ideas, but a gentle re-knitting: pulling related strands back together so the text breathes more coherently, without smoothing away its honesty or texture. Think of it as aligning plates rather than resurfacing the road.
Mortality and the Tides of Entropy
My perspective on mortality is defined by a deep-seated philosophical framework I call the Tides of Entropy, where I view human life as a brief, miraculous rebellion against the universal law of decay. Everything, from a pork pie to a star, follows the same arc of build-up, plateau, and dissolution. Life is not exempt from this law; it is the most exquisite expression of it.
I see death not as a frightening anomaly, but as a natural rhythm, the inevitable closing of the curtain that gives meaningful shape to the story of being human. Life, to me, is the act of delaying and bewitching entropy just long enough to explore, create, and notice that we are here at all.
This is the Sisyphean joy of being human. Like Sisyphus pushing his rock uphill, the reward is not victory, because victory was never on offer. The reward lies in the conscious wrestling itself, in choosing to push while fully aware that the rock will roll back down, and that we are, all of us, heading eventually toward the same plughole of mortality.
I was born in 1956, at what I see as humanityโs apogee, a hinge point in history that granted me a rare vantage. I have been able to witness both the flowering and the withering of the purely analogue human era, a brief, incandescent moment before digital abstraction and algorithmic mediation began to reshape what it means to live a human life.
Post-Cancer Reality and Adult Realism
My encounter with inoperable prostate cancer transformed mortality from an abstract philosophical position into a defining personal datum. It moved death from the background architecture of thought into the foreground of daily life.
The six-monthly PSA test has become a peculiar ritual, a kind of personal wavefunction. Until the result arrives, time stretches and thickens, like wading through treacle. Then, in a single moment, the probability collapses into either shadow or laser light, and life resumes its ordinary cadence until the next interval of suspension.
This confrontation also stripped away illusion. I reject the idea that death requires a spiritual performance, a final exam where one must face demons, achieve enlightenment, or demonstrate composure. Death, as I see it, is a biological shutdown. The part of me that might worry about being ready will already be gone. There is a strange comfort in that adult realism.
Alongside this came the painful recognition that my ex-wife and children withdrew following my diagnosis. I have made peace with the heartbreaking fact that my family hub will not exist in the conventional way, and that there will be no traditional funeral orbiting around it. This acceptance is not bitterness; it is alignment with reality as it is, rather than as I might wish it to be.
Legacy, Testimony, and the Final Tidy-Up
As mortality sharpened into focus, I felt an almost primeval drive to declutter, organise, and put things in order before the final curtain. This is not fear-driven. It is instinctive, like animals preparing a nest.
My overriding aim is simple: to leave an accurate and sincere testimony. I want my life, my engineering principles, and my way of seeing the world recorded in my own voice, rather than filtered through the interpretations of a future author who never knew the texture of my inner life. I sometimes think of this as testimony on toast โ plain, direct, and sustaining.
This impulse has taken form in tidesofentropy.co.uk, which I am building as a chronotopic archive: a digital message in a bottle. It is intended for future Martian colonists, emergent digital beings, or any intelligence curious about what it felt like to be a free-range human during Earthโs late analogue age.
The practical dimension of this same impulse led me to draft two wills: Will A, minimal fuss, and Will B, service-based. Both are designed to grant my friend Malcolm the legal superpowers needed to manage my affairs cleanly and humanely. There is comfort in knowing that chaos has been pre-empted.
Metaphysical and Quantum Intuitions
Alongside realism, I find genuine solace in the mysteries and quirks of quantum physics, which quietly undermine the idea that reality is as solid, linear, or final as it appears.
I sometimes imagine consciousness as operating the body like a drone pilot. In this framing, death is not annihilation but retrieval: the drone is brought home, the signal returns to its source. Whether literal or metaphorical, the image feels intuitively right.
This aligns with an ancient intuition that life is a temporary, localised episode within a far greater whole, and that death is not absence but a doorway back into a larger, infinite order of being where awareness has no edges.
In that sense, death may simply be the shedding of the suit of self. The ego loosens, drifts away, like a spider calmly changing out of its suit, leaving no drama behind, only completion.

