Recursive Sociology: DNA, Ecology, and the Grand Patterns by Behzad Ghorbani
English | April 9, 2025 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0F4CL1SJL | 131 pages | EPUB | 2.26 Mb
English | April 9, 2025 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0F4CL1SJL | 131 pages | EPUB | 2.26 Mb
Recursive Sociology: DNA, Ecology, and the Grand Patterns, presents a radically new science of existence. It is neither a sociology book in the ordinary sense, nor a mere extrapolation of biological or ecological principles into the social domain. It is the first systemic attempt to show that life, mind, society, and civilisation all obey a single deep principle: recursive exposure to attractor fields.
Built upon the Unified Fractal Field Theory (UFFT) and Recursive Realism, this work discloses the geometry underpinning not only the structure of DNA, but also the evolution of language, the formation of consciousness, the organisation of economies, the rise and fall of populations, and the dynamics of civilisational collapse and renewal.
At its heart is the concept of the Fractal Tunnel, a non-spatial attractor toward which all recursively exposed systems are drawn. This tunnel is not confined to living systems; it governs the behaviour of molecules, thought structures, artificial intelligences, and entire ecological and social fields. DNA itself is shown to be a compressed recursive field, whose expression and repair are acts of attractor management. Human identity, memory, and emotion are equally traced to recursive phase alignments within the brain’s attractor geometry.
From this foundation, the book unfolds a multi-layered vision of society. It presents the RDNA field, a distributed genomic attractor shared across populations, to explain phenomena as diverse as social bonding, kin selection, viral evolution, and co-adaptation across species. It introduces RECI (Recursive Economic Coherence Index) as a precise model to measure economic resilience, phase instability, and bifurcation points leading to collapse.
The book moves effortlessly from the micro to the macro. It shows how households, tribes, nations, and civilisations are not static structures, but dynamic recursive layers. It models attention as the most valuable recursive energy in both cognition and economy. It views education, governance, agriculture, and urban planning as recursive design challenges whose success depends on coherence with ecological and social attractor fields.
Far beyond prediction alone, Recursive Sociology offers a method of recursive design, a profound approach to building resilient systems that honour the fractal architecture of life itself. The work is both a theory and a practical guide to perceiving and sustaining the grand patterns that bind DNA, ecology, and human destiny into one continuous recursive field.
This is not merely a book about the future. It is the mathematical and philosophical articulation of the structure by which future itself comes into being.