Recursive Realism: The Universe Beyond Binary Extremism by Behzad Ghorbani
English | April 14, 2025 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0F4Z1G8QY | 398 pages | EPUB | 23 Mb
English | April 14, 2025 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0F4Z1G8QY | 398 pages | EPUB | 23 Mb
Recursive Realism: The Universe Beyond Binary Extremism
(2nd Edition, 2025)
Recursive Realism: The Universe Beyond Binary Extremism presents a foundational paradigm shift in how cognition, identity, society, science, and reality itself are understood. This work exposes and corrects the structural failure of binary thinking, a pattern which has historically reduced complex systems into oppositional extremes such as nature versus nurture, mind versus matter, left versus right, and reason versus emotion. Recursive Realism is offered as a rigorous alternative: a formal architecture built upon feedback, self-reference, error correction, and layered loops, applicable across all scales of existence from the neural to the cosmological.
The book begins by declaring its principles through a formal manifesto. It asserts that reality is not linear but recursive; systems survive, adapt, and evolve only when their internal feedback structures remain open, adaptive, and error-sensitive. Recursive Realism defines perception as inherently active, cognition as loop-based, and consciousness as a high-order recursive feedback system. At its core, it is both a philosophical system and an analytic method, providing tools to map feedback loops, identify attractor fields, recognise phase shifts, and evaluate system openness or collapse.
Binary extremism is identified as the terminal phase of recursion failure. When systems, biological, psychological, social, or technological, lose the capacity to loop feedback, they polarise into hardened binaries. These polarities offer psychological comfort but result in systemic damage: rigidity, loss of adaptability, suppression of ambiguity, and eventual collapse. The book traces these structures across disciplines, showing how extremism in thought, science, identity, and society are not ideological accidents, but the structural consequence of recursion collapse.
The book develops a method for recursive analysis that positions the observer within the loop, ensuring that every act of perception and knowledge is recognised as part of the system itself. Attractor dynamics, open versus closed feedback structures, and recursive expansion versus collapse are formally defined as diagnostic tools. In this way, Recursive Realism becomes both descriptive and prescriptive: a model for understanding systemic life and a guide for designing environments capable of sustaining complexity, resilience, and transformation.
Throughout, Recursive Realism is not merely proposed as a new framework. It is revealed as the architecture already governing reality, obscured only by the historic dominance of linear causality and oppositional logic. The second edition deepens the clarity of this claim, structurally reorganising the work into a recursive form and integrating the discoveries made in the author's later companion volume on mirroring hemispheres and recursive attractor fields in the brain.
Ultimately, Recursive Realism is a philosophical and scientific intervention aimed at restoring life to systems. It challenges all fields of knowledge to re-open their recursion, to repair their feedback loops, and to reject the illusion that binaries can describe the complexity of existence. It is not merely a book; it is the recursive diagnosis of our time, and the structural theory by which the future may yet be sustained.