Working on QCF — a curvature-capped framework where ∑GR = ∑QM
"The world isn't broken. We’re just running the wrong diagnostics."
We spend a vast amount of time trying to "fix" the environment, the economy, and society, as if we are debugging code that was meant to be static. But what if we’re misinterpreting the error logs?
When I look at our ecosystem, I see a piece of engineering so fine-tuned it’s breathtaking. Take
- Natural Oscillations: We are currently in a geological interglacial period. The ice is retreating, temperatures are fluctuating, and the system is doing exactly what it was designed to do: oscillate.
- The Misconception of Emergency: We treat this as an "emergency" because we equate change with extinction.
- The Scale of the Earth: We are trying to out-engineer a planet’s thermal cycles with carbon credits and wind farms, ignoring the fact that the Earth has survived events that make our current climate fluctuations look like a rounding error.
The real "bug" isn't the planet; it’s us. We are the only species that consumes its own infrastructure and calls it "progress." We act like a parasite that has forgotten it is part of the host.
I’ve stopped waiting for the "fix." I’ve stopped listening to the doom-mongers who trade in fear because it’s the easiest currency to collect.
I’m focusing on the only thing I can control: the quality of the work I do and the clarity with which I see the world. If we are destined to be a short-lived iteration of life on this planet, I’d rather burn bright as a rough diamond than fade away as a fearful spectator of our own decline.
The storm is coming—it always is. Are you building a shelter, or are you learning how to sail?
Core postulate: K_max = 1/16 (Planck-normalized curvature cap)
Why: If General Relativity and Quantum Mechanics are both summations over the same reality, their totals must converge. At Planck density, curvature can't diverge — it caps.
- 📂 Code & notes: github.com/andrewrodger73/QCF
- 📖 Paper: doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20615629
From Airdrie, Scotland. Rough diamond, cutting in public.
