Veriphysics
A new post-Enlightenment philosophy
The Enlightenment promised to replace superstition with reason, tyranny with liberty, and ignorance with progress. Three centuries later, the results are in.
Democratic governments no longer represent their citizens. Economic models that predicted shared prosperity have delivered stagnation and debt. The scientific establishment cannot correct its own errors. The very philosophers who enthroned reason ended by abandoning it entirely. What we are witnessing is not the corruption of a good idea by bad actors. It is the inevitable collapse of a framework that was flawed from its foundations.
Veriphysics: The Treatise is a systematic diagnosis of that collapse and a rigorous description of what must replace it.
The Enlightenment’s five core premises, autonomous reason, sovereign individualism, mechanical nature, the fact-value distinction, and inevitable progress, have each been falsified by the experience of history and by the findings of the sciences the Enlightenment itself celebrated. A superior philosophical tradition, the classical and Christian inheritance from the Greco-Roman legacy, was outmaneuvered, not by better arguments but by superior rhetoric, institutional capture, and the patient infiltration of universities, academies, and publishing houses over generations.
Veriphysics is a genuine successor to the Western philosophical tradition, with a framework built on Aletheian Realism, grounded in the Christian metaphysical tradition, and equipped with a concrete epistemological tool identified as the Triveritas. Any claim that cannot satisfy all three of the triad’s conditions, logical validity, mathematical coherence, and empirical anchoring, does not merit assent, regardless of the credentials of those asserting it. Applied to the crown jewels of Enlightenment thought, including the cogito, Darwinian evolution, classical economics, and social contract theory, the Triveritas serves as a wrecking ball. The math doesn’t work. The logic doesn’t hold. The evidence, honestly examined, refutes rather than confirms.
Veriphysics is not for those who want their current assumptions confirmed. It is for those who have become aware that something is deeply wrong with the intellectual world they inherited, and who are willing to follow the path toward truth wherever it leads.


The critique of Veriphysics and the method it proposes are both applicable to geological uniformitarianism.