About
I write about the relationship between digital media spaces and the human nervous system—how contemporary technologies shape cognition, perception, and, ultimately, lived experience. My work moves across the nature of consciousness, the biological and philosophical origins of life, and the emerging pressures placed on human regulation by algorithmic environments. I examine fear as an economic and political instrument, the curation of cognition by media systems, and the transformation of politics and economics into performative theatres of attention. Artificial intelligence sits at the centre of this inquiry—not as a novelty, but as an accelerant—reshaping how meaning is produced, authority is conferred, and reality itself is mediated. The aim is not instruction, but orientation: to make visible the pressures acting on modern life and the systems through which they operate.