InnerSpace was conceived during the most difficult period of my life—initially as a refuge, and a desperate act of survival. I will explore that personal context more fully in the stories of InnerSpace. What matters here is the paradox that followed: I have never been as productive as I have been during the past eight months, and the momentum shows no sign of slowing.
In this time, I have written and revised more words than ever before, produced an unprecedented number of images, and—most unexpectedly—transformed more speculative thought experiments into fully articulated theories than at any previous point in my life. What began as a creative sanctuary evolved into a generative engine.
One of the most significant byproducts of InnerSpace has been the realization of an idea I have carried for over three decades: the construction of a rational bridge between matter and idea, grounded purely in mathematics. I now refer to this process as categorical rational conversion. For years, this concept existed as an intellectual game—something I returned to for pleasure rather than completion. I always assumed that bringing it to fruition would require years of re-mastering faded and forgotten advanced mathematics, perhaps up to five years. That assumption turned out to be entirely wrong.
The theory is now complete, along with several consequential extensions that emerged naturally from it. It remains rigorously mathematical, and its foundation is strikingly elegant—anchored in a strictly rational, axiomatic framework. What once felt distant and hypothetical has become precise, coherent, and structurally sound.
I intend to present this work in full detail across two substantial volumes, which will continue to be refined as InnerSpace itself evolves. What began as refuge has become structure; what began as play has become theory. Now, if this is not magic, then what is?









