Before you leave...
Take 20% off your first order
20% off
Enter the code below at checkout to get 20% off your first order
Discover summer reading lists for all ages & interests!
Find Your Next Read
The Theory of Everything in Politics (Vol 2)
Following The Theory of Everything in Politics: The Non-Newtonian Model - How Systems Shift, Adapt, and Collapse (Vol. 1), this second volume moves from theory to application. Here, the author focuses on the practical side: how to use the model to diagnose real problems and design concrete solutions for the institutions, markets, rights, and systems that shape modern societies. That's why I strongly recommend reading volume 1 of the work first.
Why do modern states fail?
Why do democracies fall into polarization, institutional gridlock, failing healthcare systems, unaffordable housing, permanent deficits, and inflation that never matches the official explanations?And above all:
why no ideology ever seems to fix any of it?This book offers a complete operating system for the modern State.
Clear, practical, and grounded in first principles, Volume II of The Theory of Everything in Politics applies the Non-Newtonian Model to every pillar of society, turning political theory into an actionable blueprint. The foundations of the State and individual rights- A unified and structural theory of rights
- How to balance freedom, property, and life
Democracy and the Iron Law of Oligarchy
- Why representative democracies drift toward oligarchy
- How elites reproduce and concentrate power
- Why the representative system is failing, and the pillars required for a new, real, and functional democracy
Centralization, decentralization, and the Non-Newtonian State
- A dynamic framework to determine when a State must become "solid" (centralized) or "liquid" (flexible and decentralized)
- How to apply this logic within a democratic system
Institutions
- Building healthcare systems that actually work, with realistic scalability and efficient resource use.
- Education, pensions, housing, transport, and justice designed for long-term stability instead of short political cycles.
- How institutional incentives prevent decay and keep systems functional over time.
- State vs. unions: how each shapes bargaining power and stability.
- When to regulate, and when regulation does more harm than good.
- Deregulation: flexibility vs. precarity and wage erosion.
- Offshoring: lower costs vs. long-term loss of industrial capacity.
A paradigm-shifting monetary model
- Clear distinction between real money and total money
- Hoarding as a macroeconomic variable
- Central innovation: commodity velocity as the forgotten counterpart of money velocity
- A mathematical model of inflation based on commodity types and monetary structure
- When freedom of expression must be prioritized to preserve institutional feedback
- When restrictions become necessary to prevent systemic collapse
- Criteria for balancing stability, legitimacy, and social cohesion
A practical and post-ideological architecture of the State
Faithful to Volume I, it keeps the same clear and accessible style: organized chapters, precise language, 12-point type, generous spacing, and soft cream paper that makes even dense passages easy to read.
It preserves the essence of the project, rigor combined with clarity, now expanded into a complete operational blueprint of the State.
Aimed at students, researchers, policymakers, and any reader seeking to understand how to build a country that actually works, this volume offers a solid, ambitious, and integrated framework refined over years.
Thanks for subscribing!
This email has been registered!
Take 20% off your first order
Enter the code below at checkout to get 20% off your first order