Our foundation is the Second Law of Thermodynamics: a law with no known exceptions. Energy disperses. The universe tends toward disorder. Which raises an immediate and fundamental question: how can any system cohere at all?
Unifying Systems Theory (UST) is how we've reasoned through that question. Our mission is to develop it into a candidate early systems science through application to problems that matter.
The foundation
The theoretical roots trace to doctoral work at MIT where the application of entropy-based principles generated insight into how to strategically evolve complex systems under legacy constraints. Years of technical work across many programs and domains followed. Patterns kept appearing: something fundamental hidden beneath the surface behavior of systems, consistent across contexts with nothing obvious in common. Hypotheses formed, and emerging patterns and approaches grew sharper and more refined with each application.
The effort since has been to systematically derive from empirical law and first principles what intuition first revealed. Like the law it follows from, UST is discovered, not invented, belonging to no one and to everyone.