The Project
This is not a collection of separate novels, but a single exploration articulated across three levels of reality: matter, life, and mind.
Each volume approaches the same fundamental question from a different perspective: what is the place of the individual within the systems that shape existence?
Rather than telling a continuous story, the trilogy forms a conceptual progression — a gradual displacement of the idea that the human being stands at the center of reality.
The First Movement: Matter
The Geometry of Traces explores what remains.
Set within a building awaiting demolition, the novel follows Elias, a “liquidator” of spaces, as he moves through rooms filled with the silent residue of past lives. Objects, walls, and forgotten details become fragments of memory, suggesting that existence does not vanish, but stratifies.
Here, the individual recedes, while the world retains its traces.
The Second Movement: Life
The Glass Code shifts the focus from space to time.
In a speculative scenario where biological error is eliminated, aging and decay come to an end. What initially appears as a form of perfection reveals a deeper contradiction: without error, there is no transformation — and without transformation, life begins to lose coherence.
Change, loss, and entropy emerge not as flaws, but as the necessary conditions of life.
The Third Movement: Mind
The Echo of Minds completes the trajectory by turning inward, toward consciousness itself.
A researcher studying the emergence of ideas begins to observe a pattern: certain intuitions arise simultaneously in different individuals, without any apparent connection. As the phenomenon intensifies, a radical hypothesis takes form — thoughts do not originate within a single mind, but circulate across multiple minds at once.
The individual is no longer the source of thinking, but a transient node within a larger cognitive network.
Even the narrative structure reflects this shift: the central perspective dissolves, and multiple voices converge toward the same emergent idea.
Beyond the Trilogy
Every structure, once completed, reveals what it cannot contain.
After matter, life, and mind, one question remains unresolved — not as a concept, but as a limit:
whether experience can ever be reduced to what can be measured.
The Theorem of the Soul, a new work in progress, begins from this fracture.
A researcher attempts to map consciousness with absolute precision.
At a certain point, observation fails.
The boundary between two minds opens — briefly, irreversibly.
What passes through it cannot be retained, only remembered.
And even that, not completely.