What if time is not ending-but evolving?
This book explores a bold and carefully reasoned idea: that time, as we experience it, may be approaching a fundamental transformation. Rather than flowing endlessly forward, time may be completing itself-becoming a spatial dimension that can be inhabited rather than endured. Drawing on physics, philosophy, biology, and information theory, the book develops the concept of anti-time: a subtle counter-influence from the future that helps explain intuition, coincidence, acceleration, and the growing instability of modern systems. Through accessible explanations and visual metaphors, the author invites readers to rethink causality, memory, health, and the nature of change itself.
Beyond time lies evolution.
As time loses its dominance, life must adapt. The book traces how consciousness, biology, and evolution may respond to a reality no longer governed by linear sequence. It explores the possibility of new forms of life-post-temporal species-capable of navigating time as structure rather than flow, and considers what this transition means for identity, health, ethics, and humanity's future. Thought-provoking yet grounded, speculative yet responsible, this work is not a prediction of catastrophe but an invitation to awareness. Whether time truly ends or not, how we experience it-and how we adapt-may define the next chapter of human existence.