Apex: on choice and creation (quantum ethics)

In an age of infinite options and algorithmic curation, we have reached a strange apex: surrounded by more choices than any generation in history, yet increasingly unable to make intentional decisions. We scroll, we consume, we react, but do we truly choose?

Apex: On Choice and Creation explores how modern life has transformed human agency into something automated, predicted, and pre-selected. Through philosophical enquiry, cultural observation, and raw honesty, Alexander Paul Burton examines what it means to create, choose, and remain authentic when algorithms know our preferences before we do.

From ancient campfires to endless digital feeds, from the intentional hunger of our ancestors to our current state of perpetual satiation, this collection of essays asks uncomfortable questions: Have we inherited struggle as our cultural birthright? Is validation replacing creation? Can chaos be more liberating than the structures designed to free us?

Composed across Toronto coffee shops and fuelled by an inordinate amount of caffeine, this work is messy, tangential, and unapologetically authentic: exactly what it argues for.

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