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Eonatrika. View frow above


Katerina Wind

© Katerina Wind, 2026


ISBN 978-5-0069-2500-7

Created with Ridero smart publishing system

Preface

Eonatrika is a view from the height of the Universe and a scientific-philosophical reflection on the possible cosmic transformation of humanity: how we are structured, how our myths and scientific models change, and what future scenarios grow out of this.


This book lies at the intersection of scientific inquiry, philosophical reflection, and an authorial worldview. Facts and theories from astrophysics, biology, sociology, and related disciplines are presented in accordance with the current scientific consensus and are accompanied by references to up-to-date sources.

For the reader’s convenience, the book introduces several original conceptual models – “Eonatrika”, the “Law of Harmony”, the “Civilization Counter”, and others. Their purpose is not to propose a new physical theory, but to create a coherent image for rethinking humanity’s place in the universal drama of being. These models are philosophical constructs rather than scientific theories and serve purely as worldview- and illustration-oriented tools; they are not subject to empirical verification and are not intended for practical application.


Scientific terms are sometimes used in an extended, metaphorical sense, which is explicitly indicated in the text. This approach does not claim to alter the existing scientific consensus and functions only as an instrument of philosophical analysis. For convenience, all key terms, both scientific and authorial, are collected in a glossary at the end of the book.

How to read this book

The book is structured as a sequence of interconnected essays: from the paradox of a silent Universe and the Great Filter hypotheses to the inner contradictions of the human psyche and the idea of Eonatrika as a possible framework for humanity’s cosmic becoming. Each chapter can be read as a stand-alone text, yet together they form a single trajectory – from the description of the cosmic context to the question of inner harmony as a condition for the survival of the species.


The text does not require specialized education, but it does presuppose a willingness to read attentively and to engage in independent critical analysis. It is best approached not as a set of final answers but as an invitation to reflect and to enter into an inner dialogue about which qualities of a civilization might actually allow it to pass through the “bottleneck” of history.

Legal notice

This book is intended solely for intellectual, educational, and philosophical reflection and does not constitute guidance for action or professional advice in any field. Nothing in the text may be regarded as legal, financial, investment, medical, psychological, religious, or any other form of professional advice, nor as an inducement to perform legally significant actions.

The concepts described in the book (“Eonatrika”, the “Law of Harmony”, the “Civilization Counter”, and other authorial principles and models) are philosophical constructs rather than scientific theories; they are not subject to empirical verification and are not intended for practical application. Scientific terms used in an extended or metaphorical sense do not claim to modify the existing scientific consensus and do not constitute scientific statements, recommendations, or forecasts.

All historical analogies, interpretations of scientific theories, and psychological and sociological models are used exclusively within the framework of the author’s philosophical concept and do not claim absolute truth, completeness, or universal applicability. Nothing in this book may be regarded as legal, financial, investment, medical, psychological, religious, or any other type of professional consultation.

Reasonable efforts have been made in preparing this book to verify data and sources; however, their absolute completeness, timeliness, and freedom from error are not guaranteed. Responsibility for the interpretation and any possible use of the ideas contained herein rests entirely with the reader. By beginning to read this book, you confirm your understanding and acceptance of these conditions.

Copyright to the text and the authorial concepts belongs to Katerina Wind (pen name), 2026. When quoting or otherwise permissibly using fragments of the book, a reference to the author, the title of the book, and the year of publication must be retained.

Translation notice

This English version was produced from the original Russian text with the assistance of artificial intelligence and without additional human editing; despite reasonable care, the text may contain inaccuracies or distortions of meaning.

From the author

Eonatrika is an author’s view of humanity as an experiment in overcoming its own biological program for the sake of a cosmic future. The human being lives in a permanent inner contradiction: our thought can contemplate the Universe, yet our collective will is often held captive by narrow, pre-rational impulses.

We are the Architects of the future, capable of thinking in terms of cooperation and progress, and at the same time carriers of an ancient residual “Shadow” that splits the world into camps and seeks superiority. The collision of these levels of being on the stage of planetary civilization generates a critical tension that threatens to turn our greatest achievements against us.

Perhaps it is time to look at ourselves from the vantage point of space – and reconsider. This book is an attempt at such a view.

Invitation to dialogue

This book does not demand agreement with every thesis; it matters far more if some of the proposed perspectives help you articulate your own questions about the future of humanity and about yourself more precisely. If, in the course of reading, objections, alternative models, or a desire to extend the proposed picture arise, then Eonatrika’s task as a philosophical experiment is already partially fulfilled.

Read. Reflect. And if it resonates, find in this perspective your own point of assembly – that inner configuration from which the cosmic fate of humanity ceases to be an abstraction and becomes a personal ethical choice. After that, you can turn the page and move on to Part I, where the discussion begins with the silent Universe and the statistics of the Great Filter.

Part I. Cosmic Protocol

The silence of the Universe is the loudest signal we have ever received. The Fermi paradox confronts us with a stark choice: is our civilization a rare miracle or a solitary spark?

We feverishly scan the sky, while the Great Filter may already lie behind us… or be waiting ahead. This is not a search for our cosmic siblings; it is an interrogation of our own civilization in the face of voiceless eternity.

Chapter 1. The Civilization Counter: why does it reset?

The Universe has prepared trillions of seats, yet the hall remains empty. Where is everyone these places were made for? Or is the ticket to the “galactic club” far more expensive than we think?

In a clear night, to see the main equation of this book, it is enough to look up. Each point of light is not just a “little star” but a separate star, one of the hundreds of billions of suns in our Galaxy. Most of these stars have planets; this is no longer a conjecture but an established fact: as of January 2026, the existence of more than six thousand exoplanets has been confirmed [1].

From there, simple arithmetic takes over. According to current estimates, the observable Universe contains from two hundred billion to two trillion galaxies [2].

Each of them contains hundreds of billions of stars. A significant fraction of these stars host planets, and a certain percentage of planets lie in the “habitable zone” – the theoretical range of distances from a star where liquid water can exist on the surface as a necessary condition for the biochemistry familiar to us [3] [4].

It does not matter which estimate of the number of potentially habitable worlds we adopt. What matters is that pure statistics depict the cosmos as an environment in which life and intelligence must arise repeatedly [4].

Yet against this numerical backdrop, space remains silent. Despite the abundance of possible worlds, we see neither clear signals nor unambiguous traces of other civilizations. Around us is the light of millions of stars – and almost complete silence [5].

Why, amid such stellar abundance around us, does the cosmos remain silent? Is this silence one of the most troubling riddles the human mind has ever faced [5]?


The Fermi paradox: “Where is everybody?”

The official Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) has been underway for more than six decades. Formal SETI searches began in 1960, when radio telescopes were first pointed at other stars in the hope of detecting artificial signals; since then, the instruments have become more powerful, the search range has expanded, and private initiatives and new telescope arrays have joined the effort [5] [6].

The result remains unchanged: there is still no convincing, widely accepted evidence for the existence of another technological civilization [5]:

1. Radio searches have detected many signals, but all of them have been explained by natural processes or interference [6].

2. Searches for large-scale engineering structures, such as hypothetical Dyson spheres, have likewise yielded no definitive results [7].

3. Searches for other forms of technosignatures, including atmospheric anomalies and artificial pollutants, have so far produced no results [5].

Of course, we have explored only a tiny fraction of space and time. Yet even against this background, the contrast between the astronomical number of potential sites for life and the observed emptiness is so great that it has become a scientific problem in its own right. Its concise formulation was given by Enrico Fermi in a simple question: “Where is everybody?” [8].

Contemporary research on cosmic communication points to the possibility of alternative forms of contact that our current methods cannot detect, including quantum communication channels [9] [10].

Most likely, somewhere in the Universe there is life and intelligence, but at our current temporal scales and instrumental sensitivity, practical contact with them may be a matter not of thousands but of billions of years – if it is possible in any familiar form at all [5].

Regardless of whether intelligence exists elsewhere, the only real resource we can rely on is our own capacity for harmony, self-control, and re-examination of the primate code. Only this can help us pass our section of the Filter, rather than any hope of external salvation [11] [12].

Two lines of response: rarity and filtering

To systematize the hypotheses that attempt to explain the Fermi paradox, we can roughly divide them into two broad classes. Between them lies a wide range of hybrid and alternative scenarios. [11] [12] [13].

1. The rarity hypothesis. Intelligent life may be statistically almost impossible. In this view, either life itself arises extremely rarely, or the transition to complex cells is a rare event, or the development of intelligence and technology is an almost unique convergence of circumstances. From a mathematical point of view, this is possible: the Universe is large enough to allow unique phenomena even at tiny probabilities [14] [4].

2. The filtering hypothesis. Life, and even intelligence, may arise relatively often, but the transition to a stable cosmic civilization turns out to be extremely unlikely. Between these states lies one or several “bottlenecks” – filters where most trajectories break off; this idea has been called the Great Filter. It does not necessarily imply an external force; more often it is understood as a set of objective difficulties, from the emergence of life to the management of powerful technologies [11] [12] [13].

Within Eonatrika, the main interest shifts from the question “How many intelligent worlds are out there?” to “Where exactly does the Filter lie in our world?”. It may lie not only in biochemistry and technology, but also in the structure of our thinking and our social systems – in how the primate code of the tribe scales up to the level of a planetary civilization [12].

A notional civilization counter

To visualize the logic of this approach, we can use a thought experiment – a notional authorial counter of stages for any civilization. This is not an empirically observed sequence or a commonly accepted classification, but a model for reflection within Eonatrika:

1. A planet with conditions suitable for complex chemistry and a stable environment.

2. The emergence of simple life.

3. The appearance of complex (eukaryotic) cells.

4. The formation of multicellular organisms.

5. The rise of intelligent beings capable of complex culture and symbolic thinking.

6. The emergence of a technological civilization visible from space through its emissions and its impact on the planet [5] [6].

7. The transition to a stable civilization capable of not destroying itself with its own technologies and conflicts.

8. The alignment of a civilization’s trajectory with the broader structures of the Aeon – a cosmic synthesis.

9. The deliberate creation and maintenance of new worlds, from robust artificial ecosystems to the ultimate image of a Laboratory that gives birth to new “universes”.

10. Existence on timescales comparable to a substantial fraction of the Galaxy’s age.

The first six steps can be described in the language of biology and astronomy. The remaining four are a philosophical extension, an authorial Eonatrika scale that does not describe measurable stages but possible horizons of a mature civilization [12].

Humanity has apparently passed the first six steps. We live on a suitable planet where life has produced complex forms, and intelligence and culture have arisen. The last few centuries have been marked by the emergence of a technological civilization that is noticeable through its radio noise and its alteration of the atmosphere [5] [6].

But this is where the central question arises. If the path from zero to the sixth stage is passable, why do we not see those who have reached the eighth, ninth, or tenth? If the Galaxy were populated by many long-lived civilizations, we would expect to see at least some traces of them. So far, no such confident evidence exists. This is not proof of absence, but it is a serious argument that the transition to a stable cosmic stage is associated with a high risk of collapse [11] [12].

Where might the Great Filter be located?

The concept of the Great Filter is a theoretical framework. Its value lies in the way it diagnoses our position. The question of where the Filter is located determines how we envision our own future [11] [12].

1. The Filter is behind us. In this scenario, the key difficulties fall on the early stages: the emergence of life and of complex cells. Intelligence and technological civilization are rare, but already passed thresholds. The silence of the cosmos is explained by the fact that only a few have reached our level; the hardest stages may already lie behind us [11] [12].

2. The Filter lies ahead of us. In this scenario, many worlds successfully pass the early stages; intelligence and technology arise frequently. Yet managing their own power turns out to be the task that almost no one can handle. This includes unstable handling of energy, conflicts involving global means of destruction, and unconsidered technological risks [11] [12] [13].

In this book, the second scenario is treated not as fate, but as a systemic governance crisis. It emerges when the complexity of a civilization exceeds the depth of its self-understanding: a critical imbalance between the power of the technologies we have created and our lagging psychological, ethical, and bioethical maturity – the capacity to recognize ourselves as part of a living system and to act in accordance with this knowledge [11] [12].

An add-on to the notional counter: Harmony as a critical transition

Humanity has long existed within a field of collective thought that arises not in isolation, but within ever more complex networks – cultural, technological, and digital. This field grows together with our tools, from the printing press to artificial intelligence, expanding access to a shared mental space but by no means guaranteeing access to Harmony.

As studies of planetary habitability show, the stability of systems depends not on one or two isolated factors, but on the subtle interaction of many parameters – orbit, stellar properties, atmospheric composition, geology, and the architecture of the planetary system as a whole. By analogy, the stability of a civilization is determined not only by its technical achievements, but also by the internal coherence of its structures – from neural networks and the psyche to institutions, culture, and the global economy [11] [4].

The problem of modern civilization lies not in a lack of knowledge, but in systemic distortions. Contemporary research in evolutionary psychology shows that our social brain is optimized for interaction with about 50—150 individuals (the Dunbar number) [15].

When a community expands to the scale of a nation or a global civilization, people still continue to think in tribal terms, which manifests itself in nationalism, intergroup hostility, and an impaired capacity for long-term planning [15].

Technological power is growing exponentially, while the mechanisms of self-control are developing only linearly. Like the Sun, which, according to modern astronomical studies, shows reduced activity compared to many similar stars, human civilization must find a way to maintain inner equilibrium amid outward development [16]. Otherwise, technological power will inevitably outpace inner maturity, creating conditions in which we encounter the Great Filter in a way that does not favor us [11] [12].

If the system can be brought into balance – by reducing its distortions, stopping the systematic removal of the competent, and embedding the principle of Harmony into culture – the probability of accelerated evolution rises sharply. In that case, a civilization need not wait for an external revelation, but can itself grow into an understanding of the Laws it now only intuitively anticipates, and, in the role of a Laboratory, create new worlds: from sustainable ecosystems to artificial “universes” as an ultimate image of a creative Aeon [12].

Our position in the Eonatrix

All this sets the context for the main theme of the book. Within the proposed model, humanity occupies a specific point in the Aeon – the sixth stage on the notional counter, the level of a technological civilization that is detectable from space.

We find ourselves in a condition where our inner programs, shaped by evolution for the challenges of small-group life, come into conflict with the demands of planetary-scale responsibility [15] [12].

Eonatrix is an attempt to discern the matrix of time in which human civilization is only one node. At present, this node lies in a zone where the decisions of a single species begin to have consequences on a planetary scale. Therefore, the question “Are we alone in the Universe?” is reformulated as a practical one: will our node become a sustainable line, or will it turn into yet another point at which the civilization counter has been reset to zero [12].

Regardless of whether other civilizations exist somewhere else, we will have to sit this exam on our own: no external force will take on the work of rewriting our primate code in the direction of Harmony [11] [15] [12].

The next chapter will show how the very structure of the Universe – its expansion and the “receding” sky – makes our window of opportunity unique.

Chapter 2. A Universe That Is Running Away from Us

Imagine a sky without stars. Not because of clouds or city lights, but because they are no longer within reach.

This is not science fiction. In 100 billion years, astronomers on Earth will see only a single galaxy in the sky – our own, merged with Andromeda – while the rest of the Universe will have slipped beyond the cosmic event horizon. The key to understanding this future already lies in the data we are collecting today.

A cosmic crisis of measurement

In 1929, Edwin Hubble revolutionized cosmology by discovering that distant galaxies are receding from us. The speed of their recession is proportional to their distance – Hubble’s law: v=H0⋅dv=H0⋅d. Today this law has been confirmed with remarkable precision, yet a new problem has emerged: a cosmological crisis.

Data from the Planck space telescope, which measured the cosmic microwave background, indicate that the Universe is expanding at 67.4 km/s per megaparsec. However, observations of Type Ia supernovae with the Hubble Space Telescope and ground-based observatories yield a value of about 73 km/s per megaparsec [17].

A 9% difference may seem small, but on the scale of the Universe it opens up an abyss in our understanding of its fate.

“This is not just a measurement error,” says Nobel laureate Adam Riess. “It may mean that we do not really understand the fundamental physics of dark energy” [18]. This measurement crisis may ultimately force a revision of the entire ΛCDM cosmological model.

Dark energy: the greatest mystery in physics

In 1998, two independent teams of astronomers made a shocking discovery: the expansion of the Universe is not slowing under the pull of gravity, but accelerating. For this discovery, the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to Saul Perlmutter, Brian P. Schmidt, and Adam G. Riess.

The acceleration is attributed to dark energy – a mysterious component thought to account for about 68% of the Universe’s total energy content [19].

Recent observations with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) suggest that dark energy has behaved in a broadly stable way over the last 11 billion years, while some studies point to possible variations in its density in the early Universe [20].

The key question is: what happens if dark energy changes its properties? According to the “quintessence” model, if the density of dark energy begins to increase, it could lead to a “Big Rip” – a catastrophic tearing apart of all structures, down to atoms themselves, in roughly 22 billion years [21].

Invisible isolation: the mathematics of the cosmological horizon

Calculations show that galaxies beyond our Local Group are already receding from us at apparent speeds exceeding that of light. This does not violate the theory of relativity, because it is the space between objects that is expanding, not the galaxies moving through space faster than light.

A critical moment will come in roughly 2 trillion years, when all galaxies outside our group will have disappeared from view forever. Yet the process has already begun.

• Today, we can see on the order of 2 trillion galaxies in the observable Universe [2].

• In about 150 billion years, the number of galaxies visible from our location will shrink to only a few dozen – those belonging to our Local Group alone.

• In 1 trillion years, the cosmic microwave background will have been stretched so much by expansion that it will be impossible to detect, even with ideal instruments [22].

“For future civilizations, the Universe will appear as an empty, isolated system,” explains physicist Lawrence Krauss. “They will never learn about the Big Bang, about cosmic expansion, or about the existence of other galaxies; their cosmology will be fundamentally different” [22].

Physical limits of communication: why we are alone even in a full Universe

Even if extraterrestrial civilizations exist, physics imposes strict limits on communication:

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