The Abundance Series Seven volumes. One argument.The orientation that shapes every decision — and the evidence that it can be changed.
The five books of The Abundance Series share a conviction: that the orientation human beings bring to their decisions — scarcity or abundance, extraction or contribution, defense or investment — is not fixed. It is learned. It is environmentally produced. And the conditions that produce it can be designed differently.
Each book can be read independently. The argument deepens across the sequence. The window the series describes — the historical moment in which this shift in values is still possible — is the same in all five volumes.
It is still open.
Book One — Abundance: Beyond Scarcity and Self-Devouring Cycles The foundation. What the scarcity orientation is, where it comes from, how it transmits across generations and institutions, and why the clinical and developmental evidence says it is interruptible.
Book Two — The Twin Minds: Choosing Abundance over Scarcity The individual level. The choice between scarcity and abundance orientation is not made once. It is remade continuously, in response to specific triggers, in specific contexts.
Book Three — Red Lines Rising: Governing AI While We Still Can The most urgent single domain. Artificial intelligence is the most powerful tool ever built. The decisions being made right now about how it is developed, owned, governed, and deployed are among the most consequential in human history.
Book Four — The Abundance Dispatch: Letters to Power Direct address to the specific people whose decisions are producing the outcomes the series documents. The reckoning in its most concentrated form.
Book Five — Building Abundance: The blueprint. Twenty-nine chapters. Ninety proposals. The evidence-based case for what the abundance orientation builds when applied, domain by domain, to the systems that determine whether the child born today is given what she needs or handed the bill for decisions she had no part in making.
Book Six—The Constitution — Floor Missing: A Revaluation of Founding Principles The constitutional argument. Why the policy argument for children keeps losing even when the evidence is overwhelming. The answer is architectural — the American Constitution contains no affirmative obligation to the child at the bottom. Comparing six constitutional documents across democracies, applying the child test to the founding layer itself. The word posterity is in the first sentence. It has always been there.
Book Seven—The Abundance Life: A Guide from Birth to Posterity The final volume: The individual life lived inside the abundance orientation — from birth through every stage of development, relationship, work, and aging, to the legacy left for the next generation. Forthcoming.