---
title: "An Immanent Metaphysics"
authors:
  - "Landry, Forrest"
date: 2026-07-01
publisher: "UVSM Publications LLC"
type:
  - "Book"
questions:
  - "Can ontology, epistemology, and ethics be integrated into a single coherent framework?"
  - "What is the formal relationship between being, knowing, and choosing?"
  - "How can metaphysics be practiced with the rigor of mathematics?"
license: "CC BY-NC-ND 4.0"
---

## Abstract

A comprehensive metaphysical framework integrating ontology, epistemology, and ethics into a single coherent model through the formal structure of triadic relationships.

## Core Questions

1. Can ontology, epistemology, and ethics be integrated into a single coherent framework?
2. What is the formal relationship between being, knowing, and choosing?
3. How can metaphysics be practiced with the rigor of mathematics?


<!-- **[PLACEHOLDER — Full text or extended abstract to be provided by Forrest Landry]** -->

<!-- **[PLACEHOLDER — Publication date (2026-07-01) is provisional. Forrest to confirm. Abstract below also needs Forrest's review for accuracy.]** -->

*An Immanent Metaphysics* presents the full architecture of a metaphysical system that integrates ontology, epistemology, and ethics into a single coherent model. The framework establishes triadic relationships as the foundational formal structure from which both physical reality and experiential consciousness can be derived in a non-dualistic manner.

The work develops a precise formal language for addressing questions traditionally considered beyond the reach of rigorous analysis: the nature of being, the structure of knowledge, and the ground of ethical choice. By constructing metaphysics with the methodological discipline of mathematics — defining axioms, deriving consequences, and testing internal consistency — the Immanent Metaphysics seeks to restore legitimacy to a philosophical practice that has been largely abandoned by the analytic tradition. The resulting framework provides a unified account of the relationship between subjective experience and objective reality, dissolving rather than solving several classical philosophical problems including the hard problem of consciousness and the is-ought gap.


---

UVSM Publications LLC | CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

