What if nothing truly "survives"?What if everything that remains-whether in nature, systems, or human life-does so not because it is strong, adapted, or chosen. but because it aligns?In The Law of Persistence, Sandeep J Chavan presents a unified framework that challenges some of our most fundamental assumptions about reality. Across physics, biology, human behavior, and society, we are taught to think in terms of survival, choice, control, and design.
But these explanations often describe outcomes without revealing the structure behind them. At the center of this work is a simple but powerful formulation:Configuration ? Constraint ? Reconfiguration ? PersistenceThis is not a theory of life, evolution, or systems. It is a structural law-one that applies without exception. Through Chavan's lens: Stability is not permanence, but compatibility with constraint Change is not driven, but resolved Choice is not created, but emerges from structure Systems do not exist because they are designed, but because they persist From atomic interactions to ecosystems, from individual decisions to global institutions, the same pattern holds.
What remains is not what survives-but what fits. This book does not attempt to persuade. It reveals a structure. And once seen, it becomes difficult to see anything the same way again.
What if nothing truly "survives"?What if everything that remains-whether in nature, systems, or human life-does so not because it is strong, adapted, or chosen. but because it aligns?In The Law of Persistence, Sandeep J Chavan presents a unified framework that challenges some of our most fundamental assumptions about reality. Across physics, biology, human behavior, and society, we are taught to think in terms of survival, choice, control, and design.
But these explanations often describe outcomes without revealing the structure behind them. At the center of this work is a simple but powerful formulation:Configuration ? Constraint ? Reconfiguration ? PersistenceThis is not a theory of life, evolution, or systems. It is a structural law-one that applies without exception. Through Chavan's lens: Stability is not permanence, but compatibility with constraint Change is not driven, but resolved Choice is not created, but emerges from structure Systems do not exist because they are designed, but because they persist From atomic interactions to ecosystems, from individual decisions to global institutions, the same pattern holds.
What remains is not what survives-but what fits. This book does not attempt to persuade. It reveals a structure. And once seen, it becomes difficult to see anything the same way again.