The Law of Immortality is a philosophical and conceptual examination of continuity, persistence, and non-terminal existence across biological, informational, and existential domains. Rather than treating immortality as fantasy, mysticism, or mere biological longevity, this work reframes it as a law of sustained coherence—a principle through which systems preserve identity, meaning, and functional integrity across time. The book presents immortality as an emergent property of equilibrium, not as a defiance of natural order. Drawing from equilibrium philosophy, time–energy continuity, and systemic balance, it argues that persistence arises where coherence is maintained, while decay and finality emerge where equilibrium collapses. By challenging reductionist assumptions of inevitability and termination, this work offers a framework in which continuity is lawful, intelligible, and structurally governed. Immortality is approached not as an absolute state, but as a condition of balanced existence, sustained through alignment rather than resistance. This archive edition is restricted and preserved for long-term scholarly reference and authorship verification.The author reserves the right to publish revised, expanded, or commercial editions of this work elsewhere.
Felix Akpobi (Sun,) studied this question.