Ilexa Yardley

Ilexa Yardley was the first to figure out the core (and, thus, the only) dynamic in Nature is the Conservation of a Circle.

Conservation of the Circle solves the duality dilemma (and, perhaps, more important, the grounding problem) that has plagued mankind for 40,000 years, explaining why complementarity (constant opposition) (a circle joining and separating any X and Y) is the basis for everything.

As in finance, yet much more generally, a liability is an asset (and vice versa) meaning 50–50 is both the constant and the norm.

This insight is easily used as a strategic thought weapon, a shortcut, for the genius in every person who wants to maximize the cognitive dissonance (minimize the chaos) called ‘reality.’

It provides a universal system architecture for technology, Nature, and reality, and, is easily identified: most important discovery (insight, oversight, foresight) of all time. Results in a completely tokenized reality.

The Singularity

Conservation of the Circle is The Singularity (the natural (quantum) (universal) system architecture) that perpetually produces (explains and controls) the ‘relatively-virtual,’ completely tokenized, contextualized, informational, relational, situational, complementary, emotional, intellectual, financial, technological, psychological, ‘reality’ that humans experience as ‘Nature.’

Yardley holds the ‘thought leadership’ for this architecture, following on Galileo and Einstein’s understanding of (general and special) ‘relativity,’ and generalizing it, more fully, to ‘absolute (or universal) relativity’ (explaining both the ‘human mind’ and the ‘computer (processor and programming) mind’) (Nature’s operating system) (tokenization in general) (tokenization as the basis for, what humans experience as, ‘reality’) (the tokenization of tokenization) (AIM).

This architecture provides the insight that dramatically improves the efficiency and the effectiveness of existing ‘processors,’ taking all of humanity to a new level of ‘understanding,’ to achieve, what humans call, an ‘enlightened’ state, and, thereby, ushering in a new era of universal productivity and prosperity.

Background

For the first half of her (conventional) career, Yardley participated on, and led, teams that designed, developed, implemented, managed, and maintained, large scale financial system technology projects.

Technically, her ‘programming’ expertise included fourth generation FOCUS and functional language APL, both using advanced tokenization architectures (matrix mechanics) for the efficient manipulation of data.

Yardley was trained in ASSEMBLER (machine code) (1979) (NYU) before data science was recognized as a legitimate and separate discipline.

Applications included Black-Scholes black-box decisioning for Deutsche Bank foreign exchange trading, trading floor sales analysis for Credit Suisse financial reorganization, revenue accounting control for the US Treasury Internal Revenue Service daily foreign borrowing requirements, financial information system network build-out for Bank of New York-Mellon new operations center, candidate selection and deep-sea-on-platform-data-centered marketing for Exxon-Mobil customer acquisition and retention, marketing and sales analysis for Altria-Philip Morris, and customer acquisition and retention tracking for AT&T. Focus and deliverable: more efficient process, less time.

For the second half of her career, Yardley was a technology consultant for American Management Systems, MCI Systemhouse, and Razorfish, as well as a business developer for private equity groups, investment banks, and other financial companies.

She was, also, an analyst for a private investigator, a consistent sales leader selling biotech products for ExpressScripts, and, like many others in her generation, she flipped real estate to stay afloat during (five) business downturns. Focus and deliverable: more effective process, less time.

Independent Researcher

In 1974, Yardley, as an independent researcher, began looking into oppositional dynamics in human behavior (specifically, the relationship between the work of Albert Einstein and Carl Jung) (the circular-linear relationship between physics and psychology) driven by her undergraduate and graduate degrees in Education (learning systems) (based, at that time, on educational and psychological theory by John Dewey, Edward Thorndike, Jean Piaget, Viktor Frankl, Carl Rogers, and, to some degree, Albert Ellis) as well as her undergraduate concentration in the inter-relationship between music history and theory (Donald Jay Grout).

Ernest Becker’s Denial of Death (Pulitzer Prize, 1974) was the book that impacted, impressed, and influenced her the most.

From Yardley’s point of view, Becker accurately articulated the motivation for (and, therefore, the circular-linear relationship between) life and death (psychology and philosophy).

In 2000 Yardley was exposed to the idea that a ‘landscape’ is a continually evolving (from her point of view, circular-linear) ‘relationship’ between (what humans experience as) ‘culture’ and the physical (photographic) media that represents it, at a (landscape architecture) course (given by John Stilgoe) at Harvard University.

In 2003 she was introduced to Noether’s theorem (by particle physicist Paul Padley) in a community-oriented physics class at Rice University.

These insights provided the mathematics she needed to academically ‘ground’ her insights.

In 2007 Brian Josephson, Nobel Laureate physicist (in superconductivity), was open-minded enough to visit with Yardley in person at Cavendish Laboratory, Trinity College, Cambridge University, and his professional support (and inquiry) continues to this day.

The Circular Theory Franchise

Because Conservation of the Circle controls everything in Nature, and everything in, what humans experience as, ‘reality,’ including, and, especially, the thinking, and the technology, that controls mankind, the ‘true’ (current) $value of the Circular Theory architecture is $100T ($50K per 4-person family globally) (the US dollar value of global GDP at the time this was written).

Credentials

Yardley holds an MBA in Finance, Stern School of Business, New York University; MSc, BSc, Education (Psychology) (Music) (Multi-Channel Mathematics), State University of New York, Oswego, Cortland; Post-Graduate Study, Systems Technology, Mathematics, Physics, Philosophy, Psychology, and Design (Cultural Landscape), New York University, Rice University, Columbia University, Harvard University, and is currently retired.

Yardley’s work is available on Medium.com, Phil Papers, Amazon.com, Twitter/X, Pinterest, and her website.

For investors here.

Information on AIM, ULTA-AI, One-On-One Training here.