The Engineer of Complex Systems
Hi, my name is Riki. I’m a computer engineer with Asperger’s syndrome and an IQ that allows me to see patterns where others see chaos. This blog is my digital laboratory where I dissect reality with the precision of an algorithm and the curiosity of someone who can’t stop asking, “How does this really work?”
My Cognitive Stack
Hardware:
- Neurodivergent brain optimized for systemic analysis
- High-frequency analytical processor
- Exceptional cache memory for technical details
- Operating system: Compulsive Curiosity v2.0
Software:
- Native logical-mathematical thinking
- Advanced pattern recognition framework
- Social-complexity compiler
- Continuous mental debugging of reality
Why I Started Writing
As an engineer, I’m programmed to solve problems. But the most interesting problems aren’t in servers or databases — they’re in social systems, economic structures, and cognitive mechanisms that govern our lives.
My Asperger’s syndrome isn’t a bug; it’s a feature. It allows me to:
- Analyse complex phenomena without being distracted by social conventions
- Identify logical inconsistencies in realities others take for granted
- Process massive amounts of data to extract hidden insights
- See reality as a system to be optimised, not as an immutable fact
My Mission
This blog is my contribution to debugging society. Every article is:
- A systemic investigation into how things really work
- A reverse engineering of power mechanisms
- A proposal for refactoring poorly designed social systems
- A data-driven analysis of the human condition
My Approach
Systemic Thinking: I’m not interested in symptoms; I’m interested in underlying architectures. Why does a system produce certain outputs? How can it be redesigned?
Intellectual Honesty: I change my mind when the data demands it. The ego cannot interfere with the algorithm of truth.
Technical Accessibility: I translate complexity into clarity. If you can’t explain something simply, you don’t understand it well enough.
What You’ll Find Here
- Analyses of economic systems as if they were software to optimise
- Deconstructions of cognitive biases that distort our perception
- Inverse social engineering to understand how power and consent work
- Pattern recognition applied to political and social phenomena
- Concrete proposals to upgrade society the way one upgrades an IT system
A Confession
My neurodivergence makes me hypersensitive to inconsistencies. When I encounter systems that don’t work, that squander human potential, that produce avoidable suffering… I can’t “pretend nothing’s wrong.”
It’s stronger than me: I have to debug it.
I have to understand where the bug is, why it happened, and how it can be fixed. And I have to share what I find, because information that isn’t shared is wasted information.
A Necessary Disclaimer
I’m not a guru, an influencer, or a seller of prepackaged truths. I’m a computer scientist doing research. I might be wrong, I might change my mind, I might discover that my models were incomplete.
But what I will never do is stop questioning reality with the same intensity I apply when debugging code.
Connect with the Algorithm
If you, too, believe that reality is a system to be optimised rather than a fate to endure, you’re in the right place.
Here you won’t find cognitive comfort zones, but expansions of mental parameters.
Welcome to the society-wide debugging session. Let’s fix this thing together.
P.S. — If you’re reading this thinking, “this guy is completely nuts,” you’re probably right.
Now, let’s get to work.