An inquiry into how anticipation reshapes judgment, responsibility, and human relations.
Decisions are no longer grounded only in what has happened.
Increasingly, they are shaped by what is anticipated — sometimes before reality has had the chance to unfold.
In areas such as child protection and family separation,
these shifts are already reshaping real lives — often in ways that cannot be reversed.
This site explores the ethical, legal, and civilizational limits
of decisions made in the name of the future —
especially where those decisions carry consequences that cannot be undone.
What happens when decisions are made in the name of the future,
but their consequences must be lived in the present?