Condemned Birth is a work of philosophical reflection that begins where interpretation fails.
Rather than advancing arguments or defending positions, this book traces the conditions under which existence appears before it becomes intelligible, recognizable, or speakable.
It examines how meaning persists outside discourse, how interpretive systems pre-select what can be received as intelligible, and how certain forms of existence are condemned not through exclusion or silencing, but through structural incapacity.
Moving through an analysis of interpretation, ritual, and absence, the book shows how coherence can endure without explanation, without representation, and without appeal. It does not seek inclusion, recovery, or voice.
Condemned Birth offers no program and no remedy.
It exposes the limits of interpretation itself—and what reorganizes meaning beyond those limits.