
by thilshanizam
The world isn’t ending suddenly.It’s ending quietly—through delayed decisions and tolerated failures. When a research institute learns to alter the past by correcting information rather than events, the technology is framed as restraint. Small adjustments. Minimal interference. Just enough to prevent disaster. At first, it works. But as urgency fades, power begins to shift. Political interests move closer. Military oversight tightens. Each correction is justified by the last. Inside the project, one researcher begins to question whether the danger lies not in time itself, but in the certainty used to control it—and in who decides what “better” means. The Danger of Certainty is a philosophical science-fiction novel about time, power, and the quiet consequences of believing the future can be engineered.