Daniel Chris Bio
Daniel Chris is a tech entrepreneur, systems thinker, author, and poet whose published work redefines how we understand civilization itself.
His fascination with language began in school, where writing became both refuge and revelation—a private current of expression that has never left him.
Years in international business—as consultant, executive, and entrepreneur—sharpened his perception of systems, patterns, and dynamics. A lifelong interest in economy, psychology, society, and politics, combined with extensive global travel, formed a mind that sees connections where others perceive fragments. His writing reflects that duality: at times razor-sharp and analytical, at others delicate and poetic—always precise, reflective, and alive.
As the originator of Collective Neuro Theory™ (CNT)—a pioneering neuroscience-based framework—Daniel maps the nervous system of civilization, showing that culture is not metaphor but biology: a living system whose coherence or collapse can be sensed, measured, and reshaped.
He is also the founder of Evitism™, a radical systems model identifying cross-domain avoidance as the invisible meta-pattern behind social fragmentation, emotional disconnection, and institutional decay—arguably humanity’s most urgent challenge in an age of digital acceleration.
Across his nonfiction works—including the forthcoming Viral Stupidity (early 2026) and Saneciety, a movement and platform for coherence—Daniel integrates cutting-edge science (biophysics, neuroscience, trauma research) with depth psychology, social science, systems theory, and ancestral wisdom. The result is an unprecedented synthesis that traces the root causes of fragmentation and offers a unified vision of civilizational coherence.
Daniel is also the creator of Polar Poetry™, a hybrid lyrical form that explores the interface between reality and imagination and transforms paradox into generative art. In this practice, he brings opposing forces—light and shadow, reason and feeling, chaos and order, masculine and feminine—into creative tension, not to reconcile them but to let their energy reveal more profound truth. His work invites readers into a visceral experience of integration rather than escape into fragmentation.
One of his most recognized aphorisms, “The society in me,” stands in lineage with Nietzsche’s “He who fights with monsters should see to it that he himself does not become a monster,” and Jung’s “Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.”
A Swiss native and father of two adult children, Daniel lives between London, language, mind, and soul—embodying his philosophy: Raw. Real. Radical.
