1. We do not pursue material gainThe research produced within IFARA / ANACHROMA is not created for financial profit, commercial models, or the monetization of knowledge.
We engage in science for its own sake — for the sake of understanding the structure of reality and sharing that understanding with the world.
2. Knowledge must spread on its own if it is truly viableWe uphold a fundamental principle:
If knowledge is genuinely needed by the world, it will spread without artificial promotion. If it requires being “pushed forward,” it is not viable.We view attempts to artificially manufacture “success” — through paid publications, marketing, or influence mechanisms — as ways of extending one’s illusions rather than developing science.
3. We reject the pursuit of profit from fundamental ideasIf a concept is fundamental, it belongs to humanity. It cannot be owned, privatized, or used as a vehicle for profit.
We consciously reject any models that turn foundational principles into commodities.
4. Openness is our core principleWe publish
everything openly:
- articles,
- drafts,
- unfoldings,
- methodologies,
- intermediate versions,
- data and reconstructions.
Openness is our form of honesty and our method of testing ourselves against reality.
Anyone may reproduce our steps, verify our conclusions, and observe the full trajectory of our work without hidden fragments.
5. We do not live in self-deceptionPaid publications create the illusion of scientific relevance: a work appears recognized not because of its intrinsic strength, but because of a transaction. We refuse to participate in this mechanism.
If paying for publication means paying for one’s own fantasies, we choose reality.We would rather honestly see whether the world needs what we create than fabricate the appearance of demand through commercial dissemination channels.
6. We accept only the natural selection of ideasWe believe in what we create, yet we are simultaneously ready to accept the test of time and reality.
If an idea is strong and necessary, it will find its way.
If not, we will not artificially keep it alive.
Truth matters to us more than the appearance of success.7. We do not share the interests of those who seek to profit from the work of othersWe respect the work of editors and scholars, but we do not support systems
in which the meaning of science is replaced by commercial conditions.
We do not participate in economies
where knowledge exists not because it is needed,
but because someone has paid for its placement.