What if peace isn't a moral ideal...
but a measurable state of stability?
Peace As A Science reframes peace from aspiration to architecture - not as passivity or the absence of conflict, but as the stabilisation of complexity.
Drawing on neuroscience, systems theory, biology, physics, and lived human experience, this book explores a radical but grounded idea:
Peace behaves like a coherent field.
It can be observed in regulated nervous systems, traced in feedback loops and probability, strengthened through applied principles, and scaled - from the body to relationships, from culture to governance.
Through a peace lens, we reframe mental health as adaptive intelligence under rupture, neurodivergence as configuration, and justice as restorative rather than revenge - extending from identity through to education, healthcare, media, technology, and war. We move from inner experience to large-scale systems, asking how stability forms, how it breaks, and offering practical tools to repair and build peace.
It is rigorous, practical, occasionally funny, and deeply human.
Peace is dimensional, and we explore how time travel might not require a machine, but awareness - because peaceful choices shift probability and alter trajectory. And yes, pop culture is part of the laboratory - because sometimes Yoda explains regulation better than a textbook.
Because if peace has structure, it can be studied.
If it can be studied, it can be practiced.
And if it can be practiced, it can be built.
Michelle Lightworker is an author, field researcher, music producer, and songwriter, and host of the podcast Enlightened Conversations. She is the author of 12 books exploring consciousness, spirituality, and lived experience.With over 30 years of experience in counselling, leadership, and workforce engagement, she has also facilitated courses and guided individuals and groups in applying principles of awareness, connection, and transformation in real-world settings. Her work bridges practical experience with deeper inquiry into coherence, connection, and transformation.In Peace As A Science: Towards a Unified Peace Theory, she presents a framework for understanding peace as a measurable and lived field - one that can be embodied in everyday life, strengthening relationships and expanding awareness, allowing us to collectively build peace together - as peace builds on peace.