Vol. III - The Atlas Burden

Resources, Sovereignty and the Infrastructure of Survival

In The Atlas Burden, the third volume of The Metis Imperative, the focus shifts from intelligence and biology to the physical world that must sustain them. If the earlier volumes explored the transformation of mind and body, Volume III confronts the harder question beneath both: what must be built, extracted, powered, moved and governed to make any of it possible?

This book argues that civilization is not self-sustaining. Advanced AI, longevity medicine, autonomous systems and climate adaptation all depend on material foundations—energy, minerals, logistics, grids, labor and political order. Yet modern societies increasingly speak as though digital ambition can float free of thermodynamics, geology and infrastructure. It cannot.

At the center of this volume is the idea of the Atlas Burden: the crushing mismatch between our frontier ambitions and the fragile substrate beneath them. We are trying to build a high-complexity future on top of aging grids, brittle supply chains, finite resources and institutions that struggle to think beyond the next crisis.

Drawing on mythology, political economy and systems thinking, The Atlas Burden explores the real weight of the future: sovereignty in an age of dependency, maintenance as a civilizational function, the politics of constraint, and the growing divide between those with reliable continuity and those left exposed to failure.

This is not a book of utopian promises. It is an examination of the physical, institutional and civic realities that will decide whether tomorrow’s capabilities become widely shared civilization—or brittle privilege for the few.

For readers interested in infrastructure, energy, geopolitics, technology and long-range governance, The Atlas Burden is a call to look beneath the surface of innovation and reckon with what survival actually requires.

Volume III Reviews

The Atlas Burden: A masterful, sobering, and ultimately empowering look at the physical bill coming due for the digital age. David Kerrigan reminds us that you cannot build a 21st-century utopia on a 19th-century power grid

If you work in tech, policy, or business, The Atlas Burden is mandatory reading. It is a brilliant unmasking of the real bottlenecks—minerals, megawatts, and political paralysis—that threaten the Promethean Age


Resources

The Atlas Burden is available for purchase exclusively on Amazon in Paperback and Kindle formats.

Podcast