Constitution
Manifesto
The internal constitution of the project — why it exists, what excellence means, and what it must never become.
Why this site exists
This site exists to gather, under one roof, the faces of a single vocation — and to preserve them with the care of an editorial house meant to last.
It is neither a showcase nor a résumé. It is a place where ideas are published, examined, and kept, so that time may judge them.
Mission
To serve truth and neighbor through craft, thought, and care for creation.
Central question
“How to do well what has been entrusted — in the code, the land, the book, and the neighbor?”
What excellence means
Excellence here is not ornament but rectitude: to say the true clearly, to build the solid honestly, and to refuse the shortcut that compromises the whole.
How faith, craft, research, conservation, and philanthropy relate
Technology, faith, research, conservation, and philanthropy are not sectors but rays of one center. Faith orders; craft executes; research discerns; conservation keeps; philanthropy shares.
What it must never become
- ×A showcase of vanity.
- ×A hostage to passing design trends.
- ×Loud where it should be sober.
- ×Generic to the point of seeming machine-made.
Values
- Truth
- True before beautiful.
- Service
- The work exists for the other.
- Permanence
- Build to last, not to impress.
- Silence
- Leave space between ideas.
Writing guidelines
A sober, precise, human tone. Sentences that breathe. No empty jargon, no artificial enthusiasm. To write as one who thinks aloud before someone they respect.
Design to avoid
- ×Flashy effects without purpose.
- ×Trends that age poorly.
- ×Decorative gradients and glows.
- ×Excess animation.
- ×The sameness of repeated cards.
Development
Clean, explicit architecture. Reversible decisions. Minimal dependencies. Prefer the simple that endures to the clever that becomes debt.
Preserving the identity for 10 years
Identity is preserved by fidelity to this manifesto, not by immobility. Let every future change pass through one question: will this still seem elegant and true ten years from now?