Human Behavioral Patterns cover Human Behavioral Patterns Individual Sovereignty cover Individual Sovereignty Tracyism cover Tracyism An Assertion of Right (Second Edition) cover An Assertion of Right The Problem with Distress cover The Problem with Distress Gender Incongruent: Understanding Us cover Gender Incongruent: Understanding Us
The Apocalypse Plan cover The Apocalypse Plan Their Choice: Our Responsibility cover Their Choice: Our Responsibility Rebuttal cover Rebuttal

Works

Human Behavioral Patterns

What if conflict, ideology, and social fracture are not moral failures—but predictable human behaviors? Human Behavioral Patterns reframes modern discord through a rigorous, unsentimental lens: people act in patterned ways under pressure, scarcity, threat, and belonging. Dismantling the myth that disagreement is pathology and replacing it with a map of how humans actually behave. Drawing from psychology, philosophy, and lived experience, this work offers a framework for understanding why societies polarize, why movements radicalize, and why well-intentioned systems fail. It does not ask you to conform—it asks you to see clearly. Understanding is the first form of sovereignty.

Individual Sovereignty

You are not a collective abstraction. You are a singular moral entity. Individual Sovereignty is a philosophical defense of the person against systems that erase, subsume, or instrumentalize the self. Arguing that dignity does not arise from identity, class, or consensus—it arises from the irreducible reality of a single human mind in a single body. This book confronts ideology, coercion, and moral outsourcing with a simple, radical claim: no system has standing over the conscience of the individual. Sovereignty is not rebellion. It is responsibility.

Tracyism

Tracyism is not a movement. It is a stance. Rooted in lived experience and sharpened by philosophy, Tracyism articulates a worldview built on clarity, boundaries, and the refusal to be erased—by ideology, by abstraction, or by compassion without structure. It insists that existence is not a claim on others, and that recognition does not require submission. This is a philosophy of presence: I am here. I do not negate you. You do not negate me. Tracyism offers a way to stand in the world without conquest and without collapse—a final place in the universe that is neither cage nor throne, but ground.

An Assertion of Right (Second Edition)

Before there can be justice, there must be standing. An Assertion of Right is a foundational declaration of the individual as a moral fact, not a social permission. Dismantling the modern habit of granting legitimacy through ideology, category, or consensus, and replacing it with a more demanding claim: a person does not require validation in order to exist, to speak, or to refuse. This is not a manifesto of rebellion—it is a statement of being. Clear, disciplined, and uncompromising, the work establishes the ethical architecture that underlies all that follows in this corpus. You are not a function of a system. You are a locus of will. That is the beginning of every right.

The Problem with Distress

Distress is not identity. It is not ideology. It is a human signal. The Problem with Distress confronts the collapse of precision in contemporary clinical and cultural discourse, where suffering is reframed as doctrine and care is subordinated to narrative. Focusing on dysphoria and the treatment of gender-incongruent individuals, this work argues for disciplined compassion—one that distinguishes experience from prescription, and pain from policy. Distress deserves understanding, not conversion.

Gender Incongruent: Understanding Us

A first-person, analytic account of gender incongruity grounded in lived experience rather than ideology. Drawing on childhood memory, developmental context, medical literature, and decades of reflection, examines what it means to grow up with a fundamental mismatch between physical sex and internal gender identity. The book traces this incongruity from early childhood through puberty, adulthood, and transition, addressing bullying, family dynamics, medical care, and political distortion along the way. Written from a transsex perspective, it rejects slogans and simplifications in favor of careful distinctions, biological reality, and an insistence on understanding gender-incongruent people as human beings rather than abstractions.

About the Author

Tracy Coyle is a philosopher and author whose work centers on individual sovereignty, moral agency, and the irreducible authority of the human person.

Her writing rejects ideological conformity and benevolent coercion alike, arguing that liberty is not a political grant but a condition of being alive. Grounded in first principles—thought, will, action, and consequence—her work resists the abstraction of people into systems, identities, or populations.

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Beginning with An Assertion of Right and continuing through Human Behavior and Individual Sovereignty, Coyle has developed a coherent philosophical framework centered on the individual as the primary moral unit. She writes for readers who sense that something essential is being eroded in contemporary life and refuse to surrender the ground of thought.