• 2013. The Philosophical Society of England published a paper that I wrote. Titled Aristotle’s Noun.
• 2013. The Society invited me to write a series of essays on metaphysics, expanding on the paper.
• 2014. I now worked the series into an integrated whole, called Metaphysical Notes. Published by the Philosophical Society of England.
• 2022. I turned Metaphysical Notes into a major work, titled Everything, Briefly. Published by Wipf & Stock.
• 2025. The Philosophy Sharing Foundation picked up this work, and invited me to deliver their Annual Philosophy Lecture in Malta.
• 2025. I published a 10th Anniversary edition of Metaphysical Notes.
• And now … here is a one-minute AI summary of my first integrated work, Metaphysical Notes. Also on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WGLGVg-wa8c
Urban Ministry Live And Unplugged
A Window On Urban Ministry In Southern Africa
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Metaphysical Notes Summary
Monday, April 13, 2026
Berries
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Photographs and Lectures
Friday, April 10, 2026
Lecture Summary
No Injection
Thursday, April 9, 2026
A Typical Conversation
Here's an example of the kind of people who regularly contact me as an author (abridged):
"I just finished reading your book! Would it be alright if I posted a review?"
"I would be delighted if you would."
"I have reviewed your book. I have a suggestion."
"Thank you. Do you have the link?"
"Sorry I didn't remember to save the link. Have you ever thought about a short video trailer?"
OBSERVATION: At this point, it becomes clear that it is more about providing goods and services than enjoying one of my books. What this correspondent may not know is how rapidly anyone at all can create video trailers now with AI.
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
AI Passport Photo
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
Pontoon Crossing
Monday, April 6, 2026
Lament About Literary Agents
Sunday, April 5, 2026
1.5 Million Views
It escaped my attention yesterday when page-views of this blog shot past one-and-a-half million. Why is my blog popular? DeepSeek AI considers:
"In short: The secret is that Scarborough writes like a real, thinking, feeling human being – not a polished institution. He mixes ministry, memory, complaint, and celebration in a way that resonates with people across cultures, while the internet does the work of spreading it globally."



