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The Mysterion Dynasty

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The human mind is deeply mysterious, and it is possible that no one has ever completely understood just how the mind actually works. The mind does not let you see inside of it, in fact always throwing you out into the sensory, everyday life around you. So how do we turn inward and lift the veil on the mind? How does the mind reveal itself to us—if at all? The Mysterion Dynasty uncovers a truth about the mind that has long been concealed—that the mind will tell you what it does if you ask it and then carefully listen when it finally tells you. A result of a thirty-eight year game to discover how our minds actually work, The Mysterion Dynasty chronicles one man's exploration of the many parts and mechanisms of our revealed minds. With continual hard work, author Roger Wells was uniquely enabled to not only discover how the mind works—but also uncover its faults and how these faults lead to destruction and cruelty. Looking inside the mind is only the first step to understanding how it works. Beginning with this understanding, The Mysterion Dynasty will show us how our conscious minds operate in the world and receive and transmit images and other sensory data. Yet even more, learning about the fault in the mind of humankind will offer us the greatest hope and a plan to bring our world into a much better place than it has ever been before—for without knowledge of the fault, all is lost and hopeless.
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    • Kirkus

      Debut author Wells delivers a philosophical investigation of the inner workings of the human mind. At the outset of this extensive work, the author describes the human mind as a series of TV monitors. According to the author, the mind is largely concerned with communication and images, so it's natural that humans process thoughts through television screens. The most important one, he asserts, is a flat, tablelike monitor, on which the mind places "every person and object important to us in our lives, and if the image is altered, it brings happiness or distress." Wells goes on to address many other topics, ranging from the golden rule to the importance of working with one's hands. All of these subjects, however, relate back to the central conceit of the mind and its monitors, and how happiness is generated when "all the information on the monitor is seen to be complete." If it all sounds slightly perplexing, that's because it is. As the author admits, "Describing the mind is not a quick and easy task," and a number of his tangents tend to distract from the main argument. However, they also provide insight into the author behind it all. Bits and pieces of his life are sprinkled throughout the material, as when he describes his desire to paint portraits, or his admiration for craftsman Von Dutch, or the fact that he once swallowed a chicken bone and was ill for four years as a result. Taken as a whole, the material is unapologetically dense and repetitive--the word "monitor" appears so much that it tends to lose meaning, for example. However, it's also heartfelt and full of intriguing imagery, as when readers are asked to imagine "a million people mowing grass at the same time." Likewise, the author's positive tone helps personalize the work; he encourages the reader more than once to "Enjoy your life," which finally comes across as one of the main messages of the book. An invitingly strange meditation on the mind.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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  • English

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