Limen (The Companion book to "Anima" and "Numen") is a companion volume to the science fiction cycle of the same name - a work of philosophical and scientific non-fiction that maps the intellectual architecture beneath the fiction. At its center: three frequencies (164.81, 209.64, 266.67 Hz) in exact golden ratio relationship, forming the only chord in Western harmony with no single root note. From this musical fact the book builds outward through quantum field theory, the philosophy of consciousness, the neuroscience of hemispheric attention, and the mathematics of the golden ratio.
Drawing on Kurt G del's incompleteness theorems, Roger Penrose's G delian argument for non-computational consciousness, Federico Faggin's irreducible properties of the quantum field, Thomas Aquinas's Five Ways, Iain McGilchrist's divided brain research, and Hermann von Helmholtz's 1863 physiology of resonance, the book argues that the physical world is the consciousness field expressing itself through every instrument available to it - from the geometry of the human cochlea to the protein folds Marcus Webb drew without looking at the paper. The hard problem of consciousness is identified as the G del sentence of neuroscience: true, self-referential, and forever unprovable from within the physical description alone. The field is not threatened by G del's incompleteness. It is the escape.
Limen is written for general readers with no prior background in physics or philosophy. The science is precise; the argument is cumulative; the conclusion is musical.