Who am I? What is the nature of reality? Why is there something rather than nothing? What is the meaning of existence?
The "non-dual" understanding of reality offers enlightening and reasonable answers to these perennial questions. "Non-duality" posits that consciousness is the primary reality, with matter being a manifestation of consciousness, not the other way around. Aldous Huxley defined non-duality as the "perennial philosophy" because it has been discovered or glimpsed repeatedly throughout history in almost all cultures and eras.
This book provides an unexpected introduction to the perennial philosophy of non-duality through the perspective and arguments of a computational physicist. The result is particularly comprehensible, enlightening, and encouraging.
In this book, the author presents ten suggestive, convincing, and compelling analytical arguments in favor of non-duality. These arguments are transformative.