What if every thought you've ever had-every fear, every memory, every moment of joy-was not created inside your brain, but was the universe itself passing through you?
In this groundbreaking work at the intersection of physics, neuroscience, and philosophy of mind, The Physical Mind: How the Universe Thinks Through Us proposes a radical new theory of consciousness: thoughts are not internal inventions but the final link in a continuous physical chain of events stretching from the world to the brain.
Drawing inspiration from quantum mechanics, holography, thermodynamics, evolutionary biology, and the philosophy of perception, this book dismantles traditional dualism and replaces it with a strikingly physical vision of subjective experience. It argues:
Qualia are not mystical properties but physical deformations in the brain's holographic field
Pain is the universe's default signal, a measure of entropy pressing against the fragile order of living systems
Pleasure is coherence, the temporary easing of that entropic force
Thought is not authored by the self, but received and transformed like a signal through a transceiver
Dreams obey physics because the brain cannot simulate what it has never physically encoded
Free will is an illusion, dissolved by the causal structure of energy exchange
Meaning is physical, shaped by evolutionary pressures, memory structures, and the laws governing atoms and fields
Consciousness is what it feels like to resist entropy
With narrative clarity in the tradition of Roger Penrose, Sean Carroll, and Carlo Rovelli, the book bridges the explanatory gap between brain and experience by treating the mind as a self-maintaining holographic structure-a pocket of order flickering in and out of existence at Planck-scale intervals, continually updated by the universe's physical signals.
This is not metaphysics. This is physics turned inward.
From d j vu to dreams, from trauma to love, from the persistence of a song stuck in your head to the terror of anticipating the future, the book tests its theory against the full range of human experience-and shows that consciousness is both stranger and more physical than we ever imagined.
Provocative, elegant, and deeply original, The Physical Mind invites you to rethink not only what consciousness is, but what you are.
Related Subjects
Philosophy