There is a moment-so subtle you almost miss it-when the world you trust begins to slip. Nothing has changed, and yet something is no longer quite right. The familiar stops feeling familiar. This book begins in that moment. What We Think We See explores a deeply unsettling possibility: that reality, as you experience it, is not the world itself, but a construction-shaped by prediction, expectation, and the mind's quiet insistence on coherence. Humans do not simply observe the world; we anticipate it, revise it, and, in many ways, invent it. What feels stable and certain is, beneath the surface, a continuous act of interpretation. But this is not a story about error. It is a story about mystery. For centuries, philosophy has circled a quiet idea: what we call "reality" may be only an imitation-useful, persuasive, and incomplete. Yet instead of treating mystery as a flaw in understanding-a gap to be filled-this book turns the idea inside out. Mystery is not the problem. It is the engine. Blending philosophy, cognitive science, and lived experience, What We Think We See invites you to reconsider what it means to know anything at all. To think is not to eliminate uncertainty, but to encounter it-and to keep going. At the edge of perception, where certainty begins to unravel, something deeper comes into view. What if mystery isn't a weakness of knowledge-but the reason it exists?
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