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The Monad Manifesto  By  cover art

The Monad Manifesto

By: Dennis William Hauck
Narrated by: Stacy Carolan
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Publisher's summary

As scientists probe deeper into the nature of reality, they are discovering that consciousness is at the root of everything. What we believed were the laws of physics and matter are really the archetypal laws of mind, and the condensation of consciousness that created our universe originated from a dimensionless point in the void known as the “singularity” in physics and the “monad” in math and philosophy.

In philosophy, the monad is the single source of all things—the embedded matrix of both our present existence and all possible future incarnations. For theologians, it is the logos—the word of God that created the world. In mathematics, the monad is the root of all the numbers that describe nature. In science, it is the Big Bang explosion of light and information from which our universe sprung forth.

By the late 20th century, an interdisciplinary science of consciousness studies emerged dedicated to solving the puzzle of consciousness and understanding the mysterious monadic origin of the universe. Most of the pieces to that puzzle are already in place, and we are just beginning to glimpse the overall picture. It’s not like anything we ever expected....

©2022 Dennis William Hauck (P)2022 Dennis William Hauck

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Mosaic of Misquoting

Dennis Hauck has used the term Age of Enlightenment to argue for the notion of the Monad. He implies that the important philosophers of the Age of Enlightenment agreed on the notion of the Monad. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz is the only of these philosophers who introduced the notion of the Monad. Leibniz was Christian. The great philosophers of the time influenced one another but did not agree among themselves much less argue unanimously regarding the Monad. No other ever mentioned the Monad. Hume, was accused of atheism. All of them were criticized, some persecuted, for arguing for the right to consider ideas in opposition to church doctrine. This argument alone, the right to free speech, they held in common. Hauck drags Einstein into his doctrine. Einstein pointed out at one time that he had been quoted for things he never said. It’s the curse of being famous that you will be misquoted. The doctrine of Hauck is a mosaic of misquoting.

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