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Code and Being
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Code and Being
By None
Current price: $6.99

Coles
Code and Being
By None
Current price: $6.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
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Is time real? Is the self a construction? And is consciousness the universe's way of knowing itself?
In Code and Being, Chiron Caravella confronts the deepest questions at the intersection of quantum physics, neuroscience, and philosophy — and arrives at a thesis both scientifically grounded and philosophically transformative.
The starting point is a fact that physics has quietly established and rarely advertised: at the most fundamental level of description, time does not exist. The Wheeler-DeWitt equation — the quantum mechanical equation for the universe as a whole — contains no time variable. Space itself is generated by quantum entanglement. And consciousness, Caravella argues, is precisely the process by which this timeless, entangled ground generates the experience of being a self in a world, moving through time.
Drawing on Wheeler, Van Raamsdonk, Friston, Penrose, Whitehead, Nagarjuna, and Bateson, Code and Being builds a unified framework in which the physicist's timeless wave function and the contemplative's experience of non-dual awareness describe the same reality from opposite ends. The book confronts the simulation hypothesis, the hard problem of consciousness, retrocausality, and the neuroscience of altered states — showing how each illuminates a different face of the same underlying structure.
But the book does not stop at cosmology. The digital age's attention economy, Caravella argues, constitutes a systematic disruption of the processes by which consciousness — individual and collective — generates coherent experience. Algorithmic systems optimized for engagement are degrading the very architecture of collective memory and authentic thought. And artificial intelligence, however powerful, remains intelligence without world: pattern-completion without the irreversible, embodied experience that grounds genuine wisdom.
Code and Being maps a path toward regeneration — through contemplative practice, participatory community, and a politics of cognitive sovereignty — and closes with a return to the question it began with: what does it mean to be, when being itself turns out to be generated from something timeless?
A rare achievement: philosophically rigorous, scientifically honest, and written with the conviction that these are not academic questions — they are the questions that determine what we are, and what we owe to the fact of our existence.
Is time real? Is the self a construction? And is consciousness the universe's way of knowing itself?
In Code and Being, Chiron Caravella confronts the deepest questions at the intersection of quantum physics, neuroscience, and philosophy — and arrives at a thesis both scientifically grounded and philosophically transformative.
The starting point is a fact that physics has quietly established and rarely advertised: at the most fundamental level of description, time does not exist. The Wheeler-DeWitt equation — the quantum mechanical equation for the universe as a whole — contains no time variable. Space itself is generated by quantum entanglement. And consciousness, Caravella argues, is precisely the process by which this timeless, entangled ground generates the experience of being a self in a world, moving through time.
Drawing on Wheeler, Van Raamsdonk, Friston, Penrose, Whitehead, Nagarjuna, and Bateson, Code and Being builds a unified framework in which the physicist's timeless wave function and the contemplative's experience of non-dual awareness describe the same reality from opposite ends. The book confronts the simulation hypothesis, the hard problem of consciousness, retrocausality, and the neuroscience of altered states — showing how each illuminates a different face of the same underlying structure.
But the book does not stop at cosmology. The digital age's attention economy, Caravella argues, constitutes a systematic disruption of the processes by which consciousness — individual and collective — generates coherent experience. Algorithmic systems optimized for engagement are degrading the very architecture of collective memory and authentic thought. And artificial intelligence, however powerful, remains intelligence without world: pattern-completion without the irreversible, embodied experience that grounds genuine wisdom.
Code and Being maps a path toward regeneration — through contemplative practice, participatory community, and a politics of cognitive sovereignty — and closes with a return to the question it began with: what does it mean to be, when being itself turns out to be generated from something timeless?
A rare achievement: philosophically rigorous, scientifically honest, and written with the conviction that these are not academic questions — they are the questions that determine what we are, and what we owe to the fact of our existence.



















