What is Life - really?
This book dares to reframe that timeless question by exploring the very foundations of Reality itself. Through a bold philosophical lens, the author examines every phenomenon of existence from two opposing but complementary views: metaphysical Realism and Antirealism. Reality, he argues, is dual in nature-both objective and subjective- and any attempt to understand it using only one side leads to an incomplete, distorted picture.
From this foundation, the book unfolds into a thought-provoking exploration of what it means to be alive. It proposes that:
Ultimately, the book arrives at a profound and provocative conclusion:
There is no such thing as "living" or "non-living" Matter - only Subjective Entities evolving in an endless interaction hierarchy. This groundbreaking insight forms the core of a new worldview the author calls the Paradigm of the Great Life.
The final chapters examine how this new paradigm might reframe some of modern science's biggest questions - from quantum mechanics to the mysteries of astrophysics.
If you've ever questioned the boundaries between consciousness, reality, and the universe, this book offers a bold new way of seeing everything.