| Management number | 233563615 | Release Date | 2026/06/27 | List Price | US$23.02 | Model Number | 233563615 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Category | |||||||||
Every night, humanity enters a condition so familiar that almost nobody questions it.Awareness disappears. Dreams emerge. Morning arrives. Identity returns. The cycle repeats.But what if the most important event in human experience is the one everyone ignores?Dreamtime Theft begins with a deceptively simple question: Why does humanity accept the blackout? What begins as an investigation into sleep gradually expands into a far-reaching examination of memory, identity, continuity, psychology, meaning, chronology, and civilization itself.Drawing a distinction between Origin REM and Astral REM, this book challenges the assumption that dreams, interruption, and reconstruction are fundamental features of human existence. Instead, it explores the possibility that many of the structures modern people consider normal may be adaptive responses to a condition that was inherited long before it was examined.Along the way, familiar concepts begin appearing in a different light. Memory becomes more than memory. Identity becomes more than identity. Meaning becomes more than meaning. Dreams become more than dreams. The systems humanity depends upon to create coherence, orientation, and stability reveal themselves as possible compensations for something deeper.Rather than offering dream interpretation, lucid dreaming techniques, or theories about symbolism, Dreamtime Theft investigates the hidden architecture underlying interruption itself. It asks what happens when continuity weakens, how civilization adapts to that condition, and why reconstruction eventually becomes mistaken for origin.Inside this volume, readers will explore:• The distinction between Origin REM and Astral REM• The relationship between dreams, continuity, and identity• The architecture of interruption and reconstruction• Memory, chronology, and continuity substitutes• Psychology as adaptation to discontinuity• Dream theater and symbolic immersion• The managed human and the normalization of blackout• The relationship between continuity and authorship• Why intermediaries become necessary when direct orientation weakens• What may have been lost when humanity stopped questioning disappearancePart philosophy, part consciousness study, and part cultural critique, Dreamtime Theft invites readers into an inquiry that extends far beyond sleep. It is ultimately an investigation into continuity, authorship, and the assumptions humanity inherited before it learned to question them.Some books offer answers.This book restores a question.Why does humanity accept the blackout?Part of The War on Signal Series Read more
| ISBN10 | 1972691074 |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 978-1972691076 |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Rise of Sophia, LLC, The |
| Dimensions | 5.06 x 0.97 x 7.81 inches |
| Item Weight | 1.09 pounds |
| Print length | 387 pages |
| Part of series | The War on Signal |
| Publication date | June 17, 2026 |
If you notice any omissions or errors in the product information on this page, please use the correction request form below.
Correction Request Form