The Sense of Being Stared At: How Looking Is a Resonance That Can Be Felt
There are cracks in the materialist model of the world, small, persistent anomalies of human experience that standard biology cannot explain. The feeling of being stared at is one of them.
It is a common experience: the sudden, inexplicable urge to turn around, only to lock eyes with someone who was watching us from a distance.
If the mind is sealed inside the skull, and if the eye is merely a passive receiver of light, this experience should be impossible. Science often dismisses this sensation as coincidence or paranoia.
But what if the sensation is real, and the materialist model is wrong?
This book explores the mechanics of that connection. It proposes that we are not separate, biological islands and that consciousness is not limited to the body-mind. As such, attention is not a private activity; it is an energetic, tangible event.
