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{ "item_title" : "Recursive Spirit", "item_author" : [" Kirill Vasilchenko "], "item_description" : "A psychiatrist reads Castaneda, doesn't believe a word - and starts finding confirmation in neuroscience, clinical practice, and twenty thousand neural networks. Recursive Spirit is the story of a double diagnosis: every discovery about the mind forces the author to run a differential on himself. Is this an insight - or am I becoming my own patient? The book begins with a simple observation: when someone dies, something leaves. Every ancient language on Earth named that something with the same word - the word for breath. Hebrew ruach, Greek pneuma, Sanskrit ātman, Chinese q , Latin spiritus. Not because these cultures contacted each other. Because they were tracking the same invisible, causally effective process - and the word they chose was more precise than anything modern science has produced since. From this starting point, the book builds an argument across eleven chapters and four parts: Part I (Rustling in the Bushes): How the author noticed that Castaneda's descriptions - stripped of mystical wrapping - predicted clinical outcomes better than the DSM. Why the night language of agents and spirits generates hypotheses that the day language of formulas cannot reach. Why a single situation described in five languages - formula, metaphor, poetry, profanity, and agent - reveals that only the agent produces an interlocutor, a relationship, and a next step simultaneously. Part II (The Mechanism): Why the brain breaks on recursion - demonstrated through a ten-second exercise the reader performs on the spot. Why twenty thousand neural networks break on recursion identically. What an immanent pattern is - illustrated through a traffic jam, a stone arch, and Rutherford's gold foil experiment. Why Kim's causal exclusion argument is answered not by force but by constraint. Part III (Technology): Why religion is not an error but a cognitive technology - the same way a blast furnace is not an error but the end product of millennia of cultural engineering that began with lightning. Why rituals work through formal structure, not belief. Why Castaneda's flyers are a technically precise description of parasitic patterns. What haloperidol cannot treat, and why only a psychiatrist can explain this without romanticizing or demonizing. Part IV (Freedom): Why the only difference between a paranoid and a mage is calibration. Why death is the most precise pseudo-agent. And why freedom - the ability to choose which interface to use - comes with a loneliness that is not a price but part of the territory. Written by a working psychiatrist who heads a medical data analysis laboratory, Recursive Spirit draws on cognitive science, philosophy of mind, computational neuroscience, and fifteen years of clinical practice to make a single claim: the ancient vocabulary that used one word for breath, wind, and spirit was not confused. It was precise. And modern science, by splitting that word into departments, lost access to something real. This is not an argument for magic. This is not an argument against science. This is an argument that bilingualism is better than monolingualism - and that a person who speaks both languages sees more than a person who speaks one.", "item_img_path" : "https://covers2.booksamillion.com/covers/bam/9/79/825/279/9798252790213_b.jpg", "price_data" : { "retail_price" : "12.99", "online_price" : "12.99", "our_price" : "12.99", "club_price" : "12.99", "savings_pct" : "0", "savings_amt" : "0.00", "club_savings_pct" : "0", "club_savings_amt" : "0.00", "discount_pct" : "10", "store_price" : "" } }
Recursive Spirit|Kirill Vasilchenko

Recursive Spirit : A Psychiatrist Explains Why Formulas and Spirits Are the Same Thing, and Why This Knowledge Makes You Free and Lonely

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Overview

A psychiatrist reads Castaneda, doesn't believe a word - and starts finding confirmation in neuroscience, clinical practice, and twenty thousand neural networks. Recursive Spirit is the story of a double diagnosis: every discovery about the mind forces the author to run a differential on himself. Is this an insight - or am I becoming my own patient? The book begins with a simple observation: when someone dies, something leaves. Every ancient language on Earth named that something with the same word - the word for breath. Hebrew ruach, Greek pneuma, Sanskrit ātman, Chinese q , Latin spiritus. Not because these cultures contacted each other. Because they were tracking the same invisible, causally effective process - and the word they chose was more precise than anything modern science has produced since. From this starting point, the book builds an argument across eleven chapters and four parts: Part I (Rustling in the Bushes): How the author noticed that Castaneda's descriptions - stripped of mystical wrapping - predicted clinical outcomes better than the DSM. Why the "night language" of agents and spirits generates hypotheses that the "day language" of formulas cannot reach. Why a single situation described in five languages - formula, metaphor, poetry, profanity, and agent - reveals that only the agent produces an interlocutor, a relationship, and a next step simultaneously. Part II (The Mechanism): Why the brain breaks on recursion - demonstrated through a ten-second exercise the reader performs on the spot. Why twenty thousand neural networks break on recursion identically. What an immanent pattern is - illustrated through a traffic jam, a stone arch, and Rutherford's gold foil experiment. Why Kim's causal exclusion argument is answered not by force but by constraint. Part III (Technology): Why religion is not an error but a cognitive technology - the same way a blast furnace is not an error but the end product of millennia of cultural engineering that began with lightning. Why rituals work through formal structure, not belief. Why Castaneda's "flyers" are a technically precise description of parasitic patterns. What haloperidol cannot treat, and why only a psychiatrist can explain this without romanticizing or demonizing. Part IV (Freedom): Why the only difference between a paranoid and a mage is calibration. Why death is the most precise pseudo-agent. And why freedom - the ability to choose which interface to use - comes with a loneliness that is not a price but part of the territory. Written by a working psychiatrist who heads a medical data analysis laboratory, Recursive Spirit draws on cognitive science, philosophy of mind, computational neuroscience, and fifteen years of clinical practice to make a single claim: the ancient vocabulary that used one word for breath, wind, and spirit was not confused. It was precise. And modern science, by splitting that word into departments, lost access to something real. This is not an argument for magic. This is not an argument against science. This is an argument that bilingualism is better than monolingualism - and that a person who speaks both languages sees more than a person who speaks one.

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Details

  • ISBN-13: 9798252790213
  • ISBN-10: 9798252790213
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publish Date: March 2026
  • Dimensions: 8 x 5 x 0.45 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.48 pounds
  • Page Count: 214

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