The human being believes he is free.
He believes he thinks for himself, chooses his paths, and builds his own worldview. Yet he rarely realizes how much his mind has already been shaped before he could even question it.
Consciousness, in its initial state, is not born awakened—it is formed.
Formed by culture, religion, society, experiences, and, above all, repetition. Ideas are accepted not because they are true, but because they are familiar. And what is familiar, to a mind not yet awakened, is mistaken for what is real.
It is within this scenario that what we may call *spiritual irrationality* arises.
This is not the absence of spirituality, but its distortion. A state in which beliefs are maintained without reflection, symbols are interpreted literally, and structures of control are sustained under the disguise of absolute truth.
Consciousness, then, becomes passive.
It accepts. It reproduces. It sustains.
And, without realizing it, it participates in its own limitation.
But the story of consciousness does not end there.
At some point—often silent, almost imperceptible—something begins to change. A restlessness emerges. A doubt takes root. A feeling that “something is not right” begins to grow.
This is the beginning of awakening.
This book is a deep immersion into that process.
Through the symbolic interpretation of ancient visions—especially those attributed to the so-called Chapter 84—we explore the evolution of human consciousness as a living, dynamic, and
| Número de páginas | 57 |
| Edición | 1 (2026) |
| Formato | A5 (148x210) |
| Acabado | Tapa blanda (con solapas) |
| Coloración | Blanco y negro |
| Tipo de papel | Offset 90g |
| Idioma | Portugués |
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