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Sacred Sound Meditation: The Perception Threshold. VOVINA, #355
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8903908547
- EAN9798903908547
- Date de parution20/03/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- Éditeur36N9 GENETICS
Résumé
Sacred Sound Meditation: The Perception Threshold is Book 355 in Michael L. Curzi's 500-volume philosophical and interdisciplinary canon, the Vovina Ontological OmniTautology. Part of the Sacred Sound Meditation sequence within the Spirituality and Practice branch of the project, the volume explores meditation as a disciplined method for transforming perception and investigating the structure of consciousness.
At the center of the work is the Sanskrit root dhyana, traditionally translated as meditation but interpreted here as a form of perceptual training. Rather than presenting meditation purely as a spiritual tradition, the book frames it as a systematic process through which awareness refines its ability to observe reality. Through sustained practice, perception itself becomes the laboratory in which inquiry unfolds.
The text is organized into nineteen chapters following the structural architecture used throughout the VOVINA canon. Each chapter proceeds through a layered sequence of inquiry-observation, discrimination, application, connection, and integration-guiding readers from theoretical understanding toward participatory insight. This structure mirrors the developmental arc of contemplative practice itself, where knowledge gradually transforms from information into lived experience.
A central theme of the book is the idea of a perceptual threshold. Drawing analogies from physics and phase transitions, the text proposes that contemplative practice often produces little visible change until a critical point is reached. At that threshold, small additional effort can produce dramatic shifts in perception and awareness. This dynamic explains why many contemplative traditions describe sudden breakthroughs following long periods of gradual preparation.
The work brings together insights from Advaita Vedanta, Buddhist philosophy, contemplative neuroscience, and systems theory. Studies of meditation and brain activity are discussed alongside classical philosophical accounts of the witnessing awareness that underlies experience. Across traditions and disciplines, the book observes a recurring pattern: the observer and the observed cannot ultimately be separated without distorting the nature of the inquiry itself.
Within the broader VOVINA project, this volume also contributes to the ongoing investigation known as Variable X, the unresolved principle linking the entire five-hundred-volume canon. Rather than offering a final answer, Sacred Sound Meditation: The Perception Threshold presents meditation as a practical path through which the relationship between awareness, perception, and reality may gradually become clear.
Blending philosophy, contemplative practice, and scientific reflection, the book invites readers to explore how disciplined attention can transform the very structures through which experience is known.
At the center of the work is the Sanskrit root dhyana, traditionally translated as meditation but interpreted here as a form of perceptual training. Rather than presenting meditation purely as a spiritual tradition, the book frames it as a systematic process through which awareness refines its ability to observe reality. Through sustained practice, perception itself becomes the laboratory in which inquiry unfolds.
The text is organized into nineteen chapters following the structural architecture used throughout the VOVINA canon. Each chapter proceeds through a layered sequence of inquiry-observation, discrimination, application, connection, and integration-guiding readers from theoretical understanding toward participatory insight. This structure mirrors the developmental arc of contemplative practice itself, where knowledge gradually transforms from information into lived experience.
A central theme of the book is the idea of a perceptual threshold. Drawing analogies from physics and phase transitions, the text proposes that contemplative practice often produces little visible change until a critical point is reached. At that threshold, small additional effort can produce dramatic shifts in perception and awareness. This dynamic explains why many contemplative traditions describe sudden breakthroughs following long periods of gradual preparation.
The work brings together insights from Advaita Vedanta, Buddhist philosophy, contemplative neuroscience, and systems theory. Studies of meditation and brain activity are discussed alongside classical philosophical accounts of the witnessing awareness that underlies experience. Across traditions and disciplines, the book observes a recurring pattern: the observer and the observed cannot ultimately be separated without distorting the nature of the inquiry itself.
Within the broader VOVINA project, this volume also contributes to the ongoing investigation known as Variable X, the unresolved principle linking the entire five-hundred-volume canon. Rather than offering a final answer, Sacred Sound Meditation: The Perception Threshold presents meditation as a practical path through which the relationship between awareness, perception, and reality may gradually become clear.
Blending philosophy, contemplative practice, and scientific reflection, the book invites readers to explore how disciplined attention can transform the very structures through which experience is known.










