Suppose for a moment that every major assumption you hold about yourself is wrong.
Not your politics. Not your religion. Not your opinions.
You. The person reading these words.
Most of us move through life with an unspoken assumption. We believe we are the product of our brains. Consciousness is something the brain creates. When the brain ceases to function, consciousness ends.
It is a reasonable assumption. It may even be correct. But what if it isn't?
What if consciousness is not produced by the brain at all? What if the brain is more like a receiver than a generator?
If a radio is damaged, the music stops. Yet no one concludes that the radio created the orchestra. The music existed before the radio received it and continues after the radio is gone.
The Heaven Dimension Theory begins with a similar question.
What if the self you experience every day is only a localized expression of something larger? What if your deepest identity exists partly beyond the limits of physical perception?
Suddenly many familiar experiences become more interesting.
Why do some truths feel recognized rather than learned? Why do moments of profound love feel less like emotion and more like connection? Why do some people emerge from tragedy with a sense that life possesses meaning they cannot fully explain?
Perhaps there are conventional explanations. Perhaps there are not.
The purpose of the question is not to prove anything. The purpose is to consider the possibility that consciousness may be larger than our current models allow.
The most important question in The Heaven Dimension is not whether heaven exists. It is whether we have correctly identified who and what we are.
The answer may be far more surprising than we imagine.
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