Enman Mind
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- $5.99
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- $5.99
Publisher Description
Human cognition rarely tolerates unfinished structures. An unanswered question lingers longer than a resolved one. An incomplete story continues to run in the background of thought. A decision not fully made returns in subtle variations, often disguised as reflection but functioning as persistence.
This tendency is not accidental. It is structural.
The mind does not simply process reality; it organizes it into states that feel complete enough to be stable. What is unfinished is not merely unknown, it is cognitively active. It demands resolution, or at least the illusion of resolution. In this space between incompletion and resolution, psychological tension emerges.
This book begins from a simple but uncomfortable observation: much of what humans experience as dissatisfaction is not caused by lack, but by incompleteness of mental closure.
The concept of Enman, drawn from the idea of wholeness or completeness, serves here not as a metaphysical claim about reality, but as a psychological and phenomenological construct. It describes a subjective state in which internal representations of experience, memory, and expectation reach a level of integration that reduces cognitive friction. Enman is not perfection. It is not totality. It is the felt sense that a system of meaning has reached temporary coherence.