That: The Book of Remembrance, Return, and Alignment - Adrianus Andrew Muganga (Ramadan)

By Adrianus Andrew Muganga (Ramadan)

Release Date: 2026-02-11

Genre: Philosophy

(0 ratings)
THAT: A Book of Remembrance and Return is a philosophical and contemplative inquiry into the nature of reality, identity, and continuity in an age of fragmentation and uncertainty. It argues that much of modern confusion does not arise from lack of information, but from a subtle misinterpretation: the elevation of visible form over the unexamined ground that makes all form possible.

The book begins by reexamining ideas often misunderstood emptiness, silence, and space. Rather than treating them as absence or void, it presents them as essential conditions that allow experience, movement, and relation. From there, it traces how visibility became equated with truth, how naming replaced direct seeing, and how symbols hardened into objects of attachment. This shift gradually reinforced the assumption of separation, shaping how individuals understand themselves, others, and the world.

At the center of the work is a simple but far-reaching claim: reality is whole, continuous, and without outside. Forms arise, transform, and dissolve within this unbroken field, but nothing essential is lost. Drawing on converging insights from philosophy, comparative religion, and scientific principles, the book reframes what has been called "the Supreme" not as a being among beings, but as the totality within which all beings appear.

The later sections explore the practical implications of this understanding. Fear of loss, fear of ending, and constant seeking are examined as natural outcomes of misunderstanding. Remembrance is defined as recognizing what has never been absent. Return is described as the correction of perception. Alignment becomes a lived expression of clarity, responsibility, and integrity.

This work does not introduce a new doctrine or demand belief. It invites careful attention. It asks the reader to examine what remains true when assumptions are set aside—and to rediscover the ground that was never missing.

That: The Book of Remembrance, Return, and Alignment - Adrianus Andrew Muganga (Ramadan)

By Adrianus Andrew Muganga (Ramadan)

Release Date: 2026-02-11

Genre: Philosophy

(0 ratings)
THAT: A Book of Remembrance and Return is a philosophical and contemplative inquiry into the nature of reality, identity, and continuity in an age of fragmentation and uncertainty. It argues that much of modern confusion does not arise from lack of information, but from a subtle misinterpretation: the elevation of visible form over the unexamined ground that makes all form possible.

The book begins by reexamining ideas often misunderstood emptiness, silence, and space. Rather than treating them as absence or void, it presents them as essential conditions that allow experience, movement, and relation. From there, it traces how visibility became equated with truth, how naming replaced direct seeing, and how symbols hardened into objects of attachment. This shift gradually reinforced the assumption of separation, shaping how individuals understand themselves, others, and the world.

At the center of the work is a simple but far-reaching claim: reality is whole, continuous, and without outside. Forms arise, transform, and dissolve within this unbroken field, but nothing essential is lost. Drawing on converging insights from philosophy, comparative religion, and scientific principles, the book reframes what has been called "the Supreme" not as a being among beings, but as the totality within which all beings appear.

The later sections explore the practical implications of this understanding. Fear of loss, fear of ending, and constant seeking are examined as natural outcomes of misunderstanding. Remembrance is defined as recognizing what has never been absent. Return is described as the correction of perception. Alignment becomes a lived expression of clarity, responsibility, and integrity.

This work does not introduce a new doctrine or demand belief. It invites careful attention. It asks the reader to examine what remains true when assumptions are set aside—and to rediscover the ground that was never missing.

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