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Thanosis is a radical philosophical investigation of life after death, integrating parapsychological data with an ontological framework.
Rejecting both materialist annihilation and monistic idealism, the author affirms a Jamesian pluralism: consciousness as a battlefield of wills where individuality, freedom, and creative agency endure beyond death. Engaging with more than a century of parapsychological research and earlier survival studies, Jorjani critiques both idealism and epistemic impasse, proposing instead a pluralistic panpsychism that gives meaning to survival in a way that preserves personal agency.
Across the chapters of Thanosis, Jorjani explores the distinction between reincarnation and possession with a view to the question of personal identity; he exposes the “afterlife” as a psychotronic prison system extracting “loosh” from souls; and he advances a computational ontology in which the soul is software within a quantum information processing system.
Reinterpreting religious eschatologies through this lens, Jorjani reframes liberation as Promethean authorship over one’s informational pattern.
The book culminates in a program of postmortem training and psychotronic technologies — techniques for lucid navigation and self-engineering. With these tools, we can transcend the archontic system and transform death into a domain of spiritual mastery and creative freedom.
PDF:
Rejecting both materialist annihilation and monistic idealism, the author affirms a Jamesian pluralism: consciousness as a battlefield of wills where individuality, freedom, and creative agency endure beyond death. Engaging with more than a century of parapsychological research and earlier survival studies, Jorjani critiques both idealism and epistemic impasse, proposing instead a pluralistic panpsychism that gives meaning to survival in a way that preserves personal agency.
Across the chapters of Thanosis, Jorjani explores the distinction between reincarnation and possession with a view to the question of personal identity; he exposes the “afterlife” as a psychotronic prison system extracting “loosh” from souls; and he advances a computational ontology in which the soul is software within a quantum information processing system.
Reinterpreting religious eschatologies through this lens, Jorjani reframes liberation as Promethean authorship over one’s informational pattern.
The book culminates in a program of postmortem training and psychotronic technologies — techniques for lucid navigation and self-engineering. With these tools, we can transcend the archontic system and transform death into a domain of spiritual mastery and creative freedom.
PDF: