What if consciousness is not a late glitch in an otherwise empty cosmos, but the very medium in which everything unfolds? This book invites you to reconsider the universe you thought you lived in, exploring the daring possibility of a conscious universe and a truly universal consciousness. Moving between cosmology, philosophy, and contemplative insight, it offers a clear, grounded tour of panpsychism explained for thoughtful readers. Along the way, it reframes the classic puzzles of philosophy of mind, asking whether a spiritual cosmology can sit comfortably beside hard-won scientific knowledge. Rather than forcing agreement, it holds science and spirituality in creative tension, showing how each can correct the other's blind spots. You will encounter accessible arguments for awareness as fundamental, reflections on the nature of reality, and fresh ways to think about mind and matter as intertwined rather than opposed. Simple practices help you test these ideas in your own experience, linking the vastness of the sky to your most intimate inner and outer worlds. This book is for sceptical seekers, spiritually curious scientists, and anyone who feels that neither tidy materialism nor rigid dogma quite fits. If you want a rigorous yet open-hearted guide to the possibility of a living universe, this is your next conversation partner.
The Conscious Cosmos
SKU: 9789375363668
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- Elodie Varkash is a writer and thinker who lives at the meeting point of cosmology, philosophy, and contemplative practice. Her work explores how our deepest stories about the universe shape the way we live, love, and build societies. Drawing on a long-standing fascination with night skies, mythic imagination, and the hard edges of physics, she writes in a clear, grounded style that welcomes sceptical readers as well as seekers. Elodie is particularly interested in the neglected conversation between scientific models of reality and the experiential insights of spiritual traditions. Influenced by ancient Middle Eastern and Mediterranean cosmologies, she traces how older images of a living universe might be reinterpreted for a technological age without abandoning rigour. Her essays and talks invite readers into thoughtful, questioning dialogue rather than easy agreement, asking what changes if consciousness runs all the way through the fabric of things.


















