Neuroscience of Being;
A Neuropsychophysiological Theory of the Dynamic Tensional Field of Integrity
We moved away from treating the right hemisphere as an isolated module and began to examine the architecture of mental health as a whole—not as a collection of symptoms or diagnostic categories, but as an integrated functional system. Within this expanded framework, one line of inquiry began to emerge with particular clarity: the study of functions that do not generate content, but instead sustain experience itself.
Following an extended process of structural analysis, clinical validation, and the deliberate application of high-complexity thinking, a central finding became unavoidable:
Being is not a philosophical abstraction nor a clinical metaphor, but a specific neuropsychological function.
A function with structure, form, dynamics, method, and system.
This book presents that discovery—not as a speculative hypothesis, but as the formal identification of a function that had been operating silently, without name or model, at the core of human experience.