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This groundbreaking work examines numerous documented cases through rigorous empirical analysis, exploring why millions of people remember corporate logos, movie quotes, geographical features, and historical events differently than current evidence indicates. Moving beyond conventional psychological explanations, the book presents the revolutionary quantum consciousness hypothesis—proposing that collective consciousness can influence physical reality through quantum mechanical processes, potentially altering past events while preserving memories of original timelines.
Inside this book, you’ll learn:
•Why memory works more like a story editor than a video camera
•How shared culture quietly trains millions of people to misremember the same details
•Why familiar errors feel more “right” than the truth
•How repetition and online agreement inflate confidence over time
•Why debunking often strengthens belief instead of dissolving it
•How logos, quotes, movies, and media drift in our minds
•How to test your own memories without losing curiosity or wonder
Discover the fascinating world of memory and how our minds can create shared false recollections, exemplified by the mysterious mandela effect. This book explores why certain memories seem wrong or conflicting with recorded history, blending psychology, neuroscience, and cultural analysis. It explains how human memory works, why it is fallible, and how cognitive biases, social influence, media, and expectations shape what we remember. The book also examines how collective beliefs form and how we can think critically to better understand and verify our memories.
Catégories
Caractéristiques
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- ISBN9798902161301
- ÉditeurRob Satterfield
- Date de publication30 décembre 2025
- FormatEpub
- ProtectionFiligrane numérique
- Catégories BISACScience / Physique / Généralités, Psychologie / Référence, Développement Personnel / Motivation & Inspirational
- LangueAnglais
