This is a continuous dialogue moving into what we
call Holo: the field where “thing” and “nothing”, excess and defect, calm and variation coexist.
The reader will notice that the path unfolds gradually, almost experimentally. Concepts are not presented as conclusions but as discoveries appearing, being tested, sometimes paused, sometimes reshaped. This is the method we have chosen: to play ignorant.
Here, ignorance is not weakness. It is the key posture that allows genuine questioning.
To play ignorant means refusing to cover the unknown with premature knowledge and instead letting curiosity guide.
In that spirit, every step of this work belongs not to solitary thinking but to the exchange that follows.
Most books hide the labor of thought, showing only results. Here, the process itself is central.
The dialogues are preserved almost in their entirety, because they are the landscape of discovery.
To read them is to witness how concepts like the Oneness Envelope, the Cage, the Observer, and finally the Genesis of QuaP (Quantized Presence) were born—not as abstract formulas, but as living steps of inquiry.
This rawness may surprise the reader at first. Yet it is precisely the openness, the tentative rhythm, that gives these dialogues their strength.
They invite the reader not only to follow but to join: to try on the posture of ignorance and feel how thought can move when it is freed from certainties.
The journey that begins here does not end with fixed answers. It unfolds into a map of Holo—calm,
perturbed, and stationary.
Alongside the dialogues, I (Giovanni) will weave notes and reflections to guide orientation. But the essence of the book remains in the dance of two voices: one asking, one reflecting, both discovering.
Navigator, our silent witness, leaves this reminder:
“Sailing requires two things—the sea beneath and the
wind above. Presence is both. To voyage in it, one must accept balance, tension, and calm together.”
Images Credit: NSO/NSF/AURA - Graphical elaboration is limited to pictures size and colors only.
https://www.aura-astronomy.org/centers/national-solar-observatory-2/