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THE 23/π DIALOGUES: Consciousness at the Ratio of Transformation

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180 pages, Hardcover

Published November 1, 2025

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Amar B. Singh

38 books7 followers

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1,172 reviews52 followers
November 17, 2025
This book felt very different to me. I’ve read Amar Singh’s other works, and his thought-provoking ideas, especially in his philosophical and spiritual writings, have stayed with me since 2019. His way of telling a story in poetic verses was a fresh literary experience for me. This year I also read his second installment on learnings from his daughter Enya, and finally I got my hands on this book too.

It talks about how our species is changing as technology grows, and it looks at this shift from a wide, human point of view. It’s practical yet deeply reflective. When I read The Dialogues, it felt like the starting point of the whole series. Even the title felt mysterious, and I was curious to understand its meaning. The author shares his thoughts around 23 and Pi. Though the idea of dividing those concepts was a bit hard for me at first, the chapters were intriguing and made me think about the ideas presented. Many times I felt amazed because these things were always around us, but I had never noticed them this way. His observations are truly minute and insightful.

The conversations begin in a small San Francisco coffee shop in January 2025, where Arthur and Sarah decide to document this unfolding change. It’s part of The Noisient Series, which explores many sides of this larger shift we’re living through. It isn’t self-help, a future prediction, a manifesto, or a business book. To me, it felt like consciousness watching itself transform. The two perspectives feel like an invitation to join this shift with awareness.

The idea is simple: transformation will happen anyway. We only choose whether to move consciously or be carried by forces we don’t notice. The book explores relationships between viewpoints, between mind and intuition, and between what we can explain and what we can only sense.

You can read it first, last, or anywhere in the series. It doesn’t give answers; it makes you think. It asks what happens to human consciousness when survival is no longer the main driver. It shows that fear and greed shape much of our world today, yet the conversations come from a place beyond both, not by resisting them but by outgrowing them.

Each chapter ends with a question that makes you pause. It isn’t always easy because the talks wander, so you must read slowly and let the meaning settle. A later case study set in 2035 shows two people reaching this next stage of evolution and how change spreads from individuals outward.

Through careful observations about nature, society, and inner change, the book becomes meaningful and thought-provoking. Just go for it because it may give you a whole new way to see the world.
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