Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Thanosis

Rate this book
In Thanosis, Jason Reza Jorjani presents a radical philosophical investigation of life after death, integrating parapsychological data with an ontological framework. Rejecting both materialist annihilation and monistic idealism, he affirms a Jamesian consciousness as a battlefield of wills where individuality, freedom, and creative agency endure beyond death. Engaging with more than a century of parapsychological research and earlier survival studies, Jorjani critiques both idealism and epistemic impasse, proposing instead a pluralistic panpsychism that gives meaning to survival in a way that preserves personal agency.

Across the chapters of Thanosis, Jorjani explores the distinction between reincarnation and possession with a view to the question of personal identity; he exposes the “afterlife” as a psychotronic prison system extracting “loosh” from souls; and he advances a computational ontology in which the soul is software within a quantum information processing system. Reinterpreting religious eschatologies through this lens, Jorjani reframes liberation as Promethean authorship over one’s informational pattern.

The book culminates in a program of postmortem training and psychotronic technologies — techniques for lucid navigation and self-engineering. With these tools, we can transcend the archontic system and transform death into a domain of spiritual mastery and creative freedom.

202 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 13, 2025

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

Jason Reza Jorjani

19 books134 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
13 (46%)
4 stars
9 (32%)
3 stars
3 (10%)
2 stars
2 (7%)
1 star
1 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
37 reviews
February 14, 2026
This book is WILD. It is terrifying, “fun”, thought provoking, absolutely crazy. Wild stories and research about many afterlife theories, and technologies that have been discovered. Some things definitely worth looking more into. It’s a tough read at times, but Jorjani is repetitive enough that you get what he’s saying if not at first. It’s a trust-the-process type of book and gave me nightmares along the way. It ended up being a bit too “Scientology”-esque (IYKYK) in the end for me to get fully on board with… so maybe I’ll become part of the loosh… I enjoyed the ride overall and it did get me thinking differently about death. And about consequences of our current state of technology and information overload.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
19 reviews1 follower
March 30, 2026
I like this book alot.

It uses evidence collected about NDEs, and out of body experience etc to posit a thesis about the after life. And its thrilling.

Maybe more so because evidence is usually sued to support boring things.

I get the feeling this book is an example of what science should be used for...

Furthering and interpreting novel thesis that will shape behavior, not to say that modern science doesn't do that, but often time it feels like studies are just used to confuse people

anyways this book is really dope, its my thrid JRJ book and honesty at this point I might just read his whole catalogue lol.

this wasn't much of a review but this is a rly cool and unique book, check it out.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews