The world of Nada Amari ’s book, , is less a traditional narrative and more a philosophical exploration of the "Law of Mirroring"—the idea that your external reality is a direct reflection of your internal state. The "Story" of the Book
Nada Amari posits that the physical world is an illusion—a "hologram" or "hallucination" created by your consciousness. The book operates on the principle that your external reality is a direct, unwavering reflection of your internal state. Self-Concept is Key
Amari doesn’t romanticize introspection. The mirror reveals uncomfortable parts of ourselves—jealousy, shame, fear. The work proposes compassionate integration of these shadows as essential to receiving a truer reflection.
For academic or personal study, the version sometimes appears on the Internet Archive under a slightly different title: The Mirror Principle: An Unpublished Manuscript. Search using the author's name in quotes: "Nada Amari."
that are distributed without the author's or publisher's permission. Doing so would violate copyright laws and ethical guidelines.
The world of Nada Amari ’s book, , is less a traditional narrative and more a philosophical exploration of the "Law of Mirroring"—the idea that your external reality is a direct reflection of your internal state. The "Story" of the Book
Nada Amari posits that the physical world is an illusion—a "hologram" or "hallucination" created by your consciousness. The book operates on the principle that your external reality is a direct, unwavering reflection of your internal state. Self-Concept is Key
Amari doesn’t romanticize introspection. The mirror reveals uncomfortable parts of ourselves—jealousy, shame, fear. The work proposes compassionate integration of these shadows as essential to receiving a truer reflection.
For academic or personal study, the version sometimes appears on the Internet Archive under a slightly different title: The Mirror Principle: An Unpublished Manuscript. Search using the author's name in quotes: "Nada Amari."
that are distributed without the author's or publisher's permission. Doing so would violate copyright laws and ethical guidelines.