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Préface
There will be several book release parties and author lectures including a potential workshop at the Printed Matter New York and Los Angeles Art Book Fairs
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What is time? How is consciousness related to the physical world? Why is the simulation hypothesis so popular? These are just some of the questions LD Deutsch tackles in her first collection of essays, Time, Myth and Matter.
This book consists of five long essays, including revised and expanded versions of Deutsch’s highly esteemed zines published by Sacred Bones Books between 2018-2023, and an exclusive, previously unreleased essay, all of which explore the intersections between techno-scientific thinking and mythological narratives as they relate to life’s attempt at self-definition. Known for her ability to render complicated scientific and esoteric subjects accessible to wider audiences, Deutsch deftly traces the relationships between different theories and events in the history of science and technology, and various aspects of mythology, psychology, philosophy, (meta)physics and mysticism—resulting in a riveting inquiry into the nature of the self and the foundations of reality. By treating both science and mythology as serious subjects worthy of respect and rigor, Time, Myth and Matter opens up new avenues of thought and theory as to how the inner world of man and the outer world of Nature intersect and affect each other.
The essays in this book cover:
Time, Myth and Matter covers the theories and ideas of world-renowned philosophers, scientists and psychologists such as Carl Jung, Marie-Louise von Franz, Carlo Rovelli, Brian Greene, Nick Bostrom, Bernardo Kastrup, Ruth Kastner, Jacques Vallée, Jeffrey Kripal, Hans-Peter Dürr, Albert Einstein, and more. 
Résumé
Time, Myth and Matter by LD Deutsch is a collection of five essays, including revised and expanded versions of her highly esteemed zines published by Sacred Bones Books between 2018-2023, and an exclusive, previously unreleased essay, all of which explore the intersections between techno-scientific thinking and mythological narratives as they relate to life’s attempt at self-definition.
By placing certain histories of science and technology in conversation with collective psychological, philosophical and mythological currents (both recent and historic), Deutsch’s research reveals a new space in which an original scholarly, but playful, exchange between science and the humanities takes place.
In Myths & Models of Time + Timelessness, historic and modern Western scientific and philosophical perspectives on time (Aristotle/Newton, Einstein & the theories of Special & General Relativity, Minkowski/Einstein’s Block Universe, Presentism vs. Eternalism, The Spatialization of Time, Neuroscientific Bases for the Scientific Preference for Eternalism ), are juxtaposed with Greek mythological (Chronos, Saturn, Kairos, Aion) and Chinese mythological and philosophical (Time as Moment of Connection Between Fields, Number Boxes Lo-Shu and Ho-Tu, Cyclical Time vs Linear Time, Acausal Connection Principles) perspectives on time, and a striking isomorphism is shown.
The conversation between these different approaches to time is then used to investigate the phenomenon of synchronicity, as defined by Carl Jung and Wolfgang Pauli during their lengthy correspondence.
Pluto & The Mythic Dimension traces the synchronistic parallels between the mythologies of the Roman god Pluto (and his Greek counterpart Hades), the history and cultural implications of the discovery of the planet Pluto, and the discovery of the element Plutonium and dropping of the atom bomb. This essay also investigates Pluto’s archetypal role in the unconscious as well as its symbolic and astrological significance.
Technomythology explores the prevalence and popularity of the simulation hypothesis through a mythological framework, while considering the ever-evolving relationship between the collective unconscious and modern information technology. Rooted in a Jungian analysis of mythological models, Deutsch tracks the concept of a computer-programmed reality from its most popular origin point, through the scientific and philosophical presuppositions for its existence, into an associative understanding of its position as a model of reality.
The Myth of Matter is an essay in two parts that considers the various aways that humans have come to think about the unthinkable: how does matter emerge into the universe, and from where? How does the elementary grammar of our reality arrange itself into the language of the physical world?
Part One examines the way in which Western science has attempted to answer these questions, both from a quantum mechanical and scientifically allegorical perspective.
Part Two, which will be available for the first time in this collection, will approach these questions from a psychological and ideated perspective, asking the question how does the archetype of something, emerging from a perceived nothingness that precedes it get expressed in thought and in life?
Part One argues that matter is a myth in the sense that it is false: matter does not exist.
Part Two argues that matter is a myth in a Jungian sense: it is a concept that says something qualitative about the human psyche and creates a bridge between internal and external realities.
As a whole, this essay attempts to ask: just what is the whatness of matter? As a whole, Time, Myth and Matter presents to the reader new ways of engaging in interdisciplinary thought around life’s greatest mystery: the nature and narrative(s) of reality.