Monday, October 26, 2009

The Philosophical Escalation of the Manifest Utopia Trilogy

The Philosophical Escalation of the Manifest Utopia Trilogy


The Girl, examines the psychological journey of personal Liberation.

Zarat, examines the psychological quest of a human at war for Independence within this American system.

Existentialism, examines the relevancy of Humanity within the Universe and its necessity to be Free to Evolve.

We must search the full Epic nature of these Free people to understand the Final Solution.


How many thoughts to set you Free? How many thoughts to Free us All?

The Epic as a Single Ideal


Pacheco Humility Foundation Presents:

The Manifest Utopia Series

Book One: The Girl, A Journey in Memories through the Self, by The Father, Written by Philosopher Stephan Pacheco

In book one, we experience the mind of the Girl. We touch her mind exactly. We experience piece by piece every thought, every memory that has made her mind as she would know it, as experienced by the Father. We experience the Father's influence on her because he is the author that knows her thoughts, and the feelings of how they randomly and specifically appear. He experiences the thoughts and translates them purely.


Book Two: Zarat, Notes of the Becoming, by Zarat. Written by Philosopher Stephan Pacheco

In book two...we get to know Zarat. Zarat, alone, records his own memoirs. What he is. What he has done. He comments on the Girl and the Father because he knew them. They influenced him. And through his mind he perceived them. Judged them, loved them for his own reasons. And we experience his suffering in the torments of endless, lonely, purposeful slaughter within a revolution that for all he knows only he believes in.


Book Three: Existentialism, A Solution, by The Father, Compiled by The Priest, Written by Philosopher Stephan Pacheco

The Father is imprisoned. Near the end of his life the Father sits calmly and contemplates a long journey of thought that ends in death. He thinks of the few he had met that strove towards absolute freedom and the extinction of all power. But his mind is rotting. Spasming. Forgetting. Losing. Life is hard and suffering and these people are real.

Synopsis for The Girl, A Journey in Memories through the Self

Book 1 of 3 in the Manifest Utopia Series:

Freedom Is What You Suspect:

A child mostly uncluttered by the biases of a long life feels deeply her own demise. In an instant a young girl faces death and learns the greatest secret of the greatest question of the living Universe. What is Death? What happens when we become it? The child comes face to face with the absolute truth of what all human beings are, and have been. She realizes what it is when all identity, all history, all learning, all opinions and people, anyone's heaven and hell, all lies and controls - fall away. She knows completely what she truly is without justification. She knows Absolute Freedom in a flash lost in the infinite void of eternity. She returned with confirmable knowledge which realized the very root of her Existence. She will strive for the length of her life to manifest into reality that place of absolute peace and serenity, where judgment and penalty do no exist. A place of infinite Freedom where she exists purely without fear or consequence, and so, free from the negative reactions that over time turn people into what they used hate to escape. She will live her life as she specifically chooses. Experiencing life as a malleable dream that she controls through her own perceptions, always knowing that she will one day, in an instant, return to the place of complete Calmness. The most profound knowledge she holds, which she strains to stretch to you, is that she can never be away from this holy and cleansing place, that her very being is, this--unnamed--nameless thing...This that set her Free. This is true Freedom. This is the root of her Revolt.