The Call from Tomorrow
How The Future Shapes Who We Are (Philosophical Questions)
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Narrated by:
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C.L. Berns
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By:
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Boris Kriger
What if the future is not empty?
We are taught that causes precede effects, that the past shapes the present, and that the future is nothing more than an open space waiting to be filled. But our deepest experiences tell a different story. We fall in love before there is evidence. We sense what is approaching before it arrives. We feel pulled toward purposes we cannot yet name. Something ahead of us is already at work.
In The Call from Tomorrow, Boris Kriger draws on twenty-five centuries of philosophy, the time-symmetry of fundamental physics, the phenomenology of consciousness, and the intimate testimony of human experience to argue that the direction of causation is not what we think it is. The arrow from past to future is real—but it is not the only arrow. There is another, quieter force: the pull of what has not yet been, shaping who we are from ahead.
From Aristotle's forgotten final cause to Wheeler's delayed-choice experiment, from Husserl's forward-leaning consciousness to the placebo effect in modern medicine, from the phenomenology of prayer to the neuroscience of the predictive brain—this book weaves science, philosophy, and lived experience into a single, compelling vision: we are not only pushed by the past. We are called by the future.
Grounded in a formal philosophical paper included as an appendix, yet written entirely without mathematics, The Call from Tomorrow is an invitation to rethink time, meaning, and the hidden architecture of human life.
Keywords
causation · time · consciousness · meaning · future · phenomenology · purpose