Some dreams arrive early. Some hunches prove right. And some moments feel known before they have happened.
Reports of foreknowledge are older than philosophy and stranger than any single explanation can carry. Precognition in a Nutshell: Dreams, Research, and Reflection offers a short, clear companion to the long human conversation about whether the future can sometimes reach back.
Drawing on history, laboratory research, cognitive science, and contemplative practice, the book guides curious readers through the territory between credulous belief and confident dismissal. It introduces the phenomenon as ordinary people experience it, surveys the careful experimental tradition that has tried to test the claim under controlled conditions, and asks what kind of attentive mental life makes the question worth holding open.
Inside Precognition in a Nutshell: Dreams, Research, and Reflection you will find:
Rather than insist on a verdict, Precognition in a Nutshell: Dreams, Research, and Reflection teaches the reader how to weigh the evidence honestly, distinguish foreknowledge from synchronicity and déjà vu, and develop the kind of patient attentiveness from which an ordinary person can engage their own anomalous experiences without either inflation or dismissal.
For readers curious about dreams, intuition, parapsychology, the philosophy of time, or simply the strange edges of ordinary experience, Precognition in a Nutshell: Dreams, Research, and Reflection is a thoughtful companion for a quiet evening and a lifetime of reflection.
About the Author
Iris Marie Whitcombe is a writer and independent researcher with a background in philosophy and the literature of anomalous experience. For many years she has been drawn to the careful study of dreams, intuitions, and the small moments of foreknowing that surface in ordinary lives, with a particular interest in how reports of precognition can be examined honestly without either credulity or premature dismissal.
Her writing focuses on clarity and accessibility, presenting complex and contested ideas in language that invites reflection rather than insists on conclusions. She is especially attentive to the boundary between scientific evidence and personal experience, and to the practical disciplines through which an attentive reader can engage with the strangeness of their own perceptual life.
Precognition in a Nutshell: Dreams, Research, and Reflection is part of her collaboration with In a Nutshell Press, a series devoted to capturing the essence of important subjects in a concise, approachable style that invites reflection and practice.