A Vision of Consciousness, Quantum Tech, and the Unknown
Writing Sphere of the Pacific wasn’t just about telling a sci-fi story—it was about pushing an idea as far as it could go. What if consciousness isn’t just something that exists in the universe, but something that creates it? What if technology could go beyond physics as we know it and touch something deeper?
At its heart, this book is a mind-bending ride through time, space, and the limits of human understanding. Dr. Erwin returns to Earth only to find it encased in a mysterious Sphere—an anomaly that defies everything we know about physics. No one knows why it’s there or what it wants, but one thing is clear: it’s not just a technological marvel—it’s something more. Something tied to consciousness itself.
When I started writing Dr. Erwin Mind Travel, I approached it the way I would a research project. I’ve spent years buried in physics, neuroscience, and the philosophy of mind, searching for something that isn’t just theoretically possible but plausible. The difference? Scientific papers demand strict methodologies. Fiction gives you the space to actually explore—to follow ideas past the edges of what we assume is real and ask: What if this is where science is actually headed?
This isn’t just another time-travel story. It’s an exploration of where quantum technology and consciousness could take us. The kind of breakthroughs that seem like sci-fi now but could be within reach in the next decade, especially with advancements in quantum computing. With one book published and a prequel on the way, the Dr. Erwin series doesn’t just tell a story—it lays out a vision of what might be possible.
Visually, the book is a trip. I wanted it to capture the full feeling of discovery—vast cosmic landscapes, surreal alien worlds, and the kind of celestial architecture that makes you question where reality ends and the mind begins. At the same time, the future of Earth plays a key role, with Perth, Australia standing as a city of balance—a vision of technological progress that doesn’t erase nature, but integrates with it.
The series pulls readers into unknown civilizations, landscapes that exist beyond the limits of our perception, and journeys where time and space aren’t boundaries—they’re tools. And as Dr. Erwin moves deeper into these realms, the expansion of his consciousness becomes something tangible, something real—an experience that’s just as visual as it is intellectual.
I don’t write books just to tell stories. I write them because these books help me think about these big questions.