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OverviewThe Ontology of Pain: A New Metaphysics of Existence by Muhammad Taha Alam redefines pain as the foundation of Being, challenging traditional metaphysical views that equate existence with harmony or perfection. Pain is presented as the first vibration of existence-the strain that makes difference, relation, and awareness possible. It is the medium through which Being learns itself, transforming resistance into reflexivity and reflexivity into meaning. The book explores pain as the primal mode of contact through which existence becomes aware of its limits. Pain is not merely a biological signal or emotional state but the first sensation that enables awareness. This perspective redefines freedom, not as the absence of constraint, but as the conscious participation in the limits that sustain existence. Reflexivity-the capacity to feel and respond to resistance-is identified as the structural principle of reality, linking pain to the evolution of consciousness, freedom, and agency. Ethically, the book argues that compassion is the highest expression of Being's reflexivity. Compassion is not just a moral sentiment but a metaphysical act-a recognition of shared endurance. To act compassionately is to transform suffering into meaning and relation, participating in the reflexive labor of existence. This ethical framework challenges the modern pursuit of comfort and control, offering instead a vision of life as mutual endurance and shared understanding. The social critique examines how modern systems-capitalism, technology, and governance-externalize pain, concealing the endurance that sustains them. This externalization has led to alienation, inequality, and ecological crisis. Yet these crises are interpreted as moments of revelation, opportunities to rediscover the interdependence that underlies existence. The book envisions a transparent civilization where institutions distribute endurance equitably and knowledge serves relation rather than domination. Philosophical spirituality is central to the book's vision, offering transparency as the ultimate goal of reflexivity. Transparency is described as the state in which awareness understands the necessity of resistance without mistaking it for hostility. It is the equilibrium where pain and pleasure are reconciled, and consciousness perceives the world as mutual endurance. The sacred is reinterpreted as the reflexive structure of reality itself, dissolving the boundary between cognition and devotion. The book emphasizes the ethical and spiritual dimensions of transparency, arguing that the good is whatever increases mutual awareness among beings. Justice is framed as the equitable distribution of endurance, and compassion is presented as the practical expression of the sacred. The transparent civilization envisioned in the book integrates ethics, science, and spirituality, transforming institutions into organs of shared reflexivity. Modernity's crises-ecological collapse, social inequality, and spiritual alienation-are framed as the return of the repressed real, moments when Being remembers itself through suffering. The book argues that the exhaustion of the modern project-its denial of dependence and externalization of pain-prepares the ground for a new mode of realism. This realism acknowledges that knowledge is participation, not mastery, and that freedom lies in the conscious acceptance of limits. Ultimately, The Ontology of Pain offers a profound rethinking of existence, freedom, and meaning. It challenges readers to confront their assumptions about suffering and to see pain not as an obstacle but as a teacher. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Muhammad AlamPublisher: Kingsman Press London Imprint: Kingsman Press London Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.304kg ISBN: 9789354695094ISBN 10: 9354695094 Pages: 222 Publication Date: 01 December 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationMuhammad Taha Alam is an independent philosopher whose work centres on the development of an original Ontology of Pain. He conceives pain as the first self-affection of Being-the inaugural vibration through which existence becomes aware of itself. From this primary wound, his philosophy traces how Being unfolds through matter, life, consciousness, and moral awareness, shaping the structures of experience and the architectures of the modern world.An alumnus of Durham University, UK, Alam works at the intersections of metaphysics, phenomenology, dialectics, and cosmology. His inquiry asks why pain seems foundational to consciousness; how longing shapes identity and memory; how perception is conditioned by material and cognitive limits; and how individuals become trapped inside large social, economic, and psychological systems that far exceed their understanding. Across his writings, he explores whether reconciliation is possible-whether the human mind can return to harmony with itself after its first rupture.His major works include Pain and Being, The Romantic Absolutist, The Blindness of Scale, Fathers and Sons, and Why Evil Exists. These projects form a unified philosophical system devoted to understanding existence not as a neutral field of being, but as a drama structured by suffering, idealism, memory, and the search for meaning.Through long-form writing and independent research, Alam continues to elaborate this ontology, proposing a coherent account of Being rooted in the primacy of pain and the forms of life, consciousness, and morality that emerge from it. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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