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Mason Howe Dwinell

    The Earth Was Flat
    The Earth was Flat
    • The Earth was Flat

      Insight into the Ancient Practice of Sungazing

      • 176 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      Challenging long-held beliefs about human limitations, Mason Howe Dwinell explores the ancient practice of sungazing, proposing that individuals can thrive without conventional sustenance and safely gaze at the sun. Drawing on scientific insights, he argues that the human body can adapt to overcome hunger and resist sunlight's damaging effects. This groundbreaking work invites readers to reconsider their understanding of human potential and the possibilities of transcending physical needs.

      The Earth was Flat
    • The Earth Was Flat

      • 172 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      For centuries, people and researchers believed that it was impossible for human beings to live their lives without sustenance, and that their visions will be destroyed by looking straight at the sun. Based on science, human eyes are not strong enough to resist the damage of direct sunlight while the human body has a natural cycle of hunger that has to be curbed. But for author Mason Howe Dwinell, people can overcome such obstacles and even achieve the impossible. These he elaborates deeply in his groundbreaking book titled The Earth Was Flat: Insight into the Ancient Practice of Sungazing. In its pages, The Earth Was Flat explains that anything is possible and to evolve humans must dissolve subtle energy blocks that prevent them from experiencing their true potential. In achieving the impossible, man must work through and surrender various emotions in order to achieve the transformation required for miraculous achievements. With such alterations people can actually stretch the preconceived limits of their minds, bodies, and spirits.

      The Earth Was Flat