Publisher's Synopsis
In 2018, scientists in Kyoto Japan concluded that it may well be possible that a computer will, one day, be able to visualize what we are thinking, imagining, hallucinating, or dreaming. Since there is no better computer than the human brain, with the proper catalyst, humans should be able to communicate with another through neurotransmission alone. The protagonist in this story, Caesar Augustus Gibran Edwards, better known as CAGE, a gifted neuroscientist, after much experimentation, has synthesized such a catalyst, but that turns out to be only half the answer. The other half proves to be more challenging...developing the exact human dose of the catalyst so not all the brains potential is activated at once. There has been a longstanding myth that humans only use on tenth of their brain potential. In debunking the ten percent myth, Knowing Neurons editor Gabrielle-Ann Torre writes that using one hundred percent of one's brain would not be desirable either. That would cause very undesirable consequences which Cage, driven by love and entangled in a web of international intrigue, painfully discovers.