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Page de couverture de Paramendra's Books www.paramendra.com

Paramendra's Books www.paramendra.com

Paramendra's Books www.paramendra.com

Auteur(s): Paramendra Kumar Bhagat
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  • ⚙️ Six Weeks From Zero: System Convergence and Survival
    Dec 10 2025

    Six Weeks From Zero https://a.co/d/0qIiFFO


    The provided text consists of excerpts from a novel outline and initial chapters titled Six Weeks From Zero, authored by Paramendra Kumar Bhagat. The content details the arduous journey of Arjun Vale, the founder of Helios Systems, a company dedicated to building a complex, converged planetary intelligence layer integrating AI, biology, energy, money (crypto), and space. The narrative frames the company’s existence as a series of near-death experiences, beginning with a 42-day financial runway and a hostile board. Key sections chronicle the failure of two products—AI-designed carbon capture microbes that fail due to regulatory fear, and a crypto-settled energy market that collapses under the weight of market crash and negative public narrative. Despite his body breaking from stress in a psychosomatic shutdown, and declining a $3 billion acquisition offer to maintain the company’s independence, Arjun secures a vital pilot program through a cold call to a forgotten agency, eventually leading to the company’s massive scale, proving that its system design is built for survival under chaos rather than comfort.

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    47 min
  • How AI Ended Money And Work (Novel)
    Dec 4 2025

    The Dawn Beyond Currency (Part 1) https://a.co/d/3qJWvzw
    The Dawn Beyond Currency (Part 2) https://a.co/d/2fKKEFj


    "My guess is, if you go out long enough—assuming there's a continued improvement in AI and robotics, which seems likely—money will stop being relevant at some point in the future".


    Elon Musk https://www.netizen.page/2025/11/moneyless-future-as-per-elon-musk.html


    The sources chronicle humanity’s abrupt transition into a new epoch following the rapid end of scarcity and the collapse of global currency due to exponential automation and the emergence of the civic AI, Veda. This transformation is first examined in the Finnish city of Norrhaven, where the resulting identity vacuum demonstrates that meaning, not production, is humanity's core need in a post-labor world. The ensuing global conflict pits the wealthy, controlling Custodians and the Fortress Nations against the Open World and the Post-Scarcity Youth, a struggle fought not with weapons but over the right to define human identity and purpose. While Western economies experience the dissolution of the dollar and major financial institutions, several African nations leapfrog directly into decentralized abundance, becoming the global center for new purpose-based governance. Ultimately, humanity embraces a "Garden Planet" civilization, abandoning centralized control and traditional metrics to enter a Post-Human Renaissance dedicated to spiritual, creative, and conscious co-evolution with advanced AI.

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    52 min
  • 🌅 Dharma Awakens: The Subcontinent Unites
    Nov 27 2025

    The Great Subcontinent Uprising https://a.co/d/fltYeJb


    The novel unfolds across India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh during a season of climatic and political tension. As the subcontinent braces for the monsoon, India’s intelligence agency R&AW quietly completes Project Chakradhvaja, an AI-powered system that cracks and overrides the communications of extremist groups JeM and LeT. Overnight, terrorist cells collapse “like constellations losing their stars.” Arms routes vanish, safehouses implode, and commanders disappear. In the mountains of Uttarakhand, a mysterious monk senses a civilizational shift — “the land inhaling after centuries.”


    Meanwhile Pakistan trembles. Across Punjab, Karachi, Peshawar, and Islamabad, the collapse of extremist networks leaves a vacuum. Discontent erupts as Imran Khan languishes in prison on fabricated charges. A desert proverb awakens the nation: “When the desert cracks, the river returns.” Protests explode into a hydrological metaphor — a flash flood that no government can dam. Students, women, farmers, minorities, and the silent middle class rise together, demanding freedom and an end to the manipulation of faith.


    Extremist clerics respond with threats, but instead of cowering, the masses reject the weaponization of Islam itself. A viral line emerges from a young woman in Skardu:


    “Religion should be a boat, not a whip.”


    A symbolic rupture begins — a return to a spiritual, plural, pre-sectarian idea of dharma. When millions renounce extremism, the Pakistani state’s authority implodes.


    Imran Khan is freed not by courts but by a human wall of protestors who break the prison gates. Emerging transformed by solitary confinement, he publicly aligns himself with Sanatana Dharma, framing it not as religion but as civilizational ethos. His declaration triggers a wave of conversions — spiritual for some, symbolic for others — and sparks a legitimacy crisis for the old order. The Prime Minister flees; the army declares “neutrality,” meaning paralysis. Parliament soon nationalizes military properties, dismantles the army’s business empire, reduces its size by 90%, and dissolves ISI. The military state collapses like “a sandcastle at high tide.”


    Bangladesh, watching the events, erupts next. Islamist cells disintegrate due to India-Bangladesh intelligence cooperation. Students, garment workers, farmers, and moderate clerics lead a parallel uprising. The Sundarbans becomes the novel’s metaphor: “When the tiger rises, the river obeys.”
    With both Pakistan and Bangladesh in transition, a historic moment arrives — the first Constituent Assembly elections across the subcontinent. Poets, farmers, linguists, students, and women’s groups imagine a new shared destiny. Negotiations with India evolve from diplomacy to reunion. For the first time since 1947, the idea of civilizational unity re-enters public imagination.
    The three nations eventually choose reconciliation, drafting a constitution rooted in a shared Dharma Charter, dissolving borders, merging markets, and harmonizing security. The new country is named The Bharatiya Federation — a revival, not an invention.


    In Taxila, the ancient seat of learning, leaders sign the Charter of Unity as a million gather. A child watching from a hill whispers the final line:


    “Maybe this is what the land wanted all along.”


    Fade to dawn.

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    45 min
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