The book also connects this mechanism to telepathy. It describes telepathy not as fantasy, but as another form of mental impression.
One mind, active and focused, projects an image, feeling, or thought. Another mind, receptive and unguarded, receives it. The receiver may never know the thought came from outside, because once an idea enters the subconscious, it feels exactly like an original thought.
This is the frightening part: the subconscious does not label the source of an impression. It does not say, “This came from someone else.” It simply receives, absorbs, and grows what it has received.
If this principle works between two people, it can also work between one person and many. A leader may project a thought into a crowd. A communicator may impress a narrative upon a nation. A culture may plant assumptions into millions of minds.
The vehicle changes: speech, image, music, ritual, screen, or silence. But the mechanism remains the same.
The seed enters. The mind grows it. The person calls it truth.