The Man Who Sees the Future
What if you could glimpse the face of your death before it arrives?
The Man Who Sees the Future is a philosophical novel that explores the burden of foresight—not as a gift, but as a quiet responsibility.
The narrator is a man who senses outcomes before they unfold: losses, collapses, and moments when life silently chooses its direction. Yet knowing the future grants no power. Instead, it isolates him, erodes relationships, and places moral weight on a conscience without authority.
Through personal memory, psychological tension, and reflections on consciousness, fate, and free will, the novel traces a life shaped by warnings others refuse to hear.
This is not a story about prophecy.
It is a meditation on awareness, guilt, and the fragile boundary between intuition and destiny.
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