Context and Intimacy is an in-depth exploration of the psychological, biological, and existential structures that shape human connection. Drawing from social theory, phenomenology, and consciousness studies, Menache examines how context forms the boundaries of perception, and how intimacy emerges when those boundaries dissolve.
Across its three major sections-Context, Intimacy, and The Senses-the book reveals how information enters the psyche, how boundaries are formed and removed, and how different forms of contextual exposure shape identity, vulnerability, and connection. Menache dissects the hidden frameworks that mediate social life, showing how individuals attach to environments, relationships, and conceptual layers that determine the depth or collapse of intimacy.
Through rigorous yet accessible analysis, Context and Intimacy illuminates why relationships become strained under conflicting contextual layers, how codependency forms when natural biological contexts fuse without proper mediation, and why intimacy requires both conceptual grounding and biological openness. The book also explores how universal themes, sensory embodiment, and existential centers guide human development and shape the trajectory of consciousness.
For readers interested in consciousness, social theory, intimacy, psychology, or philosophical anthropology, Context and Intimacy provides an original, and transformative perspective.