"Dark Room" primarily functions as a theory into principles and truths of the human condition. It seeks to view and prescribe these ideas through an orientation of creation, identity, and its matters in the absence of the physical. The book comes from a Judeo-Christian philosophy, borrowing ideas from Nihilism and Existentialism. The context of the writing relates to the hermeneutics of ancient Biblical texts, primarily the broader Old Testament and Torah. The writing is not mainly academic or entirely fictional. It is described in a nonfiction sense but is fictional in that "the man" does not exist in singularity but in plurality. The narrative of the writing is written in a way that can become highly interpretive; parts of the short work may leave unanswered questions or theories. Nevertheless, a common intention is present in the writing and intended for the reader. The whole narrative is packed within a story-like approach, with a man and a dark room. It is mysterious, but the reader may have deciphered the book's true nature by the end.
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