The Philosopher, Spring 1999
Georges Dupois clearly nails his colours to the mast of the mental construct, and pursues this view to the bitter end. In fact, not only is the external world a subjective construct, but so are our bodies, our brains, even our minds. The only realities are what Dupois calls the 'Substratum' (after Kant) and the 'Overself' (an invention of his own). These are collectively a set of forces which create 'vibrations' which the mind construes into objects, thoughts, dreams or ideas and which are dropped into space/time, itself a mental construct in which to concretise these vibrations...
So far so good, and it is clear, as Dupois acknowledges, that he and we are deep in the territory inhabited by Berkeley, Kant, Schopenhauer and several Eastern philosophies. It might be worth shelling out the 9.75 for the book simply on that account: it does, in the first two chapters, give a very clear and succinct summary of the non-realist, anti-materialist philosophical position.