Topic: Philip K. Dick - On Our Nature
In Philip Dick's book VALIS which was published in 1981, he provides some endnotes. The following is from one of his endnotes (pg. 238-239):
Note: For those of you who do not know, Philip Dick is the author who wrote the books that the following movies were based on: Blade Runner, Total Recall, Paycheck, and Minority Report.
ON OUR NATURE. It is proper to say: we appear to be memory coils (DNA carriers capable of experience) in a computer-like thinking system which, although we have correctly recorded and stored thousands of years of experiential information, and each of us possesses somewhat different deposits from all the other life forms, there is a malfunction- a failure- of memory retrieval. There lies the trouble in our particular subcircuit. "Salvation" through gnosis-more properly anamnesis (the loss of amnesia)- although it has individual significance for each of us- a quantum leap in perception, identity, cognition, understanding, world and self-experience, including immortality- it has greater and further importance for the system as a whole, inasmuch as these memories are data needed by it and valuable to it, to its overall functioning.
Therefore it is in the process of self-repair, which includes: rebuilding our subcircuit via linear and orthogonal time changes, as well as continual signaling to us to stimulate blocked memory banks within us to fire and hence retrieve what is there. (End of quote)
This sounds quite similar to Bringers of the Dawn where humans as described as libraries.
Also, my interpretation of one of the C's transcripts is that they referred to Philip Dick as a genius, a troubled genius, but a genius nevertheless.