Nounlegos (L'Homme qui lit dans le cerveau)

Nounlegos (L'Homme qui lit dans le cerveau)
A billionaire American is found dead in Paris, his family slaughtered alongside him. The case lands on the desk of a determined judge who finds himself utterly baffled, until a reclusive scientist named Nounlegos appears in his office with an impossible proposition. Nounlegos has dedicated his entire life and fortune to unlocking the secrets of the human brain. He has built a machine that can read thoughts, detect lies from a distance, perceive the hidden truths that humans so carefully conceal. His ambition: a world where all human relationships unfold in perfect honesty. But when this device falls into the hands of a judge investigating murder, the consequences become unforeseeable. Every witness becomes an open book. Every suspect's mind lies exposed. Yet with this terrible power comes an unbearable question, what happens when we can no longer hide from ourselves or each other? This early meditation on surveillance, privacy, and the fragile architecture of trust remains strikingly relevant. Bigot imagined a world where transparency is technologically forced upon us, and asked: would we truly want to live in such a world?














