in relationships, | continue to be erotically spellbound, in love with them in all their forms. Questions about how to think about these exquisitely sensitive women, Bell’s Syndrome exists but is rarer in men, continue to drive aspects of my scientific research. It has been variegated quest, which began with trying to find a general conceptual framework that would help my understanding of this unique capacity to be aware and process large amounts of internal and external information that escape the awareness of most of us. As one might guess, this search led to fundamental ideas about information and its inverse, the entropy indicating the amount of information transport capacity, with respect to their characterization, quantification and measurement. To get to the end from close to the beginning, we recall that it was Claude Shannon and his followers who both mathematically proved and experimentally verified that a receiver must have more entropy, less already fixed knowledge and more wondering, than the sending source, in order for the message to be sensitively and reliably received and encoded. Sensibility seems to have something to do with the readiness for information transmission afforded by the brain’s high entropy, minimal fixed information states, in its resting dynamics. Their remarkable receptivity derives from a baseline brain state like the formless emptiness of the bodhisattva’s “...no form, no sound, no_ feelings, no _ perceptions, no consciousness...” of transcendent Tibetan Buddhism as described in the Heart Sutra of The Dalai Lama. In Chinese Medicine, xu, meaning emptiness, contrasts with shi, the word for fullness, both of these complementary opposites having multiple specific meanings. Most metaphysically relevant is the characterization of xu as the emptiness of the deepest reality of being and the highest state of human spirituality. Like that aspect of Lao-Tsu’s ineffable Dao, The Way that is empty, xu indicates a mind devoid of desire, bei