The present framing of the cultural debate in terms of materialism versus religion has allowed materialism to go unchallenged as the only rationally-viable metaphysics. This book seeks to change this.
This book is a multi-faceted exploration and critique of the human condition as it is presently manifested.
This book examines what can be learned about the nature of reality based on conceptual parsimony, straightforward logic and empirical evidence from fields as diverse as physics and neuroscience.
This finding was all the more remarkable to me because, when I first read that passage of Jung's autobiography, I felt skeptical of his description: a pyramid-shaped reddish stone fetched from a lakeshore? I had never seen anything ...
A strong and growing intuition in society today is the idea that our thoughts create our own reality.
This book is a three-part journey into the rabbit hole we call the nature of reality.
That is a modern human tragedy, not only for its insidiousness, but for the fact that it is simply not true. In this book, the author constructs a coherent and logical argument for the meaning of existence, informed by science itself.