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Pan-Worldly Things: The Hermetic Realm of the Opposites comprises twelve lyrical poems designed to prompt readers to entertain an amalgam of concerning matters through a rhymical, rhyming standard. The cadenced framework is measured for offering a sound, counterbalancing sway upon certain solemn subjects bantered about the book. The book is founded in endless wonder over why Cosmic Things seem metaphysically flanked by two contrasting poles, such as with Cosmic Matter (Planetary Realms, magnetically set between North and South Poles); Cosmic Matters (Political Realms, rhetorically set between…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Pan-Worldly Things: The Hermetic Realm of the Opposites comprises twelve lyrical poems designed to prompt readers to entertain an amalgam of concerning matters through a rhymical, rhyming standard. The cadenced framework is measured for offering a sound, counterbalancing sway upon certain solemn subjects bantered about the book. The book is founded in endless wonder over why Cosmic Things seem metaphysically flanked by two contrasting poles, such as with Cosmic Matter (Planetary Realms, magnetically set between North and South Poles); Cosmic Matters (Political Realms, rhetorically set between Far Left and Far Right speech); and Cosmic Concepts (Mental Realms, mentally set between Absolutist and Open-Minded perspectives). Overall, the book's Socratic design is intended to energize more interest in contesting certain narratives rather than to end dialogue through scare tactics.
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Autorenporträt
Craig Matheson authored DaVinci's Mental Code (2022) under the penname Palibor Iversune. He graduated from Florida Atlantic University in 1998 with a degree in marketing. Over the years, he has become an endlessly curious student of world history, seeking to understand why the various time-tested theistic philosophies have lasted in practice to the present day.