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Part-treatise, part-memoir, and part-art-gallery, a mixture of full-color selections and black-and-white selections analyze minds, motives, and societies. It includes examples from the January 1790 to September 2024 period of world history as considered via social psychology, stories, diagrams, photographs, and debates. Expressions--often presented by the author, occasionally presented by others, and sometimes highly collaborative between the author and others--serve to illustrate kindness, cruelty, fringe lifestyles, mainstream lifestyles, and mysteries. The focus shifts between geopolitical…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Part-treatise, part-memoir, and part-art-gallery, a mixture of full-color selections and black-and-white selections analyze minds, motives, and societies. It includes examples from the January 1790 to September 2024 period of world history as considered via social psychology, stories, diagrams, photographs, and debates. Expressions--often presented by the author, occasionally presented by others, and sometimes highly collaborative between the author and others--serve to illustrate kindness, cruelty, fringe lifestyles, mainstream lifestyles, and mysteries. The focus shifts between geopolitical events, political developments, personal improvement, interpersonal improvement, healing, and more. Artwork and narratives consider health, wellness, good-vs.-evil, leader-follower dynamics, comparative religion, life-and-death situations, sacrifice, and freedom. The history and analysis of tensions--whether international, interfaith, socioeconomic, or political--abound. Examples and analyses of conflicts--whether between friends, enemies, the religious, the antireligious, conformists, or nonconformists--also abound. This is the concluding installment of The Science, Religion, Politics, and Cards Trilogy.
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Autorenporträt
Maurice James Blair demonstrated the ability to excel in the STEM fields, but became alienated by trends in some areas of Philosophy and Natural Science academia that seemed to him excessively against honoring the role of consciousness in reality. He then went a very different route with career development, working in tax services for many years. Meanwhile, he worked on Comparative Religion, Philosophy, and Science on the side of the tax work and took the liberty to analyze the minds and motives of IRS agents, businesspeople, clients, and lawmakers while performing those tax services. Eventually, he returned to dealing directly with the natural sciences, metaphysics, religion, and ethics in the composition of books he has authored.