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'The One and the Many- is actually creation in progress ... and the reader is invited to witness the very process as it unfolds itself from aphorism to aphorism.' The author's bold claim is amply borne by his exciting foray into the analysis of consciousness, individuality, knowledge and being itself. Drawing on Jung and other sources, Anthony Wakefield Hill lays bare the division or 'Schizm' between the flesh and the various guises assumed by the spirit. Vatic rather than purely philosophical, the effect is both therapeutic ('an aphorism a day keeps the doctor away') and intensely…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
'The One and the Many- is actually creation in progress ... and the reader is invited to witness the very process as it unfolds itself from aphorism to aphorism.' The author's bold claim is amply borne by his exciting foray into the analysis of consciousness, individuality, knowledge and being itself. Drawing on Jung and other sources, Anthony Wakefield Hill lays bare the division or 'Schizm' between the flesh and the various guises assumed by the spirit. Vatic rather than purely philosophical, the effect is both therapeutic ('an aphorism a day keeps the doctor away') and intensely stimulating, as the reader finds new light cast on a dazzling array of ideas. This concordia discors offers paradox, passion and puzzlement, and crams a galaxy of concepts into one bright textual star.
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Autorenporträt
Anthony Hill is a Melbourne-based writer of 21 books, mainly published by Penguin Random House. Born in 1942, Anthony moved with his wife Gillian to Canberra in 1972 as a journalist with the Melbourne Herald. With their daughter Jane they moved to a rural village in 1977 to run an antique shop for five years, which formed the material for Anthony's first books.Returning to Canberra in 1983, Anthony worked in local television, the public service briefly and in 1989 became a speech writer for Governor-General Bill Hayden. Following the success of The Burnt Stick and later Soldier Boy, Anthony retired in 1998 to become a full-time writer. In 2020 he and Gillian returned to Melbourne to be closer to family. Apart from novels and short stories, Anthony has written the libretti for several works by the composer Judith Clingan, and a number of plays. Soldier Boy The Play is his first play to be published.