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14 kirjaa tekijältä Bob Mustin
A complete poetic piece in three parts juxtaposing romantic love with the spiritual journey.The first part, Divisions, hints at the traits and experiences that divide us while promising a reunification of the human experience into The One. The second part, Encounters, fulfills the journey toward human unity as a couple express their love for one another. And finally, the third part, The Union, allows the reader to experience the exhilaration of spiritual Unity, which is absolute and enduring freedom.
Colonel Fletcher Hinton, USMC, Retired, has had a storied career, but one aspect of his life remains wanting as his end approaches: family. Son Cary, a former Marine and now a college professor, is about to marry outside his race, and the old man, suffering a bout of dementia, insults Cary's fiancee. Too, Cary has moved his mother away from Fletcher, fearing the old man has hit her. This then is Fletcher Hinton's final battle - proving himself a good father and husband as he copes with the stain that seems to tarnish his name and, through him, the Corps.
Volume 1 of this work recapitulates much of the symbology of Geometric shape, from prehistory through Plato's five primary Geometric shapes. This volume also begins the author's development of groundbreaking work expanding Plato's belief that Geometry underpins the Universe in its entirety.
The second of four volumes concerning the author's ground-breaking insights on Geometry, Mind, and Meaning, complete with diagrams. This volume concerns different aspects of modern science that will bear on this geometry, which will be presented in a more complete form in Volume Three.The sciences concerned are Chaos Theory, Relativity, Quantum Theory, Holography, and others. The book takes from these sciences only what the author sees as applying to the Geometry of Universal Mind. And all things written here are brought back to the significance of meaning in modern life.
Gerbert, a French monk educated in the sciences and literature of Muslim Spain, has risen to the Chair of St. Peter as Sylvester II, and for a brief while co-rules the Holy Roman Empire. His friend Zosimus has compiled his writings into a book at the behest of Pope Benedict VIII. An archbishop, Arnulf, jealous of Gerbert's prominence, hears of the book and wants it to expose him as an agent of Satan. Benedict has political reasons for preserving the book, but Zosimus must travel a dangerous road from Reims to Rome in order to present the manuscript to him. Gerbert's Book is a suspenseful imagining of Gerbert's brilliant but fated life during the tumultuous European era just prior to the year 1000.
This book explores the nexus between pure consciousness and the material world. Since this is such a transition, it's not materially real, but is the foundation of all created things, from thought to the hardest rock. It begins where Volume Two leaves off by completing the projects of modern sciences, i.e., reaching to the depths of what has been termed Reality. The book accommodates sources such as the original Vedic philosophy and up-to-date findings of physics and astronomy, and is written in very accessible language.