About This Book
A set of five reflective essays probes human ideas about justice, mystery, matter, the past, and luck. The writer questions whether justice is a mystic, external force or a human, psychological construction, argues that nature and heredity are morally indifferent, and traces how mystery persists even as scientific explanation advances. Other essays examine the relationship between material conditions and consciousness, the weight of memory on present life, and the role of chance in human affairs. The tone is contemplative and analytical, mixing skeptical inquiry with poetic observation while avoiding definitive doctrinal conclusions.
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