About This Book
A conversational philosophical essay opens with a seaside exchange about why water fascinates and whether the world has meaning. The narrator sketches gradual cosmogenesis—from incandescent gas and rotating rings to planet formation—and argues that matter's self-organizing activity, rather than miracle or revealed religion, accounts for the emergence of life. He contends that slow temporal scale dulls perception of this creative process, producing despair, and that recognizing continuous growth supplies aim and a rational optimism. The argument extends to social and ethical implications, viewing contemporary political unrest as a reaction to suffering and as part of moral evolution.
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