This fascinating dialogue explores some of the fundamentals of ethics and moral action. It inquires into the nature of doing-something and doing-nothing, into the ways knowledge and awareness increase freedom, and into the question whether the philosopher can live in a world of thought alone or whether there is no escaping the plane of action.
Set in a coffee house in Berkeley during the early 1960s, the dialogue is written in a novelistic style. The protagonist is sitting in a coffee house when his "saner self" appears to him and strikes up a conversation. He becomes lost in the dialectic - until finally, after the coffee shop has closed, the proprietor has to shake him to awaken him and get him to leave.
7000 words long. For philosophers and deep thinkers ONLY!
Solve a murder, save her mother, and stop the apocalypse? No problem. She has a foul-mouthed troll on her side. For Austin homicide detective Leira Berens, happy is running down bad guys and solving crimes. And she’s damn good at it. Which is why when the Light Elf prince is murdered, the king breaks a centuries old treaty and crosses between worlds to seek her help. Wait a min...
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