Evolition A Theory of Everything |
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Author:
| Evergreen, Daniel |
ISBN: | 978-1-4912-1665-1 |
Publication Date: | Aug 2013 |
Publisher: | CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $18.95 |
Book Description:
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Deduced from four "axiomatic concepts" (as infinite, "a priori" fundamentals for everything) "Evolition," uncovers a logical or "axiomatic structure" that can organize all kinds of information.
Starting from the concepts of existence, knowledge, self and identity, ideas like essence and reality, cause and effect, individual and collective, content and form, as well as more derivative concepts like quantity, entity, change, reason, value, truth, and good, are defined and...
More Description
Deduced from four "axiomatic concepts" (as infinite, "a priori" fundamentals for everything) "Evolition," uncovers a logical or "axiomatic structure" that can organize all kinds of information.
Starting from the concepts of existence, knowledge, self and identity, ideas like essence and reality, cause and effect, individual and collective, content and form, as well as more derivative concepts like quantity, entity, change, reason, value, truth, and good, are defined and interconnected into a structural template demonstrating natural hierarchy (or holarchy), reciprocal and simultaneous relations, as well as a quantified, transitional, and balanced logic.
Also, "metaphysical" things (like essences) are posited as physical things that do not end in time, as contrasted from the purely "physical," helping to alleviate any "mind-body" dichotomies that tend to permeate traditional philosophies. Another key idea is that choice comes as a natural evolution from self-regulated change; if knowledge can be regulated within individuals, it alleviates the need for evolutionary "randomness" by offering us in turn, limited individual powers in an otherwise deterministic universe. Moreover, 150+ different principles and elements across five different fields-epistemology, physics, ethics, aesthetics and visual art-are examined and cross-referenced using the same axiomatic template.
The principles and elements of physics, e.g., are scrutinized and re-systematized by using current scientific information and axiomatic structure as a guide. Additionally, what may be the first comprehensively organized structures for the principles and elements of ethics, aesthetics and visual art, are flushed out, uncovering an uncanny synergy between the humanities, sciences and philosophy, all without compromising the creative possibilities that often give humanities their purpose and relevancy.