Everything Makes Sense
By: Tim Garvin - O-Books - $24.95
Overview: Science and religion study the same phenomenon - the cosmos itself - but an impenetrable barrier seems to separate them. Author Tim Garvin removes that barrier and offers a resonant handshake.
Verdict: Instead of sitting across from each other in opposition, scientists and seekers can sit at a table made round by wonder. As Everything Makes Sense dives into the nature of knowing and existence, it reveals a mutuality in humankind unimagined by theology or biology, a mutuality in the nature of being itself.
From there, Everything Makes Sense develops an explanation of existence by employing the thought and insight of the inner world’s two most penetrating cartographers, Aurobindo Ghose and Meher Baba, whose work and a close-notice of life itself reveal the deep purpose of creation.
Having now read this book twice through, and via back-to-back sessions no less, I can testify to the fact that Everything Makes Sense is a generously thought-provoking book that will have you second-guessing your own long held opinions on existence, life and consciousness therein, whilst at the same time challenging any prevailing notions about the nature of intelligence and the limitations of physicalism.
Effortlessly veined with an erstwhile heartfulness, a desire to protract a response from any and all readers, whilst at the same time offering a deeply thought-provoking prose on the subject matter to hand via a rather spirited form of narrative, the book invites us in, encouraging us to immerse ourselves in some brilliantly deep existential questions about personal meaning and about our very own place in the universe.
Simply put, Garvin carefully guides us on a journey of self-discovery throughout each and every one of these carefully crafted pages, and hopes that all open-minded readers will find a treatise that confronts the deep issues of life with a spirit of wonder and a sincere desire for truth. I know it did for me, and I can only hope that it does for you also.
About the Author - Tim Garvin studied philosophy in college, became dissatisfied with its emptiness, and began to prowl the library for books about the inner world. Eventually he discovered the work of Aurobindo Ghose. A year later, in 1969, he was introduced to Meher Baba. He traveled to India more than a dozen times to visit Meher Baba’s tombsite and speak with his mandali, those who lived their entire lives under his direction. He lives in Durham, NC.
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