Publisher's Synopsis
We, humans, note that: -We can think and feel both joy and pain.-We know we will inevitably die once our predicta-ble short sojourn is over.-We share the near totality of animalistic characteris-tics possessed by all other mammals on Earth re-gardless of the level of awareness we possess, in-cluding the tribal savagery of survival at all costs from our primeval time that is preprogrammed at the core of our biology.-We are completely immersed in a context of total ambiguity in nearly all aspects of life-despite the adolescent angst and bravado most of us exhibit against this fact. So, our advancement, as conscious human beings, now rests and takes place mostly at the combined intellectual and eth-ical levels. Therefore: The subject of our ambiguous, amoral, unexplaina-ble and yet intensely rewarding and most pleasant conscious life, if nature and our envir¬onment priv-ilege us with such luck, ought to be our priority in this short life of ours.That is why: We must consider all inquiries about our human purpose with the greatest integrity we can muster and take advantage of all possibilities available to us.That is why also: Unadulterated truth under a full respect of all of our 'Inalienable Individual Rights' is our highest eth¬ical standard, if supported with kindness.That is why further: We must keep on improving ourselves in every way imaginable and possible in a context saturated with sanity and kindness, because it is our only hope.The only way out at our disposal in order to appre-ciate and enjoy the gift of life and consciousness awarded to us for reasons totally unknown to us all.And doing so: By living our life with the greatest integrity possible throughout our existence, while the initial and con-tinuing questions in the course of our short existence perpetually remains and are: What is our raison d'être?What is the purpose of our mysteriously awarded life and self-awareness?Why are we going into oblivion after such a short lifespan?