Review of Free Will, Do You Have It?
Posted: 29 Jul 2022, 20:17
[Following is a volunteer review of "Free Will, Do You Have It?" by Albertus Kral.]
There is a lifelong question that people are always asking themselves. This thing that people are curious to know and has been since the beginning of time. It is called free will. In the book, Free Will, Do We Have It by Albertus Kral has this great idea of what free will is and whether we may or may not have it, and he uses this cycle called Procirclism. Procirclism is a process that explains the brain function that processes thoughts we have and the conclusions that we personally come to when we think about doing and saying something.
What I really enjoyed about this book was that the author took the time to go into detail of his opinion on this topic. He did a lot of studying and interviewing different people gathering different opinions on the topic of free will. He also gives us the definition of the word 'I' and its process and who 'I' is. Also, liked how the book ended with a glossary explaining the terms that were used in it.
The only thing I frowned upon on this book was the lengthy chapters. I know this was quite a bit of information, but I believe that the long chapters were unnecessary. What could have happened is the chapters could have been sectioned out into different chapters. For example, chapter five. That could have been shortened into two or three different chapters. Then, it would not appear as long and daunting. I thought I would never finish chapter five because it was so long. I think this is why I had a hard time getting into the book, but once I did, I did not have so much trouble reading it.
The recommended audience, I would say, would be for any human being that is interested in learning whether they have any type of free will. I would aim it toward the adults because they would be able to comprehend this topic better than a child would. I think a teenager might also benefit from a book like this because that is where we start to think about life and the harder questions involving it.
I seen absolutely no grammatical errors or typos in this book. It was perfectly edited and proofread before publishing. The cover looked promising, so I give this book 4 out of 4 stars. This was a wonderful book, other than than the lengthy chapters. There was absolutely no reason to give it any rating lower than the perfect rating it deserved.
******
Free Will, Do You Have It?
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon
There is a lifelong question that people are always asking themselves. This thing that people are curious to know and has been since the beginning of time. It is called free will. In the book, Free Will, Do We Have It by Albertus Kral has this great idea of what free will is and whether we may or may not have it, and he uses this cycle called Procirclism. Procirclism is a process that explains the brain function that processes thoughts we have and the conclusions that we personally come to when we think about doing and saying something.
What I really enjoyed about this book was that the author took the time to go into detail of his opinion on this topic. He did a lot of studying and interviewing different people gathering different opinions on the topic of free will. He also gives us the definition of the word 'I' and its process and who 'I' is. Also, liked how the book ended with a glossary explaining the terms that were used in it.
The only thing I frowned upon on this book was the lengthy chapters. I know this was quite a bit of information, but I believe that the long chapters were unnecessary. What could have happened is the chapters could have been sectioned out into different chapters. For example, chapter five. That could have been shortened into two or three different chapters. Then, it would not appear as long and daunting. I thought I would never finish chapter five because it was so long. I think this is why I had a hard time getting into the book, but once I did, I did not have so much trouble reading it.
The recommended audience, I would say, would be for any human being that is interested in learning whether they have any type of free will. I would aim it toward the adults because they would be able to comprehend this topic better than a child would. I think a teenager might also benefit from a book like this because that is where we start to think about life and the harder questions involving it.
I seen absolutely no grammatical errors or typos in this book. It was perfectly edited and proofread before publishing. The cover looked promising, so I give this book 4 out of 4 stars. This was a wonderful book, other than than the lengthy chapters. There was absolutely no reason to give it any rating lower than the perfect rating it deserved.
******
Free Will, Do You Have It?
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon