What is the author's true intention behind writing this book? Is it to prove that the God is true?
- Sushan Ekanayake
- Official Reviewer Representative
- Posts: 4861
- Joined: 04 May 2018, 19:13
- Currently Reading: Uplifting The Pain of Behavioral and Learning Styles Through Poetry Now
- Bookshelf Size: 408
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-sushan-ekanayake.html
- Latest Review: Unsettled Disruption by Juana Catalina Rodriguez
- Reading Device: B0794JC2K5
What is the author's true intention behind writing this book? Is it to prove that the God is true?
But when the essence of the book is taken into consideration, I feel like that the author's true intention has been to prove that the presence of the God (or a supreme being) is true.
What do you think about that? Do you agree with me?
- Maddie Atkinson
- Book of the Month Participant
- Posts: 403
- Joined: 13 Nov 2020, 05:30
- Favorite Book: gender euphoria
- Currently Reading: A Date with Justice
- Bookshelf Size: 85
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-maddie-atkinson.html
- Latest Review: A King Amongst Us by A.D. Lewis
- Sue_neth_ak
- Posts: 69
- Joined: 24 Nov 2020, 08:05
- Favorite Book: Angels & Demons
- Currently Reading: Wilderness Cry
- Bookshelf Size: 17
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-sue-neth-ak.html
- Latest Review: We are Voulhire: Someone Else's End by Matthew Tysz
- Sushan Ekanayake
- Official Reviewer Representative
- Posts: 4861
- Joined: 04 May 2018, 19:13
- Currently Reading: Uplifting The Pain of Behavioral and Learning Styles Through Poetry Now
- Bookshelf Size: 408
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-sushan-ekanayake.html
- Latest Review: Unsettled Disruption by Juana Catalina Rodriguez
- Reading Device: B0794JC2K5
Maybe yes. The author believes in God and she wants to prove scientifically that there is some sort of a supreme presence. And she is letting the reader to think freely about their own beliefs and practicesMaddie Atkinson wrote: ↑01 Dec 2020, 15:53 I think that they are trying to prove that there is some kind of supernatural being, but also to get people to see outside the box and outside the small box that religion can subconsciously force you to be in
- Sushan Ekanayake
- Official Reviewer Representative
- Posts: 4861
- Joined: 04 May 2018, 19:13
- Currently Reading: Uplifting The Pain of Behavioral and Learning Styles Through Poetry Now
- Bookshelf Size: 408
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-sushan-ekanayake.html
- Latest Review: Unsettled Disruption by Juana Catalina Rodriguez
- Reading Device: B0794JC2K5
That is quite correct. It appears that the author has merely stated the facts, letting the reader to make his/her own decisions. Yet I don't feel that this book is completely unbiased since the author has some background opinions of her own when stating those facts and maybe it is possible that unintentionally she is directing the reader somewhereSue_neth_ak wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 02:18 I feel that the author's sole purpose was to share what he had found after quenching his thirst for answers. He had often mentioned and questioned the mainstream beliefs he had grown up with throughout. So I guess it was his own harmless attempt to share with his fellows what he think things are to be. Of course it is a readers job to chose and believe what he or she thinks is right after thinking things through.
- Sue_neth_ak
- Posts: 69
- Joined: 24 Nov 2020, 08:05
- Favorite Book: Angels & Demons
- Currently Reading: Wilderness Cry
- Bookshelf Size: 17
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-sue-neth-ak.html
- Latest Review: We are Voulhire: Someone Else's End by Matthew Tysz
I do have to agree with you on the fact about how the author had stated his own opinions to his own questions amidst scientific facts. So I guess we could still give him the benefit of doubt as to otherwise whether he was intentionally directing the readers or not.Sushan wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 04:09That is quite correct. It appears that the author has merely stated the facts, letting the reader to make his/her own decisions. Yet I don't feel that this book is completely unbiased since the author has some background opinions of her own when stating those facts and maybe it is possible that unintentionally she is directing the reader somewhereSue_neth_ak wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 02:18 I feel that the author's sole purpose was to share what he had found after quenching his thirst for answers. He had often mentioned and questioned the mainstream beliefs he had grown up with throughout. So I guess it was his own harmless attempt to share with his fellows what he think things are to be. Of course it is a readers job to chose and believe what he or she thinks is right after thinking things through.
- Dominik_G
- Posts: 697
- Joined: 29 Jun 2020, 14:45
- Currently Reading: Secret Window
- Bookshelf Size: 32
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-dominik-g.html
- Latest Review: A Long Dark Rainbow by Michael Tappenden
- Sushan Ekanayake
- Official Reviewer Representative
- Posts: 4861
- Joined: 04 May 2018, 19:13
- Currently Reading: Uplifting The Pain of Behavioral and Learning Styles Through Poetry Now
- Bookshelf Size: 408
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-sushan-ekanayake.html
- Latest Review: Unsettled Disruption by Juana Catalina Rodriguez
- Reading Device: B0794JC2K5
God from the bible is accepted by some but not all. Yes, here the author tries to show that according to quantum physics and philosophy that there is a some sort of superior being, which is addressed in many ways in various religions
- Maddie Atkinson
- Book of the Month Participant
- Posts: 403
- Joined: 13 Nov 2020, 05:30
- Favorite Book: gender euphoria
- Currently Reading: A Date with Justice
- Bookshelf Size: 85
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-maddie-atkinson.html
- Latest Review: A King Amongst Us by A.D. Lewis
I agree, I think they were trying to open up a different perspective of the Bible that is usually supressed by those who lead the Church, at least in terms of Catholicism. He allows the reader to make up their own minds, and isn't trying to force anyone to change their own beliefs, simply see a different side of them.Sue_neth_ak wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 02:18 I feel that the author's sole purpose was to share what he had found after quenching his thirst for answers. He had often mentioned and questioned the mainstream beliefs he had grown up with throughout. So I guess it was his own harmless attempt to share with his fellows what he think things are to be. Of course it is a readers job to chose and believe what he or she thinks is right after thinking things through.
- Eareeves99
- Posts: 40
- Joined: 21 Jul 2020, 23:24
- Currently Reading: The Beautiful Ones
- Bookshelf Size: 326
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-eareeves99.html
- Latest Review: Gringo by Dan "Tito" Davis
- Sushan Ekanayake
- Official Reviewer Representative
- Posts: 4861
- Joined: 04 May 2018, 19:13
- Currently Reading: Uplifting The Pain of Behavioral and Learning Styles Through Poetry Now
- Bookshelf Size: 408
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-sushan-ekanayake.html
- Latest Review: Unsettled Disruption by Juana Catalina Rodriguez
- Reading Device: B0794JC2K5
That is the face value of this book. The author merely states the facts from areas that not many have touched earlier and opens the minds of the people to see things differently. Still, what we have to keep in mind is that the author is not totally unbiased and he has his own opinions as wellMaddie Atkinson wrote: ↑03 Dec 2020, 11:17I agree, I think they were trying to open up a different perspective of the Bible that is usually supressed by those who lead the Church, at least in terms of Catholicism. He allows the reader to make up their own minds, and isn't trying to force anyone to change their own beliefs, simply see a different side of them.Sue_neth_ak wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 02:18 I feel that the author's sole purpose was to share what he had found after quenching his thirst for answers. He had often mentioned and questioned the mainstream beliefs he had grown up with throughout. So I guess it was his own harmless attempt to share with his fellows what he think things are to be. Of course it is a readers job to chose and believe what he or she thinks is right after thinking things through.
- Sushan Ekanayake
- Official Reviewer Representative
- Posts: 4861
- Joined: 04 May 2018, 19:13
- Currently Reading: Uplifting The Pain of Behavioral and Learning Styles Through Poetry Now
- Bookshelf Size: 408
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-sushan-ekanayake.html
- Latest Review: Unsettled Disruption by Juana Catalina Rodriguez
- Reading Device: B0794JC2K5
It seems so. He simply wants to believe of a supreme being and yet he wants that to be rational and scientifically proven. He has lead his studies through that pathway and the things that he found have been conveyed via this bookEareeves99 wrote: ↑03 Dec 2020, 11:28 Dr. Hunt is a medical doctor who seems to have been hurt by overzealous practitioners of religion and has since, in his cynicism, developed his own ideas and opinions about who God is. I think he does believe in a god but he has taken his beliefs from fragments of things that others believe to be true and what he wants to be true; he has created his own god.
- Twylla
- Posts: 581
- Joined: 27 Dec 2019, 13:30
- Favorite Book: Project Tau
- Currently Reading: Intwine
- Bookshelf Size: 137
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-twylla.html
- Latest Review: Contagion Domination by William Nisol
- Sushan Ekanayake
- Official Reviewer Representative
- Posts: 4861
- Joined: 04 May 2018, 19:13
- Currently Reading: Uplifting The Pain of Behavioral and Learning Styles Through Poetry Now
- Bookshelf Size: 408
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-sushan-ekanayake.html
- Latest Review: Unsettled Disruption by Juana Catalina Rodriguez
- Reading Device: B0794JC2K5
Yes, the author questions all the traditional and ancient teachings regarding the god and the universe and tries to build up a rational and scientific argument. But the issue is that he is already having his preoccupied ideas about the matterTwylla wrote: ↑03 Dec 2020, 15:37 I think the purpose of writing this book was to take the reader down a path of sorting through what we have all been taught throughout our lives about God and boil it down to the basic truths that we can use as a foundation for our relationship with God. He brings it down to two commands that Jesus gave us - first to Love God and second to Love our Neighbor. If we can accomplish that, everything else is noise and doesn't matter.
-
- Posts: 431
- Joined: 01 Aug 2020, 15:05
- Favorite Book: Wilderness Cry
- Currently Reading: Spirituality in the 21st Century
- Bookshelf Size: 80
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-readsbyarun.html
- Latest Review: Rescuing General Patton by Curtis Stephen Burdick