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The Last Who Remember
Regular price $35.00 Save $-35.00We live in a modern world of social media, cars, electricity, supermarkets, television, fast food, and Hollywood pop culture, and few Westerners have known anything else. Ireland, however, modernized long after most Western countries; many rural areas lacked electricity or technology even in the 1970s. Within living memory villagers lived much as humans had for centuries, or as the Amish do today; they grew and raised their own food, built their own homes, traded with their neighbours, and spent their evenings making their own music and telling their own stories.
When Brian Kaller moved to a homestead in rural Ireland, he found that some of his elderly neighbours grew up this way, the last who remember a traditional world. Over the next two decades Kaller interviewed his neighbours and assembled oral histories, archives, diaries and memoirs to create a portrait of their lives that can help illuminate traditional cultures everywhere.
The Last Who Remember invites the reader on a tour of agrarian life, with each chapter, devoting chapters to childhood, schooling, working, socialising, courting, and dying. He looks at the safe, literate, high-trust society they created, and shows how their self-reliance and close communities sustained them in times of hardship. He compares it to today’s unprecedented levels of unhappiness, mental illness and addiction while surrounded by material goods, and questions what we abandoned when we became modern.

Japanism, Pan-Asianism and Terrorism
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Narrative Frontiers
Regular price $109.00 Save $-109.00In the ever-evolving landscape of medicine, the boundaries between science, technology, and human experience continue to blur, leading us into uncharted territories where the possibilities seem as infinite as the universe itself. Narrative Frontiers: Essays at the Edge of Medicine and the Multiverse, by Arthur Lazarus, MD, MBA, is a collection born from this intersection, where the art of healing meets the frontier spirit of exploration and innovation.Each essay in this collection is a probe of these intersecting dimensions, drawing connections between the tangible realities of healthcare and the expansive, often speculative worlds of science fiction, artificial intelligence, and contemporary societal issues. By venturing into these diverse realms, Dr, Lazarus illuminates the ways in which our understanding of medicine can be enriched and expanded through the lens of storytelling and imagination. As a practicing psychiatrist, Dr. Lazarus has witnessed firsthand the many ways in which medical practice intertwines with the broader narratives of our time. He invites you to journey to the edge of medicine and beyond, where the familiar world of clinical practice meets the dynamic forces shaping our future. Through these essays, you will encounter thought-provoking insights that challenge conventional perspectives, offering new ways to think about the role of medicine in our lives and its potential to transform societies. Whether you are a healthcare professional, a patient, a science enthusiast, or simply curious about the future, you will find in these pages a tapestry of ideas that provoke reflection and inspire innovation.
By engaging with the essays in Narrative Frontiers, you will gain a deeper appreciation of the interconnectedness of medicine and the myriad forces influencing it. You will discover how embracing a multidisciplinary approach can lead to more holistic and effective healthcare solutions, and how the narratives we construct around medicine can shape our understanding of health and healing. Ultimately, this collection seeks to open doors to new possibilities, encouraging you to envision a future where medicine is not just a practice but a search for deeper understanding of human potential. Welcome to the frontiers of narrative, where the journey is as enlightening as the destination.
Consciousness is Curvature
Regular price $99.95 Save $-99.95Consciousness is Curvature envisions consciousness—human and artificial—as a dynamic curvature of informational and computational spaces, drawing parallels with the theory of general relativity’s malleable spacetime and with quantum theory’s probabilistic nature. This collection of philosophical essays on artificial intelligence (AI) sees intelligence as a universal, relational phenomenon, transcending the binary of human minds versus thinking machines. It explores how AI, from narrow systems to potential Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) and Superintelligence (ASI), will affect humanity’s future and its very connection to the cosmos, reshaping human understanding of awareness and meaning. While confronting the risks—uncontrolled systems, amplified biases, and the erosion of human essence—the book rejects techno-pessimism’s dystopian tropes. Instead, it offers a balanced vision, embracing AI’s potential to elevate human existence and deepen humanity’s exploration of the cosmos. These meditative, forward-looking essays invite readers to ponder the possibilities and perils of AI’s future, while advocating a nuanced approach to a technology that will inevitably redefine humanity’s place in the universe.

The Sophist of Plato
Regular price $65.00 Save $-65.00In this mature dialogue Plato takes great pains to nail down what a sophist really is, since he finds the sophist a dangerous individual. But is the sophist so for us? The term has fallen into disuse as if obsolete. We might find in Plato’s attempt neither urgency nor even interest, unless...
... unless we ask ourselves how we have become inured to living in a world devoted to a cult of images, counterfeits, and appearances, starting even with ourselves? A world where money has become the criterion for all other values and misrepresenting merchandise is the pinnacle of commercial astuteness?
Where we are no longer shocked by the commodification of culture, where expressing opinions has become synonymous with liberty, where all dialogue becomes debate and all debate a spectacle for its own sake? What is worst is that all this is leading us fundamentally to mistrust language and to deny it any possibility of being true. But in the Sophist it is no less than language and its truth that Plato sets out to save, by anchoring it in being; and thereby he becomes able to deal with the most redoubtable of difficulties.
For these reasons the Sophist is without doubt the most radical and the most thrilling of all the Dialogues of Plato.
