Ishmael: The spiritual and spiritual adventure of Daniel Quinn is a philosophical journey that takes place between an anonymous narrator and a gorilla Ismail of telepathy. The novel begins with a narrator who reads advertisements in local newspapers and asks the students "... rescue the true mind of the world". As he was looking for such a teacher in his early days, this attracted the interest of the narrator. The narrator believes the advertisement is a fraud, but still insists on his speech to satisfy his curiosity.
Daniel Quinn's philosophical novel "Ishmary: Adventures of the mind and spirit" begins with the narrator reading the newspaper, discovering that he is curious as being hated by personal advertisements. Advertising shows that teachers are looking for students who are interested in rescuing the world. In most of the narrator's early life, he was looking for such a teacher, he is very angry just to find him now. He decided that the ad was a fraud, but he went to the designated address and found a gorilla in one of the vacant offices in the room, looking through the glass window. The gorilla can talk to the narrator through telepathy, and the narrator soon realizes that this is the teacher he was looking for.
Ishmael: The spiritual and spiritual adventure of Daniel Quinn is a philosophical journey that takes place between an anonymous narrator and a gorilla Ismail of telepathy. The novel begins with a narrator who reads advertisements in local newspapers and asks the students "an enthusiastic desire to save the world". The narrator believes the advertisement is a fraud, but still insists on his speech to satisfy his curiosity.
As early as Ismail, an attractive and rare novel by Daniel Quinn, the teacher with the same name may be a gorilla, but I explained to the narrator that all human cultures are based on unrecognizable creation myths. From the Big Bang of the universe to the formation of our planet and all subsequent evolutionary stages, every moment of history is crystallized in the form of human beings. What I should say about this (in addition to spreading the book I respect) is to propose that the national state - really the entire international community - follows the same logic: it is formed as we look back on this . Positive and doubtless result. In fact, this is only one of many options. How can we summarize possible answers to problems of human society into geopolitical entities?