Our Latest Release of the Great Library of CosmoErotic Humanism
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CosmoErotic Humanism
The core mission of the Center for World Philosophy and Religion is the research, articulation, and writing of the Great Library, a collection of books and media projects to function as a strange attractor toward our memory of the future.
The Great Library is made up of two kinds of books, foundational books and impact books. The synergistic introduction of these books into public culture is aimed directly at catalyzing a crucial, pivotal evolution of today’s consciousness and culture. At this phase-shift inflection in human history, without this conscious evolving the source code of consciousness and culture, humanity will likely not survive the existential risks now threatening our civilization.
The Great Library is an expression of our mission at the Center to evolve the source code of culture and to participate in the evolution of love.
Through writing and publishing, we create what we are calling the Great Library, a body of work written as our response to the question: What do we need to give “our children” so they can prosper and grow into their highest potential—even though we don’t know what kind of challenges they will face in their lives?
That Great Library provides us with a shared language, a framework, or a context, from which we can co-create together a world that works for everyone. To have shared values, a shared framework, or what we call shared memetic structures is one of these conditions
"This book is remarkable. The work of a whole library of interconnected essential thought in a single introductory book... A theory of value and meaning as fundamental to our understanding of reality as the scientific method, filled with deep insights, that should at minimum inspire the reader to think more deeply about what is truly valuable, the nature of value itself, and what would be required for a mature civilization capable of safely and wisely stewarding our nearly unimaginable technological power."
Daniel Schmachtenberger,