Magnum Opus

A Manifesto of Love and Beauty

by


Formats

Softcover
$29.75
Softcover
$29.75

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 24/09/2014

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 488
ISBN : 9781499074499

About the Book

This book is about the struggle of good versus evil set in a dystopian society in the year 2525. There are actual forces in nature that are evil, which limit your freedom and try to reshape who you were meant to be. This, however, is a celebration of triumph. The two romantic sojourners take a pilgrimage through paradise to prove the immortality of love, beauty, truth, and perfection. It is the realization and self-actualization of becoming your greatest potential—you. All research for this was done by The Divine Artist and Cathion, travelling the world only to find the ultimate answers right back where they started from, within themselves. The beauty of how they were able to live in their art. This is a microcosm of society depicted in a dreamlike state. The twelve-day trip represents the state of the world now, in the past, and in the future. It represents the real world and the dream world all as being part of one reality. The world is depicted in art, music, mathematics, science, religion, in metaphysics, in the mind, in the world, and in magnum opus, separately and together all at the same time. Much the same as Douglas Hofstadter’s self-referencing recursion loop, a holographic universe in which everything is in everything, a world that contains both good and evil all at the same time. It is that moment in time within the infinity of time that has its own significance because it is the only one of its kind. It is infinitely important and significant in its own way, not relative to any other moment. It is what it is—nothing more and nothing less. A moment in time is through the grace of God, the only thing we have, could ever want, and will ever need. It is the here and now that we are one with God. According to the author Leo Buscaglia, “a life lived for tomorrow will always be just a day away from being realized.”


About the Author