Knowledge as a personal revelation, not a commodity sold by politics.
This edition examines how true understanding comes from direct experience and inner conviction, not from external authority or abstract theories.
The text argues that knowledge is inseparable from the individual, and that the relationship between God and person is private and superior to law or policy. It questions the power of governments to compel belief, and it asserts that freedom arises from each person defending their own direct communion with the divine.
- How personal experience can reveal truth without mediation from institutions
- Why external authority often clashes with genuine knowledge and moral action
- The role of private judgment in matters of faith, science, and education
- Historical reflections on suffrage, liberty, and resistance to coercive power
Ideal for readers exploring philosophy, theology, and political critique, who want a provocative look at authority, knowledge, and individual freedom.