Path to true science and virtue explored through a moral allegory .
This volume presents a clear, early framework for education and ethical living, using dialogue and vivid scenes to show how private desires and public duties shape a life of understanding.
The book frames how human life moves from appetite to knowledge, blending sensory experience with reason, and it discusses how communities are formed around truth, compassion, and duty. It contrasts false and true science, and it depicts the climb toward wisdom as a guided journey rather than a mere accumulation of facts.
- Learn how private appetites and public duties balance each other to keep society stable.
- See how compassion and civic virtue steer individuals toward wiser choices.
- Discover why true science requires more than sense perception; it needs discernment and a steady will.
- Explore the dangers of Fortune, false promises, and easy shortcuts away from real understanding.
Ideal for readers of moral philosophy, education history, and readers curious about early modern debates on knowledge and virtue.