I am a father and grandfather living in Eastern Ontario Canada near the northern shore of Lake Ontario.
I consider myself to be a completely free-thinker. Placing thoughts and ideas into strict ‘categories’ of subject matter is only done by human beings to categorize thoughts of human beings. I consider such bounds to be restrictive and limiting. They stifle the opportunities for creativity.
By rejecting bounds and limitations of others I leave myself the one thing that allows for unbounded creative thought: The freedom to think without bounds. There are no limits to that freedom. As a result, I consider myself to be able to completely think outside the box (any box).
I consider myself to be a scientist and an artist. I have the freedom to be both, either or neither. And I can jump around from one to another at will.
I do have degrees including a B.Sc. (Trent University) and an M.B.A. (University of Saskatchewan) but feel that I did not really benefit from them. I am mostly self-taught – finding myself challenged and interested in certain subject matters and then exploring those with a keen and focused interest. When intrigued by something, I find myself to be a very fast learner. And I believe knowledge is obtained through understanding and comprehension; not through memorization.
I have worked in various roles across multiple industries and lived in several Canadian provinces and US states. I have met lots of wonderful and inspiring people. I have found several that inspire me for key reasons. I have made a few very good friends and relish their company. I have met lots of not-so-wonderful people and try to avoid them.
I have found that I have aged very well. I have lived most of my life trying to conform to society and the wishes of others. Only as I reached my fifties, did I realize that it is wiser to pursue what you enjoy and inspires you. Entering my sixties, it becomes obvious that wisdom is both real and liberating.
“Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us at midnight very clean. It is perfect when it arrives and it puts itself in our hands.
It hopes we’ve learned something from yesterday.”
– John Wayne
For me, every day is an opportunity to discover something new.
Is this author crazy or not? Daniel F Celovsky asks that you help him make that determination.
The exploration into our Universe has many theories - but few actually add to the dimensions our Universe would require to even form and exist. Surely there is more involved than merely Time, Space, Matter and Energy!
In this break-out examination that explores our very existence; Celovsky opens the doors for inquisitive experience to its readers. He brings you along for the ride - in an easy-going format - while engaging and entertaining you every step of the way.
The journey of this book does not just start from some random point of thought. It embarks with Albert Einstein's work in his pursuit of the Theory of Everything that consumed this genius for over three-decades. On its way, it combines Einstein's work with the theories behind life's evolution outlined by Charles Darwin. The combination is magical.
A hero ant, an acutely sensitive fruit fly, a Cosmic Tom Hanks, an infinite supply of coffee, and the control of chaos in stock car racing all form a unique set of characters and life experiences that explain our Universe.
Maybe Celovsky is nuts. Maybe not. Either way, you are guaranteed to come away with a new more vibrant outlook about your surrounding environment as well as your reason for existing in it.
Título : This Is What Caused The Big Bang
EAN : 9781777383220
Editorial : Crackerbox Palace Media
El libro electrónico This Is What Caused The Big Bang está en formato ePub
¿Quieres leer en un eReader de otra marca? Sigue nuestra guía.
Puede que no esté disponible para la venta en tu país, sino sólo para la venta desde una cuenta en Francia.
Si la redirección no se produce automáticamente, haz clic en este enlace.
Conectarme
Mi cuenta