“A profound contribution to the fundamental definition of humankind in relation to the broader universe... unifies the fragmented Western scientific disciplines… implications of great depth and breadth for the future course of human actions… Anthony Marr's OMNI-SCIENCE is too important to ignore.”

- Dr. William H. Kimbel, President, Institute of Human Origins, U. C. Berkeley

 

Omni-Science

and the

Human Destiny

 

 

Wildlife preservationist Anthony Marr is no stranger to confrontation and danger.  When he went to India for the third time to execute a 10-week  tiger-saving expedition, he expected to fight poachers, illegal wood cutters, tiger bone traders and smugglers.  Unexpectedly, he encountered political corruption, organizational deceit, and personal betrayal that turned his world upside-down.  This multi-faceted turmoil may have been responsible for the least expected encounter of all.  The mysterious Raminothna, who, deep in Tigerland, via a series of thoroughly logical steps, imparted upon him a new model of the Universe called Omniscientific Cosmology, which embraces all of the physical, biological and social sciences, and shows the optimal human destiny and fate of the Earth.  Now,  Anthony Marr must fight the battle of his life,  one he must lose in order to win.

 

 

“Fascinating... elaborate… a very ambitious task… a beautiful synthesis… captivating… should be of interest not only to experts but to all thinking people of the world…” - Dr. Vahe Petrosian, Astrophysics, Stanford U.

 “Authoritative… exceptionally comprehensive.” - Dr. Alex Inkeles, Sociology, Stanford U. 

"Extremely intriguing and provocative… incomparably edifying...” - Dr. John Dupre, Philosophy, Stanford U. 

"Very thought provoking… clearly deserves extensive discussion… a serious, well-founded vision…”

- Dr. John Rick, Anthropology, Stanford U. 

“I found myself stimulated, educated… worth listening to, even for those of us who are not of the same philosophical bent…” - Dr. Leonard Susskind, Physics, Stanford U.

“Compelling… have moral import…” - Dr. John Bogart, Philosophy, Stanford U.

“Sincerity, imagination, intellectualism and scholarship… an immensely logical construct, meticulously thought out… majestic in scope but intrinsically simple, satisfying and optimistic… should have a very broad appeal… these are important ideas with great potential for lessening the conflicts in a troubled world…”

- Dr. W.R. Evitt, Geology, Stanford U. 

 

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