"The Time of Our Lives: The Ethics of Common Sense"
When I was a mere child of age 21, I read the book "The Time of Our Lives: The Ethics of Common Sense" it was just hot off the press!
Today I often think if congress would be different if all members read this book and digested the know-how? Would you and I and all of society would be different if we understood the principles found in this book? Principles which have been with us since the 4th century BCE.
The book will help answer these questions: Is it a good time to be alive? Is ours a good society to be alive in? Is it possible to have a good life in our time? And finally, does a good life consist of having a good time? Are happiness and "a good life" interchangeable?
in an age of evolving autonomous technology the questions of what is a good life will present itself to all humans. Will we understand?