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#355397
arjand wrote: April 13th, 2020, 12:01 pm
Terrapin Station wrote: April 13th, 2020, 9:20 amGagliano would presumably be someone who would be stumped over philosophical debates re how we can know that other humans have subjective mental lives.
It appears that she does study philosophy. Her book is named The Language of Plants: Science, Philosophy, Literature (ISBN 978-1517901851)

Perhaps philosophy is the only 'science' (i.e. plausible method) that can foster a cultural change that improves human interaction with plants with regard to morality.

How can empirical science possibly formulate a reason for morality? A scientist with a heart is respected by many people in society and can have an effect on culture, but why? Does empirical science support her efficiency for cultural change? Where does 'heart' originate from?

The multi-trillion USD synthetic biology revolution, primarily driven by the empirical essence of science, reduces plants to meaningless humps of matter that can be 'done better' by a company.

How can empirical science possibly provide argumentative resistance for the claim that plant life is meaningless?

Can a plant be 'done'? Can empirical science answer that question? Can empirical science study the essence of a plant?

As it appears to me, philosophy is essential if the goal is to improve the moral status of plants.
Re my comment, in other words, when it's not unusual to debate how we even know that other humans have subjective mental lives, positing that plants have mental lives is a bit of a stretch.
Favorite Philosopher: Bertrand Russell and WVO Quine Location: NYC Man
#355398
Terrapin Station wrote: April 14th, 2020, 3:16 pmRe my comment, in other words, when it's not unusual to debate how we even know that other humans have subjective mental lives, positing that plants have mental lives is a bit of a stretch.
The basic conceptual question is what it means to say that something has a mind or a mental life, that it has mental or psychological attributes. Having subjective experience aka phenomenal consciousness is surely sufficient for having a mind, but is it also necessary? Is having a mind independent of having phenomenal consciousness? Can an organism which isn't (and can't be) a subject of experientiality (an experiential, experiencing subject) nonetheless be a subject of mentality (a mental subject)?

QUOTE>
"[W]e may not always be able to say whether or not it is best or appropriate (let alone correct) to call certain abilities, properties, states, or phenomena mental. This is not because of any failure of insight or lack of information on our part, but simply because there is no single right answer. Such is the nature of the term 'mental'.

Some theorists see mental phenomena as forming a great continuum. The continuum stretches from the most complex human experiential episodes down to the nervous-system activity that goes on in seaslugs, or enables Cataglyphus, a desert ant, to go straight back to its nest in the dark without any environmental cues after pursuing a zigzag outward path. (It is as if it has done some complicated trigonometry.) These theorists see no line to be drawn on this great natural continuum of behavioral-control-system activity. They see no interesting line that sharply divides truly and distinctively mental activity from nonmental activity on this continuum. And they add, forcefully, that we don't really need to use the word 'mental' at all, or to determine its extension precisely. We can say all we want to say without using it.

Others, at the other extreme, propose to restrict the domain of truly mental phenomena to experiential phenomena—to the surface phenomena of the mind, as it were. Those who take this second view hold that none of the extremely complex subexperiential brain processes that subserve the stream of experience are to be counted as mental phenomena, sensu stricto. Only experiential phenomena (including brain processes that can be literally identified with experiential phenomena) should be counted as mental phenomena. Everything else is mere mechanism, ultimately nonmental process. These theorists may offer an analogy: plays are not possible without a great deal of activity behind the scenes, but none of this activity is, strictly speaking, part of the play.

These two opposing sides will obviously differ on the question of whether there was mental life in the universe before there was experience. The first group will say that there was, the second will say that there was not. The first group may well grant that something very important happened when experience began, something quite new. But they will not agree that it was the beginning of mental life, the beginning of mind, a sudden switching on of the mental light. Mind, they will say, was already there.

They may add that the theory of evolution shows that the line between the mental and the nonmental cannot be sharp. For behavioral-control systems originally arise simply because certain randomly arising movement-tendencies turn out to have survival value, and hence tend to be preserved in succeeding generations. Thereafter, of course, things increase enormously in complexity, and at some point in this process of increasing complexity, some of the internal causes of the movement-tendencies come to be such that we find it natural to dignify them with the title of ‘mental processes’. But it is indeed only a question of what we find natural, and our intuitions are not grounded on any precise criterion that makes a clear cut between the mental and the nonmental. The basic facts of natural history and evolution show that it is foolish to think that there could ever be a sharp answer to the question of when the title ‘mental process’ becomes appropriate.

A third group are happy to proceed with the philosophy of mind, and the science of psychology, without any attempt at a tight definition of the term ‘mental’, making do with our ordinary, more or less philosophically informed, more or less science-assisted, general consensus on the question of the proper subject matter of psychology and the philosophy of mind. This third group may be right that it doesn’t matter much how we put things, so long as there is some terminology or other in which we can agree on what we are talking about."

(Strawson, Galen. Mental Reality. 2nd ed. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2010. pp. 151-53)
<QUOTE
Location: Germany
#355400
arjand wrote: April 13th, 2020, 5:11 am Recent scientific discoveries increasingly indicate that plants are intelligent creatures that can "talk" to animals, including humans. Plants may even be capable of interspecies "love" (i.e. the forming of meaningful relationships in real-time).
Well you have started an interesting thread, and I heartily agree that all life is conscious, but I am not sure that this means that all life "talks". Plants do communicate within their own specie and with other species, but I would not call that communication, talking, as it implies things that are not happening. I also can't agree that plants are capable of "interspecies" love; I can see where someone might interpret defense of their specie, procreation, or protection of their young as "love", but I don't think it is, and it is intra-specie, not interspecie.

arjand wrote: April 13th, 2020, 5:11 am Plants can see, hear and smell – and respond
Plants, according to professor Jack C Schultz, "are just very slow animals".

This is not a misunderstanding of basic biology. Schultz is a professor in the Division of Plant Sciences at the University of Missouri in Columbia, and has spent four decades investigating the interactions between plants and insects. He knows his stuff.
http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20170109 ... nd-respond
It could well be that plants can be described as "slow animals", but is Jack Schultz attempting to designate new classifications, or is he just trying to make a point about their consciousness?

arjand wrote: April 13th, 2020, 5:11 am (2019) Flowers are talking to animals—and humans are just starting to listen
Scientists increasingly believe that trees and plants communicate with each other, various living things, and the environment. Now there’s additional evidence thanks to a new study on “natural language”. Researchers from three Tel-Aviv University schools—plant sciences and food security, zoology, and mechanical engineering—collaborated on a study that measures how evening primroses, or Oenothera drummondii, respond to sound.
https://qz.com/1522637/humans-are-learn ... d-animals/
Communicate with -- not talk to.

arjand wrote: April 13th, 2020, 5:11 am (2018) A debate over plant consciousness
Evolutionary ecologist Monica Gagliano insists that plants are intelligent, and she’s not speaking metaphorically. “My work is not about metaphors at all,” Gagliano tells Forbes. “When I talk about learning, I mean learning. When I talk about memory, I mean memory.”

Gagliano’s behavioral experiments on plants suggest that—while plants don’t have a central nervous system or a brain—they behave like intelligent beings.

Gagliano, who began her career as a marine scientist, says her work with plants triggered a profound epiphany. “The main realization for me wasn’t the fact that plants themselves must be something more than we give them credit for, but what if everything around us is much more than we give it credit for, whether it’s animal, plant, bacteria, whatever.”
https://qz.com/1294941/a-debate-over-pl ... uman-mind/
An evolutionary ecologist would know what she is talking about, and I am in full agreement here.


arjand wrote: April 13th, 2020, 5:11 am I have noticed that this information does not find ground by many people, the reason being that Vegans are naturally inclined to suppress the information out of fear that their food plate becomes emptied further, or out of fear that they have been doing harm to conscious creatures.

Recent societal developments show that people are increasingly shunning meat consumption for ethical motives.

(2018) Millennials Are Driving The Worldwide Shift Away From Meat
A global reduction in meat consumption between 2016 and 2050 could save up to eight million lives per year and $31 trillion in reduced costs from health care and climate change. (National Academy of Sciences).
https://www.forbes.com/sites/michaelpel ... from-meat/#
It could well be that Vegan ideals and ethics cause this thinking, but I have also noted that people do not like to think that other species have consciousness like ours. We really do like being superior.

arjand wrote: April 13th, 2020, 5:11 am Animal ethics/morality is a flourishing branch of academic philosophy.

(2019) Animal Ethics: an important emerging topic for society
Another reason for scientists to engage with the philosophy of animal ethics is that it might help them confront topics that have been traditionally off-limits: in particular, the notion of animal minds. While minds are difficult enough to talk about in humans, this difficulty is exacerbated when it comes to non-human animals.

... animal minds and consciousness have been consigned to a “black box”, an entity too complex or confusing to delve into, but whose inputs and outputs become the object of study.
https://cosmosmagazine.com/society/anim ... and-ethics
Bringing "minds" into this discussion is just going to confuse it more. Too many people can not get over the idea of the brain being the source of consciousness, so that makes the brain the source of mind. It is not true, but people believe it. If you want to discuss mind in conjunction with plants, you are not going to be able to restrict this thread to an ethical or moral discussion.

arjand wrote: April 13th, 2020, 5:11 am Questions:

1) Do plants deserve the same moral status as animals if plants are proven to be conscious and capable of meaningful interaction with humans?
No. I don't think so. There are lots of gradations and layers of consciousness, and I don't see plants as having the required consciousness that would appreciate morality.

Gee
Location: Michigan, US
#355401
arjand wrote: April 13th, 2020, 8:55 amThere are several studies that claim to prove that plants feel pain.
The phrase "to feel pain" is ambiguous. Even if plants are capable of nociception (perception of and reaction to nociceptive stimuli), it doesn't follow that their nociceptions involve subjective sensations of pain.

QUOTE>
"Do animals feel pain?

Conceptually, this question is a mess. This is because the term 'feel' plays two quite different roles in the present context, which are frequently not distinguished from one another. Philosophers often use the term when attempting to characterize phenomenal consciousness in general. Consciousness is said to comprise the felt qualities of experience, or the 'feely' component of experience. In this sense of 'feel' one can talk about the feel of a perception of vivid red, or what listening to the sound of a trumpet feels like. But 'feel' is also the term we use for bodily forms of perception, in particular. We talk about feeling the shape of an object with our hands, feeling the warmth of a fire, feeling a tickle on the arm, and feeling a pain in the toe. What links the two uses is that whenever one is in a position to report feeling a bodily state of some sort, the content of that state will have attracted attention and been globally broadcast, perforce becoming phenomenally conscious and acquiring 'feel' in the other sense also.

Given this distinction, it makes perfectly good sense to think that there can be felt states that lack feel. One way this can happen is that there might be feelings of bodily states that don’t attract attention and become conscious, while nevertheless playing other roles in cognition. In particular, there might be feelings of pain that lack feel. Indeed, I will argue shortly that this sort of dissociation is a common occurrence in humans (even if it isn't that common for pain specifically). But a second possibility arises in connection with the feelings of animals especially. There might be perceptions of bodily states (of warmth, touch, pain, and so on) that attract attention, and whose role is more or less similar to that resulting from human global broadcasting of similar contents. At the least-similar end of the spectrum, the result might be bodily feelings that lack feel altogether (i.e. that are definitely not phenomenally conscious). In other cases, there will be bodily feelings for which there is no fact of the matter whether or not they have feel….

In the human case, feelings of pain that lack feel because they fail to attract attention are comparatively rare. For it is part of the very function of pain to attract attention, alerting the agent to a likely source of bodily damage. But anecdotally, at least, there are such cases. These are instances where attentional focus is so firmly fixed on other things that pain—although present, and influencing behavior in other ways—remains unconscious. For example, there are cases of wounded soldiers who don't notice their wounds until the battle is over, and football players who continue to play without noticing any injury (although perhaps they limp or favor their shoulder in consequence). And for sure we know that levels of consciously experienced pain can be modulated by attention. This is the point of the distraction techniques doctors employ with children, and it may be part of what underlies placebo effects on pain! For if you believe you won't have much pain you may attend to it less, and consequently feel less pain.

Although unconscious pains are rare, unconscious instances of other forms of bodily perception are legion. One may shift one’s posture, for example, to better accommodate the shape of the chair on which one is sitting, but without noticing that one has done so, or why. One may draw one’s coat more closely around one‘s shoulders to alleviate the cold, but without noticing that one feels cold. And of course one's hands will often adjust themselves to the shape and texture of items one is grasping or carrying without one being aware of the perceptions of touch that guide the adjustments. When seen in the company of these other forms of unconscious perception of states of the body, uses of unconscious pain are just what one might expect (albeit rarely, given pain’s attention-grabbing function).

We can ask, now, whether unconscious pain (in contrast with the bodily damage that they signal) are appropriate objects of moral concern. It seems plain that they aren't. While we should want to help with the soldier's injury, this is because of its likely effects on his future life, not because it is causing him unconscious pain And although (if we could find a way to do it while he continues to fight) we might give him an analgesic, this would be in anticipation of the pain that he will surely feel as soon as the battle stops, not in order to reduce his current level of (unconscious) pain.

Suppose, then, that there are animals who are capable of forms of nociception, but whose resulting perceptions of bodily damage are never made available to anything resembling decision-making processes, with the result that their perceptions of pain are definitely unconscious ones (perhaps influencing withdrawals of a merely sensorimotor sort). In that case their pains should not be objects of moral concern, and to cause such an animal pain will not be cruel—although of course it might be wrong for other reasons or in other ways."

(Carruthers, Peter. Human and Animal Minds: The Consciousness Questions Laid to Rest. New York: Oxford University Press, 2019. pp. 168-70)
<QUOTE
Location: Germany
#355402
Consul wrote: April 14th, 2020, 4:44 pm
Terrapin Station wrote: April 14th, 2020, 3:16 pmRe my comment, in other words, when it's not unusual to debate how we even know that other humans have subjective mental lives, positing that plants have mental lives is a bit of a stretch.
The basic conceptual question is what it means to say that something has a mind or a mental life, that it has mental or psychological attributes. Having subjective experience aka phenomenal consciousness is surely sufficient for having a mind, but is it also necessary? Is having a mind independent of having phenomenal consciousness? Can an organism which isn't (and can't be) a subject of experientiality (an experiential, experiencing subject) nonetheless be a subject of mentality (a mental subject)?

QUOTE>
"[W]e may not always be able to say whether or not it is best or appropriate (let alone correct) to call certain abilities, properties, states, or phenomena mental. This is not because of any failure of insight or lack of information on our part, but simply because there is no single right answer. Such is the nature of the term 'mental'.

Some theorists see mental phenomena as forming a great continuum. The continuum stretches from the most complex human experiential episodes down to the nervous-system activity that goes on in seaslugs, or enables Cataglyphus, a desert ant, to go straight back to its nest in the dark without any environmental cues after pursuing a zigzag outward path. (It is as if it has done some complicated trigonometry.) These theorists see no line to be drawn on this great natural continuum of behavioral-control-system activity. They see no interesting line that sharply divides truly and distinctively mental activity from nonmental activity on this continuum. And they add, forcefully, that we don't really need to use the word 'mental' at all, or to determine its extension precisely. We can say all we want to say without using it.

Others, at the other extreme, propose to restrict the domain of truly mental phenomena to experiential phenomena—to the surface phenomena of the mind, as it were. Those who take this second view hold that none of the extremely complex subexperiential brain processes that subserve the stream of experience are to be counted as mental phenomena, sensu stricto. Only experiential phenomena (including brain processes that can be literally identified with experiential phenomena) should be counted as mental phenomena. Everything else is mere mechanism, ultimately nonmental process. These theorists may offer an analogy: plays are not possible without a great deal of activity behind the scenes, but none of this activity is, strictly speaking, part of the play.

These two opposing sides will obviously differ on the question of whether there was mental life in the universe before there was experience. The first group will say that there was, the second will say that there was not. The first group may well grant that something very important happened when experience began, something quite new. But they will not agree that it was the beginning of mental life, the beginning of mind, a sudden switching on of the mental light. Mind, they will say, was already there.

They may add that the theory of evolution shows that the line between the mental and the nonmental cannot be sharp. For behavioral-control systems originally arise simply because certain randomly arising movement-tendencies turn out to have survival value, and hence tend to be preserved in succeeding generations. Thereafter, of course, things increase enormously in complexity, and at some point in this process of increasing complexity, some of the internal causes of the movement-tendencies come to be such that we find it natural to dignify them with the title of ‘mental processes’. But it is indeed only a question of what we find natural, and our intuitions are not grounded on any precise criterion that makes a clear cut between the mental and the nonmental. The basic facts of natural history and evolution show that it is foolish to think that there could ever be a sharp answer to the question of when the title ‘mental process’ becomes appropriate.

A third group are happy to proceed with the philosophy of mind, and the science of psychology, without any attempt at a tight definition of the term ‘mental’, making do with our ordinary, more or less philosophically informed, more or less science-assisted, general consensus on the question of the proper subject matter of psychology and the philosophy of mind. This third group may be right that it doesn’t matter much how we put things, so long as there is some terminology or other in which we can agree on what we are talking about."

(Strawson, Galen. Mental Reality. 2nd ed. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2010. pp. 151-53)
<QUOTE
Mental should necessarily refer to subjective experience, yes. Of course, someone could use it otherwise, but that broader sense isn't going to do the work anyone wants to do it they're trying to argue in favor of treating something as a moral agent or as requiring moral consideration.

Also if we use the broader sense then we still need a concise term for awareness/consciousness/subjective mental experience/etc. What would be the merits of semantically shifting the term "mind" so that we have to come up with a neologism for awareness/etc.?
Favorite Philosopher: Bertrand Russell and WVO Quine Location: NYC Man
#355405
Terrapin Station wrote: April 14th, 2020, 5:45 pmMental should necessarily refer to subjective experience, yes. Of course, someone could use it otherwise, but that broader sense isn't going to do the work anyone wants to do it they're trying to argue in favor of treating something as a moral agent or as requiring moral consideration.
From the perspectives of cognitive psychology and behavioral psychology, phenomenal consciousness/subjective experience is a sideshow in the sphere of the mental.
Location: Germany
#355406
Consul wrote: April 14th, 2020, 6:50 pmFrom the perspectives of cognitive psychology and behavioral psychology…
A very good question: What's distinctively and genuinely mental about a (phenomenally) nonconscious, nonexperiential mental occurrence (fact/state/event/process)? Why can't a purely cognitive-behavioral psychology dealing with nonconscious minds as well be called cognitive-behavioral physiology?
Location: Germany
#355408
Consul wrote: April 14th, 2020, 6:50 pm
Terrapin Station wrote: April 14th, 2020, 5:45 pmMental should necessarily refer to subjective experience, yes. Of course, someone could use it otherwise, but that broader sense isn't going to do the work anyone wants to do it they're trying to argue in favor of treating something as a moral agent or as requiring moral consideration.
From the perspectives of cognitive psychology and behavioral psychology, phenomenal consciousness/subjective experience is a sideshow in the sphere of the mental.
You mean re positing "unconscious" mental phenomena?

I don't buy that there's any good reason to posit unconscious mental phenomena.
Favorite Philosopher: Bertrand Russell and WVO Quine Location: NYC Man
#355409
Terrapin Station wrote: April 14th, 2020, 7:21 pm
Consul wrote: April 14th, 2020, 6:50 pm From the perspectives of cognitive psychology and behavioral psychology, phenomenal consciousness/subjective experience is a sideshow in the sphere of the mental.
You mean re positing "unconscious" mental phenomena?
Yes, by focusing on the cognitive mind and neglecting the conscious mind.
Terrapin Station wrote: April 14th, 2020, 7:21 pmI don't buy that there's any good reason to posit unconscious mental phenomena.
What about mental attitudes (aka propositional attitudes, e.g. knowledge, belief, desire)?
What about mental (intellectual, cognitive) abilities?
What about nonconscious mental (intellectual, cognitive) processes (nonconscious mental reasoning or nonconscious "computations over mental representations" as postulated by cognitive science)?
Location: Germany
#355421
Consul wrote: April 14th, 2020, 1:05 pm
Consul wrote: April 14th, 2020, 1:00 pmBy the way, someone even dared to write a book titled Plants as Persons. Titles such as this one seduce people into indulging into ludicrous metaphysical woo-woo!
…into romantic animism.
Cannot judge a book by its cover, and a title is a type of cover.

Consider the flak Lawrence Krauss received for the title of his book, A Universe from Nothing. Yet his point was that, what we perceive as nothing, is actually something. Also Dawkins's The Selfish Gene:
Dawkins began writing the book in 1973, and resumed it in 1975 while on sabbatical. At the suggestion of Desmond Morris, the zoologist and author of The Naked Ape (Jonathan Cape, 1967), Dawkins showed some draft chapters to Tom Maschler of Jonathan Cape, who strongly urged that the title be changed to 'The Immortal Gene'. Today, Dawkins regrets not taking the advice. It might have short-circuited the endless arguments, so beloved of his critics and so redolent of the intentional stance (in which we tend to impute mental abilities to unconscious things, from thunderstorms to plants), about whether selfishness need be conscious. It might even have avoided the common misconception that Dawkins was advocating individual selfishness.
As things stand, I think giant redwood trees receive vastly more respect and regard from the human race than most animals. In fact, the less sentient entities are, the more humans seem to like them, as they can be utilised with much less struggle and mess. To refer to a person as a pig, dog, rat, hippo, sheep or ape is an insult. Yet gem, a rock, diamond and gold are great compliments.

Interestingly, it can be complimentary to refer to women as the genitalia of plants - a "rose" or "petal" - being referred to as the whole plant (vegetative) is rather less friendly.
#355434
Consul wrote: April 14th, 2020, 7:35 pm
Terrapin Station wrote: April 14th, 2020, 7:21 pm You mean re positing "unconscious" mental phenomena?
Yes, by focusing on the cognitive mind and neglecting the conscious mind.
Terrapin Station wrote: April 14th, 2020, 7:21 pmI don't buy that there's any good reason to posit unconscious mental phenomena.
What about mental attitudes (aka propositional attitudes, e.g. knowledge, belief, desire)?
What about mental (intellectual, cognitive) abilities?
What about nonconscious mental (intellectual, cognitive) processes (nonconscious mental reasoning or nonconscious "computations over mental representations" as postulated by cognitive science)?
So just to clarify, it's not that I think there are no unconscious brain processes. It's that there are no good reasons to posit unconscious mental phenomena--so anything like desires, beliefs, concepts, ideas, rational deductions, etc. that someone has but simply isn't aware of. Insofar as folks have any of those sorts of phenomena, they're aware of them.
Favorite Philosopher: Bertrand Russell and WVO Quine Location: NYC Man
#355455
Terrapin Station wrote: April 15th, 2020, 6:36 amSo just to clarify, it's not that I think there are no unconscious brain processes.
There certainly are unconscious neural processes.
Terrapin Station wrote: April 15th, 2020, 6:36 amIt's that there are no good reasons to posit unconscious mental phenomena--so anything like desires, beliefs, concepts, ideas, rational deductions, etc. that someone has but simply isn't aware of. Insofar as folks have any of those sorts of phenomena, they're aware of them.
There's a misunderstanding, because by "nonconscious mental item" I mean a nonexperiential mental item, i.e. one which is not a subjective experience, rather than a mental item of which its subject isn't aware, the latter of which which I call non-metaconscious rather than non-conscious. For there may be experiences too of which their subjects are not aware. So, in other words, by "nonconscious mental item" I mean a mental item which is not part of the field or stream of subjective experience/phenomenal consciousness.

If mental attitudes such as beliefs and desires exist—and I think they do—, I think they are all nonconscious mental states. There are no belief-experiences or desire-experiences, but only conscious thinkings or inner speakings of the form "I believe/desire that p". However, this is not to say that nonconscious mental attitudes aren't realized by and "stored in" neural networks of the brain.
Location: Germany
#355457
Consul wrote: April 15th, 2020, 8:50 amIf mental attitudes such as beliefs and desires exist—and I think they do—, I think they are all nonconscious mental states. There are no belief-experiences or desire-experiences, but only conscious thinkings or inner speakings of the form "I believe/desire that p". However, this is not to say that nonconscious mental attitudes aren't realized by and "stored in" neural networks of the brain…
…as dispositional mental states or mental dispositions.
Location: Germany
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April 2022

The Maestro Monologue

The Maestro Monologue
by Rob White
May 2022

What Makes America Great

What Makes America Great
by Bob Dowell
June 2022

The Truth Is Beyond Belief!

The Truth Is Beyond Belief!
by Jerry Durr
July 2022

Living in Color

Living in Color
by Mike Murphy
August 2022 (tentative)

The Not So Great American Novel

The Not So Great American Novel
by James E Doucette
September 2022

Mary Jane Whiteley Coggeshall, Hicksite Quaker, Iowa/National Suffragette And Her Speeches

Mary Jane Whiteley Coggeshall, Hicksite Quaker, Iowa/National Suffragette And Her Speeches
by John N. (Jake) Ferris
October 2022

In It Together: The Beautiful Struggle Uniting Us All

In It Together: The Beautiful Struggle Uniting Us All
by Eckhart Aurelius Hughes
November 2022

The Smartest Person in the Room: The Root Cause and New Solution for Cybersecurity

The Smartest Person in the Room
by Christian Espinosa
December 2022

2021 Philosophy Books of the Month

The Biblical Clock: The Untold Secrets Linking the Universe and Humanity with God's Plan

The Biblical Clock
by Daniel Friedmann
March 2021

Wilderness Cry: A Scientific and Philosophical Approach to Understanding God and the Universe

Wilderness Cry
by Dr. Hilary L Hunt M.D.
April 2021

Fear Not, Dream Big, & Execute: Tools To Spark Your Dream And Ignite Your Follow-Through

Fear Not, Dream Big, & Execute
by Jeff Meyer
May 2021

Surviving the Business of Healthcare: Knowledge is Power

Surviving the Business of Healthcare
by Barbara Galutia Regis M.S. PA-C
June 2021

Winning the War on Cancer: The Epic Journey Towards a Natural Cure

Winning the War on Cancer
by Sylvie Beljanski
July 2021

Defining Moments of a Free Man from a Black Stream

Defining Moments of a Free Man from a Black Stream
by Dr Frank L Douglas
August 2021

If Life Stinks, Get Your Head Outta Your Buts

If Life Stinks, Get Your Head Outta Your Buts
by Mark L. Wdowiak
September 2021

The Preppers Medical Handbook

The Preppers Medical Handbook
by Dr. William W Forgey M.D.
October 2021

Natural Relief for Anxiety and Stress: A Practical Guide

Natural Relief for Anxiety and Stress
by Dr. Gustavo Kinrys, MD
November 2021

Dream For Peace: An Ambassador Memoir

Dream For Peace
by Dr. Ghoulem Berrah
December 2021


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