Anima Mundi is two books in one; with the first book presenting proof, a priori, in the existence of God, both omniscient and omnipotent; as a science of metaphysics conforming to the strict and justifiable critical demands of Immanuel Kant for such a proof, with an Appendix quoting Kant’s most relevant remarks in this regard. Book one can truly be called a Theory of Everything for it presents a thoroughly rational explanation accounting for the origination of the four universal features that define our reality: space, time, mass (or substance), and mind (or consciousness); and the causal process explained necessiate the existence of an Absolute Mind/Being as the creator of all that exists; while book two, as a Biblical Exegesis, presents the unequivocal answer to the problem of evil found in the Bible that Christian apologists have missed, having sought for an answer to the problem outside of God’s Word. Anima Mundi thus equips Christians with the sound, rational understanding in the existence of a God with all the necessary attributes that God must possess: omniscience, omnipotence, and omnibenevolence.
Featured Book: Anima Mundi by Mikhail Kelnikov
Anima Mundi, is the compilation of two books under the separate titles of Rational Theism, Part One, and Part Two. It provides serious minded Christians in search of not only a fully cogent, but an invincible, rationally grounded defense of their faith. Book One, presents an a-priori proof in God’s existence, omniscient and omnipotent. As a Science of Metaphysics, grounded on pure reason, it adheres to the strict critical demands of Immanuel Kant for what Kant would himself call a science of metaphysics (with an accompanying Appendix for those both familiar and not familiar with Kant). Book Two, as a Biblical Exegesis, presents the unequivocal answer to the Problem of Evil that can be found in the pages of the Bible; an answer that Christian apologists have sadly missed, having sought for an answer to the problem outside the scriptures wherein the sole answer is to be found. Both works can equip Christians with the unassailable understanding of a God in possession of all the divine attributes that God must possess to be God: omnisicience, onmnipotence, and omnibenevolence. But be prepared. Anima Mundi is not just another Christian, religious book. It will test your God-given faculty of reason to the fullest for it takes on the most difficult of all philosophical questions and it answers the question by providing a coherent Theory of Everything that makes perfect sense of reality and our human experience, and this cannot be explained without also providing in this context, the proof in a necessary, Supreme, and Absolute Being as the creator and the sustainer of all that exists.
Featured Book: Rational Theism, Part One: An A Priori Proof in God’s Existence, Omnisicient and Omnipotent (A Science of Metaphysics in Answer to the Challenge of Immanuel Kant) by Mikhail Kelnikov
This book provides an a-priori proof in the existence of a Supreme Being, both omnisicient and omnipotent; and as a science of metaphysics adhering to the critical demands of Immanuel Kant, it provides an explanation for the origination of the four universal features that define reality: space, time, mass (matter or substance), and mind (consciousness). It falls in line with big bang cosmology but it goes further, explaining the causal process that predated the big bang. It provides more clarity to Christ’s words, “I am the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end”. Christians can use the work to staunchly defend and uphold their faith, especially given the answer provided in the 2nd part to the problem of evil that has escaped the notice of Christian apologists, having sought for an answer to the problem outside the Bible wherein the sole answer can be found–using over five dozen related scriptures that provide the rational answer to this problem. Both works put forth that God not only exists, but that God has the three necessary attributes that God must possess: omnipotence, omniscience, and omnibenevolence.