COMING HOME: A Philosophy of Ignorance, Morality, and the Human Family
We live in an age of dazzling knowledge and collapsing wisdom-
a world where people know more than ever, yet understand each other less.
Coming Home is a philosophical journey into the three forgotten pillars of our humanity:
ignorance, morality, and the family.
At the heart of the modern crisis lies a simple truth:
we have become intelligent without becoming whole.
We can navigate data, but not each other;
we can reach the world instantly, yet fail to reach the people we love.
This book asks a radical question:
What if the collapse of society is not political, but relational?
What if our greatest poverty is not material, but emotional-
the loss of roots, guidance, and belonging?
By blending psychology, mythology, neuroscience, and philosophical insight, Coming Home explores:
- Ignorance as the unseen engine of modern behavior
- Morality as a lost language of conscience
- The family as the first ecosystem of human meaning
- The erosion of empathy in the digital age
- The emotional architecture of modern loneliness
- How a civilization collapses when its homes collapse
Rather than nostalgia for the past, the book offers a new vision:
a noetic family, built not on tradition or authority, but on awareness, balance, and inner clarity.
With poetic precision and philosophical depth, Coming Home invites the reader to face the most intimate question of all:
Where do we return to when everything outside of us falls apart?
This is not a book about the family we were given-
but about the family we are capable of building,
and the kind of human being we can still choose to become.
The book stands as one of the foundational pillars of Noetic Humanism-a new framework aiming to restore coherence, dignity, and inner structure to the human experience.
Related Subjects
Parenting & Relationships