Książka The Closed World Cyril Opoku

The Closed World

How a Skeptic Begins to Suspect Reality Is More Than Matter and Motion

Autor: Cyril Opoku
Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Miękka
Dostępność: Dostępna u dostawcy
Wysyłamy za 9-15 dni
57.64
He thought faith was for weak people.Elias Mercer is smart enough to dismantle weak arguments, sharp...

Informacje o książce

Autor
Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Miękka
Data wydania
2026
strony
212
EAN
9781996839256
ISBN
199683925X
Enbook ID
51524786
Waga
253
Wymiary
140 x 216 x 11

Pełny opis

He thought faith was for weak people.

Elias Mercer is smart enough to dismantle weak arguments, sharp enough to expose easy answers, and certain that religion is what people reach for when they cannot face reality. As a high school senior with a restless mind and no patience for comforting illusions, he believes the universe is closed, meaning is human-made, and science explains what matters.

Then the cracks begin.

What starts as intellectual confidence is disturbed by a series of encounters he cannot dismiss as easily as he wants: a calm Christian girl who refuses to flinch, a world that feels bigger than mechanism alone, and questions about truth, existence, and meaning that explanation does not quite silence. Elias still calls himself an atheist. He still trusts reason. But for the first time, the closed world he lives in no longer feels completely sealed.

The Closed World is a thought-provoking coming-of-age novel about doubt, science, meaning, and the beginning of one skeptic's journey toward faith. Blending symbolic realism, emotional honesty, and philosophical tension, this first book in The Skeptic's Progress series is perfect for readers who enjoy intelligent Christian fiction, stories about atheism and belief, and novels that wrestle seriously with truth, suffering, identity, and Jesus.

For readers of Christian fiction, philosophical fiction, spiritual coming-of-age stories, and novels about doubt and faith, The Closed World opens a powerful series about what happens when reality refuses to stay small.