

About this book
Summary
The very dawn of human consciousness was interwoven with the nascent stirrings of a moral compass, a deep-seated impulse to discern right from wrong. Long before codified laws or sophisticated legal systems, humanity grappled with questions of fairness, accountability, and consequence. These early inquiries, etched into the fabric of foundational narratives and theological underpinnings, serve as the bedrock upon which our understanding of justice, and indeed innocence, has been built. To truly grasp the complexities of our present moral landscape, we must first cast our gaze back to these ancient echoes, to the very genesis of our moral inquiry.Book information
Genre
Politics and Government, Philosophy
Length
16 hrs 15 mins
Publish date
Jan 7, 2026
Language
English
About the Author
Raphael Wolftone Quinlivan
Table of Contents
1Chapter 1: Innocence Lost
9Chapter 9: Faith, Doubt, and the Spiritual Awakening
2Chapter 2: The Shadow of Pilate: Rationality and Conscience
10Chapter 10: Sin, Redemption, and the Human Flaw
3Chapter 3: Herod's Ambivalence: The Politics of Fear
11Chapter 11: The Interplay of Personal Belief and Societal Structures
4Chapter 4: Caesar's Decree: The Implacable State
12Chapter 12: The Nature of True Victory
5Chapter 5: The Crossroads of Self-Knowledge
13Chapter 13: The Enduring Pursuit of Justice and Morality
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