If It Isn't Wisdom It Must Be Folly
by
Book Details
About the Book
Wisdom: Understanding what is right, true, and lasting; good judgment.
-Webster’s II New University Dictionary
By following along as the author relates her insightful discoveries, we become privy to the many disguises of folly that have served to keep us from “knowing ourselves.” What we especially need to become aware of is our great potential; the promise of the wise is the ecstatic joy of enlightenment.
Humor is defined as the ability to perceive and thus enjoy what is comical. When we are in a reasonable mood we are able to perceive what is humorous about human nature; when we are not, we lose both our sense of humor and our perspective. Consider, for example, the fact that we can be as repulsed by truth as we are by cockroaches.
What is needed to become wise to folly is a clear understanding of what is wrong, what is not true, and what is ludicrous, ridiculous, or absurd and thus comical.
While it is true that “the pen is mightier than the sword,” it has also caused the sword to be taken up. There is no better way to bring about a glorious future and a happy ending to our troubled past than by recognizing folly and laughing it off the stage.
About the Author
Joan Morrone was born in
She describes herself as an ordinary person who happened to have an enlightening experience. At the age of 57, her interest in finding a reasonable explanation for her mind-altering experience led to her spending eighteen-years doing research and writing her book.
While she shows that an enlightening experience is not always lasting and can even become the source of illusions of grandeur and delusions of persecution, she believes that the reason she was able to maintain her ecstatic high was because she had gotten to the root of the problem. When we realize the cause of unhappiness, the cure is assured.