Why Are We Here? Chaos Brought Us Together
<p>Extreme or prolonged weather obviously affects us, but it’s trickier to accept that mild, temporary shifts in the weather can also change the course of our lives. A cloud moves, and a plane doesn’t take off or changes its flight path. It matters who is or isn’t on the plane, whether the plane crashes, or where the airmen drop the bomb. Yet we resist the notion that random factors control the outcome, partly because it seems unfair.</p>
<p>“We want a rational explanation to make sense of the chaos of life,” <a href="https://brianpklaas.com/" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">Brian Klaas</a> says in the forthcoming <em>Fluke</em>, and so we’ve developed religious and educational institutions that reinforce our search for these sorts of narratives.</p>
<p><a href="https://baos.pub/fluke-brian-klaas-book-review-9a02f6c610ff"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p>