Personal, reflective, and gently investigative, these early essays have
a raw, fresh quality which predates the more formal theory and practice
of Peter Ralston's two popular books, The Book of Not Knowing and
Pursuing Consciousness. Many of the questions we might struggle with
in life--identity in relation to others, authenticity in the face of
belief systems, the draw we have to pursue ineffective self-serving
urges, and our tendency to conceptualize rather than experience
things--are described here in simple, almost conversational language.
Attempting to grasp what authentic knowledge is, Ralston's queries
become a quest for how humans can develop a deeper sense of themselves
as participants in the world.