New Book - Third Mind - Press Release |
This is simply 'the most striking—African—History Book ever written!'
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Third Mind is now known to be the only history book of its kind. Written by Joe Mintsa, a fine political thinker who has explored history with an extreme sense of technicality, this book has simply opened a new window to our understanding of human history. Every major 21st century social and political enigma is dealt with and solved; but above all, the disturbing question as to what happened in the Cosmic Mind and human psychology for the African type of species to be so desecrated and brutalised in the world, has been settled for the first time.
As a philologist, historian, and an accomplished freelance investigator in the field of Political Anthropology, Joe Mintsa has used a clever combination of his knowledge and experience to compose one of the liveliest and most astonishingly captivating philosophical debates on the social and political injustices that mark today's terrible struggles of the African people, both in Africa and in the world, with a revealing touch on the place of the Western world in these struggles.
The book, thus, offers a completely different slant on the hunt for the real motives for the grievances endured by Africans in modern history. The disclosure of the true face of their historical misadventures and political struggles is brought sharply into focus in Mr Mintsa's thought-provoking style. The author puts the case fairly and squarely for a greater understanding of the needs and aspirations of Africans in today's society. This exploration has uncovered a cultural dimension that had remained untouched thus far.
This is a book that not only offers to the above question an elegant answer that sets Africa out for a solemn era of rediscovery and restoration, but also resolves, through an endless succession of astonishing twists, the political enigma of the balkanised world — whilst clarifying, in parallel, the deceptive reflections of today's civilised world.
This is politics made common, sensible and interactive. Don't miss out! Get this book today...
The book notes: “The debate on Black Africa is wide and all-out depending on who is talking amongst the individuals and institutions that today claim the right to deal with the decrepit continent. While the world media and non-governmental organisations concentrate their attention on African starvations and pandemics, academies rather steer the debate into the pitfalls of bad economies, as does international politics rather talk about tyrannies as well as the political brutalities that result from them. In the meantime, some Africans like Master Ribinga rather drag the matter into religious revolutions.... Very little attention, if any, within all these passionate diatribes that mark the case of Black Africa today, is given to a genuine exploration of the historical, social and cultural problems faced by the continent...”
In fact, Joe Mintsa's critical interest in the numerous intellectual debates that he has attended over the past ten years has led him to come up with the view that “there might be something like a conspiracy theory going on somewhere: the avoidance of the core issues that should be looked at with careful attention if any proper answer was to be reached on the indiscriminate troubles of which the African Negro and the rest of the most deprived human species of the world suffer to day...” — Get hold of this book and share its rich and revealing insights...
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Joe Mintsa was born in the present Gabon, central Africa, on May 1st 1974. After completing his studies of philology and American history at the University of Libreville in 1998, he immediately migrated to England for further studies—a sojourn that then turned into a painful journey of reflection on the moral and political crises of his world.
The Sum of all Doubts (2004)—a book that was recently nominated by a USA independent book reviewer as one of the earliest 21st century philosophical endeavours—marks his first attempt to put to public attention his system of thinking, as it is now known: ‘The Philosophy of Technicality'. After the publication of his French title, Les Mythes du Recaptif (2005) and the immediate release of Third Mind (2006), Joe Mintsa is now known to be one of the rarest contemporary thinkers who have explored history with an extreme sense of technicality. His ability to settle conceptual controversies over some of the social and political issues that shake our world today leaves no room for approximations: “human existence is a machine, like any other machine, with its own technical wheel-work. Therefore, I shall not say nor do anything unless there is any technical justification for it.”
He currently lives in Brighton, UK
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Third Mind
by Joe Mintsa is published in paperback by Pen Press Publishers Ltd
----- ISBN 1-905203-45-4 ---- Price £7.99
Available from www.amazon.co.uk www.waterstones.co.uk, www.tesco.com and via all good bookshops. Advance copies can be obtained direct from Pen Press Publishers Ltd, The Old School, 39 Chesham Road, Brighton, East Sussex BN2 1NB
www.penpress.co.uk |
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For further information, please-contact Pen Press Publishers on 01273261434; n Email:joe@penpress.co.uk |
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Remember, this book is the only African history book of its kind: a purely new revelation – that deals, in the most technical fashion ever achieved, with issues related to the following key concepts: African studies, African history and civilisation, African culture and languages, Afrocentrism, Afrocentric related research, afrocentrist figures, Egyptology, historical legacy, heritage, people and peoples, origins and identity, ancestors and ancestry, the place of Egypt in today's black and African descent, story, political philosophy, black history, black civilisation, black excellence, black consciousness, African authors and great books by Africans, social and political injustices on black and Africans both in Africa and in the world, racism and supremacism, African revolution, African Renaissance, Africa as a new world, African anthropology, sociology, ethnology, linguistics, humanities, culture and cultural concepts , nationalism, nationalist fights, social, cultural, and political endeavours throughout African and human history, political thinking, great thinkers and visionaires of the 20th and 21st century, Eurocentrist figures, Eurocentric related arguments, Western myths, creeds and ideologes, diversity and multiculturalism, citizenship and nationality, integrity and integration, functions and values of language, African development, new African ideas, new visions, millennium ideals for Africa, intellect, remarkable intellectual contributions, inventors, inventions, philosophical controversies, controversial conceptions and theories, the sense of modern history, technical vision, concepts and conceptions, conceptual technicalities, Afro-American or African American history as related to Africa, human grievances, slavery, understanding cultures and social structures, social aspirations, the rediscovery of societies and their restoration, the political enigma of the balkanised world, the curse of the nation-state in as the legacy of balkanisation and colonialism, the stumbling blocks of community self-governance in participative democracies, irredentism and devolution, country and trritoriality, territorial conflicts and the helping hand of political anthropology, conditionality and development, dictatorship and autocracy, tyranny and democracy, power and knowledge, development and improvement, ways of life and traditions, equality and inequality, revolution and destiny, liberation or freedom, liberty or laissez-faire, Europe and the fall of its economic polarity, the European union and its deceptive reflections, the African union and its dubious structure, globalisation, aid, the third world and its chonic poverty, and starvation, education and literacy, African literacy and literature as a philosophical misconception, the promotion of fiction and drama as an intellectual disorientation in Africa...