
List: $1.00
| Sale: $0.70
Club: $0.50
Compassion and Reason: The 36 Leonard Vovniks
Author: B Raquen Clarebi
Narrator: B Raquen Clarebi
Unabridged: 2 hr 21 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Independently Published
Published: 08/16/2024
Categories: Nonfiction, Family & Relationships, Religion, Atheism, Self-help, Spiritual
Synopsis
What if compassion wasn’t optional… but your life’s true purpose?
In Compassion and Reason: The 36 Leonard Vovniks, a mysterious cosmic teacher steps forward with a radical yet disarmingly simple message: Humanity’s greatest responsibility is to be kind. Always.
Presented as a series of conversations between Leonard Vovnik—a fictional celestial guide—and a curious student, this thought-provoking book explores the deepest and most controversial issues of our time through one unwavering lens: absolute compassion.
From violence and anger to religion and doubt… from bodily autonomy and cultural traditions to slavery, judgment, gender, and the treatment of animals… no topic is too sensitive, no belief too sacred to examine. With clarity, boldness, and relentless moral consistency, Leonard challenges readers to rethink the foundations of control, ownership, identity, and power.
Is violence only physical—or does it begin in anger, shame, and judgment?
Do traditions deserve respect if they cause harm?
Does belief in God matter more than how we treat one another?
Who truly benefits from conflict in the world?
Through parables, riddles, and direct dialogue, the lessons unfold like a philosophical compass—pointing not toward ideology, but toward responsibility. The message is simple, yet demanding:
• No one owns another person.
• No culture or religion justifies cruelty.
• Bodily autonomy is sacred.
• Children deserve protection, never control.
• Compassion has no exceptions.
Leonard Vovnik is fictional. His message is not.
This is not a theological treatise. It is not a political manifesto. It is not an “everything” book with every answer. It is a guide—a call to moral courage and personal accountability. It asks readers to examine their habits, their inherited beliefs, and their everyday decisions. It insists that kindness is not weakness. That gentleness is strength. That the smallest shift in perspective can ripple across distance and time.
In Compassion and Reason: The 36 Leonard Vovniks, a mysterious cosmic teacher steps forward with a radical yet disarmingly simple message: Humanity’s greatest responsibility is to be kind. Always.
Presented as a series of conversations between Leonard Vovnik—a fictional celestial guide—and a curious student, this thought-provoking book explores the deepest and most controversial issues of our time through one unwavering lens: absolute compassion.
From violence and anger to religion and doubt… from bodily autonomy and cultural traditions to slavery, judgment, gender, and the treatment of animals… no topic is too sensitive, no belief too sacred to examine. With clarity, boldness, and relentless moral consistency, Leonard challenges readers to rethink the foundations of control, ownership, identity, and power.
Is violence only physical—or does it begin in anger, shame, and judgment?
Do traditions deserve respect if they cause harm?
Does belief in God matter more than how we treat one another?
Who truly benefits from conflict in the world?
Through parables, riddles, and direct dialogue, the lessons unfold like a philosophical compass—pointing not toward ideology, but toward responsibility. The message is simple, yet demanding:
• No one owns another person.
• No culture or religion justifies cruelty.
• Bodily autonomy is sacred.
• Children deserve protection, never control.
• Compassion has no exceptions.
Leonard Vovnik is fictional. His message is not.
This is not a theological treatise. It is not a political manifesto. It is not an “everything” book with every answer. It is a guide—a call to moral courage and personal accountability. It asks readers to examine their habits, their inherited beliefs, and their everyday decisions. It insists that kindness is not weakness. That gentleness is strength. That the smallest shift in perspective can ripple across distance and time.