The Crying Wizard
       
     
The Fairytale and the Epics of the Goddess, Cycle One
       
     
bride and groom.jpg
       
     
Three Principles of Conflict Resolution
       
     
The Scriptures of One God, Cycle Three
       
     
REVERSAL: Messianic Religion and Women's Revolution   (Copy)
       
     
russianhands.jpeg
       
     
The Crying Wizard
       
     
The Crying Wizard

The cycle begins with a dialogue between the sad wizard, a teary-eyed Easter Island head, and wisdom, the purple scale representing science. Wizard: Why is the world in spite of all my stories not living happily ever after? Wisdom: Do not despair. The secrets to happiness are in all stories, but instead of believing the stories like the fanatics do, think like a scientist and examine what is universal in all stories, their plot; there you will see the wisdom of the secrets of living happily ever after.

The Fairytale and the Epics of the Goddess, Cycle One
       
     
The Fairytale and the Epics of the Goddess, Cycle One

A fair lady is surrounded by three dragons presenting conflict as the state of passivity, antagonism, and alienation.

Trace the evolution of religions as a continuum of discoveries of the innate moral process. Religions are respected as advancing alternative ways of resolving conflicts, hence as partial and complementary discoveries of the scientific process. Science steals the moral authority of religions by attributing it to the innate psychological conflict resolution process, thus completing religion's quest for meaning. Religions deified the respective conflict resolution alternatives; in contrast, science demystifies the One God and rediscovers its abstract characteristics attributing them to the human unconscious.

 

bride and groom.jpg
       
     
Three Principles of Conflict Resolution
       
     
Three Principles of Conflict Resolution

CReated by Mitch Syd

The Scriptures of One God, Cycle Three
       
     
The Scriptures of One God, Cycle Three

THE JUDAIC DISCOVERY OF MUTUAL RESPECT BETWEEN FATHER AND SON.

Created by Judith Brown and exhibited in 1984 at the Lincoln Center, it is interpreted as illustrating the Abrahamic Family; three patriarchs, 18 feet tall and four matriarchs, 4 feet tall, plus two Horus birds, the concubines, the chicks with beaks to peck on the wives. It represents men discovering mutual respect among themselves but sanctifying an inequity, the discrepancies in number and size between men and women.

REVERSAL: Messianic Religion and Women's Revolution   (Copy)
       
     
REVERSAL: Messianic Religion and Women's Revolution (Copy)
russianhands.jpeg