The Return of the Real
The print edition of Veriphysics is now available for preorder
In response to requests for a print edition of Veriphysics, Castalia House has combined The Treatise with The Refutation as well as the paper on testing the Triveritas against the Agrippan Trilemma in VERIPHYSICS: THE RETURN OF THE REAL. It is available in both hardcover and paperback.
The Enlightenment promised to liberate the mind. Instead it locked reason inside a box and declared everything outside to be unknowable. Three centuries later, we have seen the results. Democracy no longer represents the will of the people, economics that promised prosperity delivered poverty and debt, science can no longer reproduce its own results or correct its own errors, and the philosophers who enthroned reason ended by abandoning it. These failures are the collapse of a philosophical framework that was flawed at its foundation. In 1781, Immanuel Kant persuaded the West that reality as it truly is lies forever beyond the reach of the human mind. But Kant’s assertion of the unknowability of reality was never proven, and his doctrine has now been conclusively refuted.
VERIPHYSICS: THE RETURN OF THE REAL unites both halves of Vox Day’s landmark dismantling of 250 years of Enlightenment philosophy. The Treatise diagnoses the collapse of the Enlightenment and constructs its successor. The Refutation demonstrates how reason has been falsely imprisoned for more than two centuries. And the Triveritas shows how the most difficult philosophical problems ever constructed were successfully solved.
VERIPHYSICS: The Return of the Real by Vox Day is 264 pages and is now available for preorder from NDM Express in hardcover and paperback. It should be shipping from the warehouse within two weeks, and will be available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other bookstores sometime next week.



But the real question is, when does the bust come up for sale?
I hope we're going to be seeing books like this & the evolution books as part of the Castalia Library subscription. Even if not immediately (to give time to find typos or errors), I can't be the only one who wants to see these in a form that'll last a good long while.