This book raises hundreds of questions and confronts us with the crisis we are avoiding: Why are our minds and critical thinking declining, and why have we stopped asking questions? Why are talented people suffering while others are advancing?
The book is full of ideas that stimulate the reader's thinking, and it does so simply in a passing sentence, for example, raising surprise about the history of the invention of the wheel, which, according to the author, is unknown when it was invented and who invented it. In his words, "the only invention that was not an imitation of nature... Isn't that an idea worth pondering?
It offers a new reading and raises questions from a number of famous international creative works, introducing us to the world of “The Wizard of Oz” and “Alice in Wonderland.” It reviews how the great Italian writer Umberto Eco addressed the world of journalism and its intersections and overlaps with economic and political stakeholders, as well as the heroes of Dostoevsky, Kawabata, and others.
The book urges us not to rely on ready-made answers. The author was right to choose “The Invisible” as the title for his work, as the book draws our attention to many invisible things in our world and our vast universe.