In this book, the writer's 9th, the human condition is approached in the Prologue, then, the nature and meaning of coincidences, Godwinks, and Wordsworth's Spots of time are delineated. Later, the terms are applied to the concepts of Carl Jung's Synchronicity I and II.
At this point, the writer recalls his college class taken after his suicide attempt to recover. While trying to recover from his brain injury, the author attains an enlightenment that increases through life -- the good and the bad. After outlining a Hegelian Dialectic between John Donne (private metaphysician) and Ben Jonson (public moralist), yielding Andrew Marvel (public metaphysician), the author carefully recounts Michael Moore's "Capitalism: A Love Story," which focuses on the home mortgage disaster -- which was a financial disaster carried out by the top 1% of the economy to the detriment of pretty much everyone else. Taba comes to a conclusion by closing with FDR's call for a second Bill of Rights.