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The Intersection of Free Will and Finiteness (Hardcover)- Pre-Order: Dec 18,2026

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What if free will and destiny are not opposites? What if science and spirituality are not rivals? What if the greatest discoveries in human history have all been fragments of a much larger truth waiting to be connected?


In The Intersection of Free Will and Finiteness, engineer, philosopher, and independent researcher Lawrence I. Morrisbrings together the ideas developed across his three-book intellectual journey into a single framework that challenges the boundaries between faith, mathematics, physics, and human experience.


His journey began with A World Connected Within the Bounds of Interpretation, where he argued that every belief system is a finite interpretation of an infinite reality and that humanity is connected by its shared search for truth. It continued with an exploration of probability, uncertainty, and the limits of knowledge, ultimately leading to a larger question: Can the same principles that govern the physical universe also explain spirituality and God?


This book is Morris's answer.

Beginning with the foundational concepts of interpretation and statistical thinking, Morris explores how free will may emerge from systems constrained by finite boundaries while still allowing for genuine choice. He proposes that spiritual boundaries and scientific degrees of freedom may be different expressions of the same universal principles.


As the journey unfolds, readers are introduced to bold ideas that connect theology with modern physics. The concept of The God Equation and Superposition examines whether the language of quantum mechanics can illuminate ancient spiritual questions. The discussion expands into the mysteries of light, relativity, and the possibility that the deepest laws of the universe are inseparable from the existence of God.


Building upon these ideas, Morris proposes a new interdisciplinary framework known as Spir-Sci—a model designed to encourage collaboration between scientific and spiritual communities rather than competition. Instead of halting exploration, this framework argues that faith and reason become more powerful when they are allowed to challenge and refine one another.


The book then ventures into the realms of inspiration, imagination, and paradox, asking whether what humanity once called magic was simply a deeper understanding waiting to be discovered. It explores why the belief that "anything is possible" still requires meaningful limits, why paradoxes may point toward a transcendent reality, and why the existence of contradiction itself may reveal something fundamental about God.


Morris also confronts some of humanity's oldest questions. Does God require belief? Is hell a place, a condition, or a relationship with time itself? Can higher dimensions already be understood through the limitations of human perception? Is DNA more than biological code—a lifeline connecting generations across space and time?


Neither purely scientific nor exclusively theological, The Intersection of Free Will and Finiteness is an invitation to think differently. It challenges readers to see uncertainty not as ignorance, but as opportunity; faith not as the abandonment of reason, but as the courage to continue exploring; and knowledge itself as an endless journey toward a truth that no single discipline can fully possess.


For readers of philosophy, spirituality, physics, and the great unanswered questions of existence, this work offers a provocative vision of a universe where free will, finiteness, and the search for God all meet at the same intersection.

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