The Spirits' Book by Allan Kardec

The Spirits' Book

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Description

What happens when we die? Why do some souls suffer while others thrive? Is there a purpose woven into the fabric of existence — or only silence? In 1857, French educator Allan Kardec sat with these questions and, through sessions with a group of spirits who called themselves "The Spirit of Truth," recorded over a thousand answers. The result was The Spirits' Book — the founding document of Spiritism, and one of the most ambitious attempts in history to map the invisible world. It does not promise faith. It offers a system: a rational, structured philosophy of the soul, reincarnation, moral law, and the evolution of spirits across lifetimes. Whether you approach it as a believer, a skeptic, or a seeker, Kardec's work rewards careful reading. Some books explain religion. This one explains existence.

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