Kniha Humanity's Shared Code Priscilla Rogers

Humanity's Shared Code

Jazyk: Angličtina
Vazba: Brožovaná
Vydavatel: Ishan Khan
Dostupnost: Očekávané naskladnění
Naskladnění 30. 06. 2026
329
What if Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are not completely separate religions, but different expres...

Informace o knize

Jazyk
Angličtina
Vazba
Kniha - Brožovaná
Vydáno
2026
Stránek
178
EAN
9798235132238
Enbook ID
53027033
Vydavatel
Hmotnost
215
Rozměry
140 x 216 x 10

Kompletní popis

What if Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are not completely separate religions, but different expressions of a shared historical architecture?

In Humanity's Shared Code, authors Priscilla Rogers and Ishan Khan explore one of humanity's oldest and most influential conversations through an unexpected lens: software development.

Using concepts such as source code, updates, forks, documentation, version control, and system architecture, this book examines how three of the world's major religions emerged from common roots while evolving into distinct traditions followed by billions of people today.

Beginning with Abraham and continuing through Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad, the book traces the development of the Abrahamic faiths and explores the shared beliefs, prophets, moral frameworks, scriptures, and historical events that connect them.

Rather than asking which religion is right, Humanity's Shared Code asks a different question:

What can we learn when we examine the architecture beneath the interface?

Written from a respectful, analytical, and non-sectarian perspective, this book is neither a defense of religion nor a critique of it. Instead, it offers readers a framework for understanding how Judaism, Christianity, and Islam relate to one another, where they differ, and why those differences emerged.

Whether you are a believer, skeptic, agnostic, atheist, student, or technology professional, this book provides a fresh perspective on faith, history, culture, and the systems that shape human civilization.

Because sometimes understanding begins when we stop looking at the interface and start examining the code beneath it.