THINK!
In most meaningful disagreements, there is usually some element of truth on both sides. For nearly two centuries, America’s founders understood this. Even when debates were heated, they listened, reasoned, and found solutions—often without extreme compromise. Today, that ability feels lost. Modern discourse increasingly assumes that if one side is right, all others must be wrong. When this happens, listening stops. Thinking stops. Instead of seeking understanding, people seek vindication— surrounding themselves with voices that simply agree.
Think! A Return to Reason challenges this pattern. Rather than promoting a rigid set of ideas, the book encourages readers to think critically for themselves and consider alternative perspectives. Real solutions, the author argues, do not come from confrontation or shouting louder, but from reconciliation. By listening not just to what others believe, but why they believe it—what they hope to achieve and how they think their ideas might work—we open the door to better, more thoughtful solutions. This book is an invitation to return to reason, dialogue, and genuine problem-solving.
About the Author
Philip Everett Sliwiak is the son of a Polish immigrant who came to the United States to escape the looming threat of World War I. From his father and grandmother, he learned early that education was not meant to be abstract or ornamental, but purposeful—meant to solve problems and improve lives.
Like many of his father’s generation, Sliwiak began working at a young age, left home at seventeen, and paid his way through college. He earned degrees in economics and mathematics, served in military intelligence during the Cold War in Germany, and later worked in the legal and executive leadership of the Kemper Financial Group. After earning his law degree and completing fellowship studies in administrative management with distinction, he was appointed Assistant General Counsel and later CEO of Kemper’s South American operations based in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Throughout his life, Sliwiak has carried forward his father’s belief that meaningful learning must lead to action—fixing what is broken, resolving differences, and turning on lights where darkness remains. Think! A Return to Reason reflects that lifelong commitment to thoughtful engagement and practical solutions.
Published: 2026
Page Count: 368
