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The main theme of the book The Order is the cognitive and emotional impoverishment of humanity through education, which, with the pretext of inclusion and peace, serves human (and even humanoid) dispensability, in the face of the evolution of knowledge and technology. The Order is an irony of the paths that education and society are taking and a criticism of the duplicity between discourse and reality. (...)


The characters in the story will participate in adventures in a dystopian context, sometimes misleading, and witness the beginning of a major turnaround. (...)


Despite the ongoing extraterrestrial colonization, the Earth is overpopulated in the face of technological success, scientific advances and extensive times of peace. Human and humanoid clusters grow in height and depth. The seas and oceans, poisonous and dead, are occupied by artificial islands. The green lung essentially resists on top of gigantic buildings. You travel via tele-toll and sophisticated devices. Society is obsessed with inclusion and peacemaking. Education has a preponderant role in shaping the social behavior of these beings who do not know if their origin is human, hybrid, or robotic, and feel included in a large global brotherhood – they are the incon. (...)


However, the problem is that the peaceful, gray-minded incon population needs another, marginalized and minority: the excon. (...)