With this new title, Pierre Rabhi and Jean-Marie Pelt applied a ancestral wisdom: better to ask the right questions that attempt dapporter wrong answers. And the title itself (The world does that make sense?) Is a good question which one is tempted to say what can not receive any response seriously! This is a open question that deserves dégrener in its wake a host of existential questions like, live together, in what direction, with what future on what historical basis? When "going evolution of" I "to" we "," when associative adventure beyond this fear of the unknown, when lon crosses the primary stages of individuality and duality daboutir to the community principle, a connection is set up between beings and, at that moment, riches hitherto unsuspected turn out. This book I like. There seems to be a plea for "lintelligence unifying", "essential to positive evolution of mankind. " The most beautiful sentence that I was able to meet: "We do not measure enough the extraordinary power of benevolence. "(Page 167) This work, logical continuation of the booklet "What we told Nature," published in 2010, where I found a sentence directly related: "The meaning (of evolution) takes much of our responsibility. Do we want to give meaning to our actions? "Asks Lhundrup Lama, and he continues:" It seems that lethic is part of our nature. " This book, after several chapters devoted to the description of the principle in the universe dassociativité (mineral, living world, humanity), is chiseled, without redundancy, positive and peaceful. It encourages lhumilité course, but also to knowledge and it may be a subject détude distractive as much as his writing is nice.