02-11-2018, 10:43 AM
I've been reading one of Charles Eisenstein's earlier books over the past month, and have been struck by how well it diagnoses the ills and flaws of the current scientific paradigm.
I was having dinner at an Indian restaurant tonight, and was reading the text on the kindle app on my tablet.
The following page struck me as being the pivotal point in making a choice for spirituality, and a subjective creation.
I think it captures well the kind of 'crisis' that I faced after leaving high school, and realising that there were more things out there than our current social paradigm gave due credence for. In other words, there was 'phenomena' that was well accounted for, and documented, and yet it was regarded as being foolish and imaginary by the mainstream worldview. These things were openly mocked, in other words (think of David Icke, etc).
Anyway, eventually the mass of data that is unaccounted for has to start weighing on one.
There are respectable researchers who put their lives on the line.
So this extract below (from the book) describes the situation that individuals have to face, in their own time.
1) is all this phenomena a hoax, a delusion, a means of undermining one's sanity?
2) or is there a more subjective element at play, where you are open to the stories that people offer about their experiences, and it's not just dismissed out of hand. OBE's, UFO's, holistic medicine, kundalini, chakras, alternative history (Graham Handcock, etc).
[larger]
ps. Charles makes his book online for free, as well as having an audiobook version, but I bought the kindle version for the sake of convenience
I was having dinner at an Indian restaurant tonight, and was reading the text on the kindle app on my tablet.
The following page struck me as being the pivotal point in making a choice for spirituality, and a subjective creation.
I think it captures well the kind of 'crisis' that I faced after leaving high school, and realising that there were more things out there than our current social paradigm gave due credence for. In other words, there was 'phenomena' that was well accounted for, and documented, and yet it was regarded as being foolish and imaginary by the mainstream worldview. These things were openly mocked, in other words (think of David Icke, etc).
Anyway, eventually the mass of data that is unaccounted for has to start weighing on one.
There are respectable researchers who put their lives on the line.
So this extract below (from the book) describes the situation that individuals have to face, in their own time.
1) is all this phenomena a hoax, a delusion, a means of undermining one's sanity?
2) or is there a more subjective element at play, where you are open to the stories that people offer about their experiences, and it's not just dismissed out of hand. OBE's, UFO's, holistic medicine, kundalini, chakras, alternative history (Graham Handcock, etc).
[larger]
ps. Charles makes his book online for free, as well as having an audiobook version, but I bought the kindle version for the sake of convenience