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![]() | A Secret History of Consciousness by Gary, Lachman, Colin, Wilson (Foreword) ISBN-10: 9781584200116 ISBN-10: 1-58420-011-1 ISBN-13: 9781584200116 ISBN-13: 978-1-58420-011-6 Paperback 2003-05-01 Lindisfarne Books Find Lowest Price | |
Editorials | ||
Product Description -- What is consciousness like? -- How can consciousness be achieved? Gary Lachman argues that consciousness is not a result of neurons and molecules, but is actually responsible for them. Meaning, he proposes, is not imported from the outer world, but rather creates the world. He shows that consciouness is a living, evolving presence whose development can be traced through different historical periods. Concentrating on the late nineteenth-century onwards, Lachman exposes the 'secret history' of consciousness through thinkers such as P. D. Ouspensky, Rudolf Steiner, and Colin Wilson, as well as more mainstream philosophers like Henri Bergson, William James, Owen Barfield and psychologist Andreas Mavromatis. Two little known but important thinkers play a major role in Lachman's argument: Jurij Moskvitin, who showed how our consciousness relates to the mechanisms of perception and to the external world; and Jean Gebster, who presented perhaps the most impressive case for the evolution of consciousness. This is a far-reaching book from an exciting contemporary thinker. | ||
Reviews | ||
brilliant synthesis This book gives us short biographies of several key philosphers -- many of them obscure or marginalized -- plus an overview of various aspects of Western culture -- history, arts, religion, etcetera -- by way of telling us a grand human adventure story, in which scientific logical positivism plays the role of antagonist, and the human spirit's expanding integrative consciousness, the protagonist. Science is not demonized as a "badguy" but shown to represent a necessary but perilous stage in our evolution. The author's writing is concise and compelling. Reading this book was for me a breathtaking experience, a freeing of my mind. | ||
Challenge This book is inteligent, entertaining, thought provoking and meticulously researched. What Lachman demonstrates above all else is that it is possible to challenge the hegemonic scientific - materialist view of the origins and evolution of consciousness without collapsing into New Age irrationalism. Marshalling the thoughts' of some of the greatist thinkers' pre and post Enlightenment, he shows that it is possible to bring philosophical and scientific rigour to the subject whilst still allowing a place for the spiritual dimension of human experience. This really is a must read for anybody interested in the History of ideas, as well as anybody who has ever asked the eternal question of 'Why'? One of my own personal tests of a good none fiction book is the extent that it points one in the direction of many other books on the same subject. I came away from this with a list long enough to keep me immersed for the next decade. Brilliant. | ||
Extraordinarily Well-Researched and Insightful I read a great many books, and most seem to have one or two new ideas or a re-hash of something familiar. So it's easy to get the gist of most of them and to move on. But then there are some books to savor. Books that demand care and focus. Most of these demanding books soon become covered in notes, comments and annotations, and if I feel that people might be helped by a review, it is these that make the cut. I have now read three of Gary Lachman's books: this one, The Dedalus Book of the Occult: A Dark Muse, and Turn off Your Mind. All three have been excellent and demanding. Gary is evidently an interesting person. A former musician and composer with the band Blondie, he first began his explorations of consciousness between gigs. But unlike so many of his generation, he decided to do something less ephemeral than soak himself in psychedelics. This book is an exploration of the possibility and the potential that we have to transform our consciousness, not just personally but also as a society. This is not an idle preoccupation: many of us feel that we must transform if we are to survive as a species. Yet there is also another piece to this: if and when we transform, that transformation is associated with its own parcel of challenges. Over the last few centuries, we have already begun to change physically and psychologically, and these changes help explain the rapid emergence and evolution of new laws of life and of healing. Gary Lachman has something in common with Colin Wilson, who contributed a deeply insightful forward to the book. Both have felt feelings of boredom and dissatisfaction with the world as it is, and these feelings have propelled them to see what else is out there. Like many people before him, Gary went off on a round of pilgrimages and retreats before re-discovering that the answers are always in the same place: within the human heart and mind. This book reviews most of the major theories of consciousness from Helena Blavatsky, to Rudolf Steiner, to Gurdjieff and Jean Gebser. It is extremely well written: Gary Lachman is remarkably erudite, yet I managed to read the whole thing for the first time during a flight across the Pacific. It was enthralling from start to finish. I was particularly pleased to see him give a lot of space to a discussion of the work of Andreas Mavromatis, which is not as well known as it should be. Mavromatis has done a lot of work on hypnagogic and hypnopompic hallucination: those strange phenomena that most of us have experienced as we are falling asleep or waking. They appear to be a unique state of consciousness that give us important clues about the structure of perception and of conscious experiences. For anyone interested in consciousness and where we may be headed as a species this book is highly recommended. | ||
This Book is Fascinating I picked this book up without any preconceptions. I just wanted to read more about the history of consciousness, having become interested in the topic over the years. To my delight, Gary Lachman's book opened some great avenues for further study. I was unfamiliar with most of the authors he discusses in depth, other than some notables like Bucke and Gurdjieff. To my delight, he gave a really good overview of Jean Gebser, whose writing I greatly admire, and who made some amazing breakthroughs in the study of the evolution of consciousness. Fourtunately for me, Lachman not only gave clear descriptions of the writers he surveys, but also shows the development of their ideas. There is also a very good bibliography for further explorations. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is a student of the evolution and levels of consciousness from a "western" perspective. | ||
Exceptional Access To The Unconscious I don't believe consciousness evolved but this book is a good overview of various theories as to how it could have evolved. I suspect that if you could experience another's mind, you would find significant differences in consciousness even within our present time. The mind of somebody else would seem like an alien world to you. Anyone who possesses exceptional access to their unconscious mind is aware of how alien and distorted its perception can be and this distortion of perception is even present, in a very subtle manner, during full consciousness. The author does explore an interesting concept, duo-consciousness, the hypnagogic state between sleep and consciousness in which it is possible to dream while being partially awake. He even speculates about consciously induced hypnogogia, the first reference to this secret ability I've seen in print. But he does not go far enough in his speculation. Given exceptional access to the unconscious it is possible to enter the hypnagogic state at will. It is possible to awaken the unconscious into activity by consciously recalling dream imagery, even snatches of long forgotten dreams, and thereby bring it into a near conscious state to the point of experiencing irrational fears. More interesting, it is possible to acquire some of the imaginative capabilities of the dream state and create highly unexpected mental imagery as random, mild hallucinations which are nevertheless subject to some conscious direction towards specific images. This is day dreaming empowered with the faculty of true dreaming! Baudelaire once described this as the poet's gift to dream exceptionally well. While some occultists believe that exceptional access to the unconscious means peering into other dimensions, and gaining the faculty of the true dreamer would be real magic, there is little experiential evidence that supports such an interpretation. Rather it is the degree of the dissociative state that creates the sense of other dimensions or alien thoughts. The conscious mind cannot associate mental imagery from the unconscious with the self because it is too unfamiliar. However, long familiarity with the unconscious and its mental imagery can create a sense of familiarity which overcomes the dissociative state. | ||