God and the Evolving Universe
The Next Step In Personal Evolution
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- $16.99
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
IN GOD AND THE EVOLVING UNIVERSE: THE NEXT STEP IN PERSONAL EVOLUTION, the worldwide bestselling author of THE CELESTINE PROPHECY (half a million copies sold in Australia alone), James Redfield, joins forces with the bestselling author of GOLF IN THE KINGDOM (still a bestseller 27 years after it was published) and THE FUTURE OF THE BODY, Michael Murphy, to help us take the next step in our personal evolution. In a groundbreaking approach to personal development, Redfield and Murphy help readers to journey to the past, present and future of human life to explore the explosion in new abilities, understandings and possibilities to which centuries of development have bought us – and show us how to apply these to improving our everyday life.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
When is perennial wisdom more perennial than wise? Perhaps when it follows this commonplace opener: "Today we stand poised at a threshold in human history." Popular and prolific author Redfield (The Celestine Prophecy) is teamed here with Esalen Institute cofounder Murphy and documentary filmmaker Timbers. This trio of writers presents the history of human consciousness as an unfolding map of human potential, extrapolating from empirically documented peak human experiences a future norm of sensation and sensibility. An emphasis on empiricism and an 80-plus page annotated bibliography (almost one-quarter of the book) anchor the text; a chapter of exercises provides application. Perhaps the historic framework dwarfs the picture of what is new: it's difficult to discern progress in the argument for forthcoming human advancement in this latest work from writers who have already persuasively or profitably ploughed the ground. It's also difficult to find the God of the title, except as the Divine One who primed the evolutionary pump at its outset and inspired many of the visionaries the authors cite. The text is accessible but dry; Redfield's visionary fiction and Murphy's genre-bending books (e.g., Golf in the Kingdom) offer more fun. The book may be most valuable to those not familiar with the work of Redfield or Murphy; as a synergistic addition to their work, there's not much new.