Home :: Books :: Health, Mind & Body  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body

History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Simple Feeling of Being : Visionary, Spiritual, and Poetic Writings

The Simple Feeling of Being : Visionary, Spiritual, and Poetic Writings

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $10.17
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wilber: From One Taste to Infinity
Review: Wilber's students have done a wonderful job editing his previously published works. He is indeed the most provacative figure in contemporary philosophy. I have read all his works and this edition is a wonderful sequal to One Taste. His pointing out instructions are what I have been yearning to experience and I recommend this book highly, as with all of Wilber's other works. Brilliant, enlightening, and challenging. I can only say, to all my Dharma Friends, treasure this man as a living Bodhisattva.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: As nourishing to read all at once or a few pages at a time
Review: Expertly written by Ken Wilber (the prolific author of nineteen books on philosophy and psychology, as well as the developer of the "theory of everything" that blends wisdom from Eastern spirituality and Western science), The Simple Feeling Of Being: Embracing Your True Nature is an assembly of inspirationa, mystical, and informative passages drawn from his many works. These vivid, bite-sized vignettes of enlightenment offer brief glimpses into a larger fulfillment of purpose and the long path to emotional and spiritual well-being. As nourishing to read all at once or a few pages at a time, immersion of any duration in the pages of The Simple Feeling Of Being promotes a meditative sensation true to its title and is a recommended additon personal and academic supplemental reading lists for students of Eastern and Western philosophy systems.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Pointing Out What Is Always Already Just This
Review: The Simple Feeling of Being: Embracing Your True Nature by Ken Wilber is a compilation of the essential elements of Wilber's "poetic" writing. Many excerpts are taken from the end of sections, chapters, or books, where he reminds the reader that we are all aspects of Radiant Spirit - All-That-Is - as pointed out in every authentic nondual tradition. The main thrust of this opus reveals that the complexities of his integral theory are _always_ a means toward an end: awakening to who and what we really are.

In short, the simple feeling of being is about "what is" "always already" "just this."

Remarkable! Simple.

Four of his students - Mark Palmer, Sean Hargens, Vipassana Esbjörn, and Adam Leonard - assembled this "greatest hits" compilation. I really enjoyed seeing some of my favorite excerpts from various books in a new context. Readers of his books will likely find this to be the case, too. A relatively easy read, there's no need to worry about long endnotes, complex diagrams, or overly long technical explications.

Thus, we are treated to an array of Wilber's poetic riffs on concepts like the Witness, spirit-in-action, immediate awareness, passionate philosophy, always already, being-in-the-world, One Without A Second, and the brilliant clarity of ever-present awareness. There are also excerpts from The Collected Works, forewords to lesser-known books by other integral thinkers, and more obscure writings.

Moreover, there is a Memoirs chapter of personal material that casts Wilber in a human and vulnerable light. My favorite excerpt is still when he comes to terms with his second wife's - Treya - approaching death in a German beer hall, drinking, crying, and dancing with complete strangers whose compassion and acceptance allow his many conflicting feelings to surface.

The Simple Feeling of Being is a tour de force by one of the great integral philosophers of our era. Echoing three decades of Wilber's nondual experience, research, and personal meditation practices, it is _relentless_ in pushing one's awareness back into itSelf, towards its ineffable Source. In this sense, it is closer to One Taste than A Theory of Everything or A Brief History of Everything.

While I wouldn't recommend it as a first book to those just beginning to explore the details of Ken's integral theory, I heartily recommend it to anyone interested in a lucid, mindful, and passionate pointing out of "what is" "always already" "just this." Regardless of what path, practices, or philosophical background we come from, Wilber's integral poetry speaks directly to who and what we really are.

Perhaps this is the first in a series of compilations based on various aspects of Ken's work?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Simple.....
Review: zakmeg@ecoisp.com

Writing as someone who's read everything of Wilber's, I can attest that this book is a welcome addition to Wilber's corpus. The volume is finely edited and superbly designed. It is a compilation so it contains no previously unpublished materials (although it does bring to light some obscure but valuable passages). The book consists of nine sections into which some of the most powerful pieces of Wilber's writing have been collected and organized.

The section titles are as follows: The Witness; Memoirs; Spirit-in-Action; Immediate Awareness; Passionate Philosophy; Always Already; Being-in-the-World; One without a Second; The Brilliant Clarity of Ever-Present Awareness.

As can be gleaned from these headings, this is a book that distils and makes available a particular aspect of Wilber's vision- the mystical. While it could be argued that insight into the Divine is the catalyst behind all his writing; no one would claim that the freeing Dionysian energy dripping off the passages in this book seep into all his meticulous system building.

This book does not read like his others. It is not a detailed matrix of knowledge, not a blueprint of the possible, not a many-roomed mansion of human potentials. Rather, it is a simple and radiant testament. It is beautiful.

So, perhaps the most valuable aspect of the book is that it will not be misunderstood (although I'm sure some critic may be able to manage).

To conclude, if you're looking for an intro to Wilber's system don't look here (look instead to Integral Psychology or A Brief History of Everything). But, if you're looking for an invitation to party for One, this book will do that- throwing you back against your self and leaving you alone. But it may just take you from that alone to the Alone.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Simple.....
Review: zakmeg@ecoisp.com

Writing as someone who's read everything of Wilber's, I can attest that this book is a welcome addition to Wilber's corpus. The volume is finely edited and superbly designed. It is a compilation so it contains no previously unpublished materials (although it does bring to light some obscure but valuable passages). The book consists of nine sections into which some of the most powerful pieces of Wilber's writing have been collected and organized.

The section titles are as follows: The Witness; Memoirs; Spirit-in-Action; Immediate Awareness; Passionate Philosophy; Always Already; Being-in-the-World; One without a Second; The Brilliant Clarity of Ever-Present Awareness.

As can be gleaned from these headings, this is a book that distils and makes available a particular aspect of Wilber's vision- the mystical. While it could be argued that insight into the Divine is the catalyst behind all his writing; no one would claim that the freeing Dionysian energy dripping off the passages in this book seep into all his meticulous system building.

This book does not read like his others. It is not a detailed matrix of knowledge, not a blueprint of the possible, not a many-roomed mansion of human potentials. Rather, it is a simple and radiant testament. It is beautiful.

So, perhaps the most valuable aspect of the book is that it will not be misunderstood (although I'm sure some critic may be able to manage).

To conclude, if you're looking for an intro to Wilber's system don't look here (look instead to Integral Psychology or A Brief History of Everything). But, if you're looking for an invitation to party for One, this book will do that- throwing you back against your self and leaving you alone. But it may just take you from that alone to the Alone.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates