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The Psychology of Man's Possible Evolution

The Psychology of Man's Possible Evolution

List Price: $9.00
Your Price: $8.10
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Potentially life changing: explosive knowledge within...
Review: I just scrolled through the reviews and am pleased to see divergent views, regardless of how misguided they may be.

But. . . Laws of Manu? Cult? Wha-a-a. . . ?

All of O's writing is top-notch. True or false? Was he "right" or "wrong?" Who could possibly know. I can say, however, that his words have a quality that invariably focuses my mind and makes the madness and poison of the Tom Consumer world seem manageable.

Either one gets this point, or one does not. There is no point in trying to convince anyone in this regard. O realized that he was alive and he ran with it. He put something out there and I am here to report that it was worthwhile. Thanks P.D.

There's a cut-off point in life where one realizes that what is regarded as "normal" is all one big farce: law, business, carefully manufactured consent. . . Some people make the cut-off. Others still deal in fear and guilt. No point in debating with those who fall short, though it's interesting to see them display their "vision" in a forum such as this.

As soon as you see someone wax intellectual on this, showing off "credentials" and using "philosophical" language, lean back and have a good laugh. You'll know it's time when you feel the skin tightening around your skull.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Gurdjieff Primer
Review: In spite of his difficulty in accepting Gurdjieff as an authentic teacher Ouspensky kept in contact with Gurdjieff from 1915 until their last meeting in France 1930. He started lecturing the 'system' already in the twenties in Constantinople and continued until close to his death in 1947.

(By the way I have yet to see a negative review with an e-mail address!)

When you take this book for what it is - a short introduction to the psychology of an extensive 'system for personal development' - then it certainly serves its purpose. The book was written to be read aloud to people waiting for Ouspensky to start his lectures. His audiences ranged from just a handful of people to some hundreds.

'The Psychology' gives you an overview of the psychology of Gurdjieff's teaching.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Laying to rest the great lie of the Code of Manu
Review: In this work Ouspensky perpetuates an historical confusion that vitiates his presentation of the so-called 'Work' and the 'Fourth Way' by injecting his obsessive concern with the antiquated law of caste and the Code of Manu. The claims for the esotericism of the Work, derivative from Sufism, whatever their merits, are needlessly and quite egregiously burderned with this aura of the archaic Russian reactionary. Ouspensky's almost de Maistrean viewpoint, so popular among oblivious liberal westerners lured into this esoteric hunger by its beguiling inuendoes, contains the absurd suggestion that spiritual esotericism condones and sanctifies one of the most oppressive exploitations in history. Check the history here, unvarnished, and the place of this thinking in the destruction of the Indian Buddhist world. The Code of Manu is an impostor, and springs from the post-Buddhist consolidation of the brahmins whose legacy was to make spiritual equality seem anomalous, when it was always fundamental. Such thinking emerging in the context of early twentieth century fascism was, and is, provocative in the extreme, and should be laid to rest.
What is surprising is the inability of many adherents of this so-called spiritual path to face the simple reality that the classic spiritual paths were and are more compatible with a basic democratic attitude than otherwise. The reason is desperately simple, these ways prosper better in an open society!
Never feel obligated to take this nonsense seriously.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: if you recognize its worth this book is invaluable
Review: Some people have very negative opinions of Ouspensky and his books but for reasons that rarely have anything to do with the books themselves or the knowledge they contain. Usually they are associating everything with a bad experience they had in one cult or another that probably exploited all or some of the knowledge in books like the Psychology of Man's Possible Evolution, or, they're working from some uniquely conceived intellectual fetish like the 'Laws of Manu' and how their tradition is attempting to renew itself and strike terror into Democratic Man, or whatever... There's nothing about the Laws of Manu in this book by Ouspensky, nor is there anything having to do with cults or cult manipulation. The book itself explains very clearly the basic psychological side of what has come to be known as the Work, which is simply the universal ideas and practices of inner, spiritual development put into a very clear and precise and practical language. Aside from its unique terminology it is the inner meaning and goals of the New Testament, Stoic philosophy and some Buddhist literature (just to name a few examples from the full spectrum of universal influences...) This book doesn't contain the cosmological side of the Work which provide the metaphor and models for understanding the psychological side of the Work, but that can be found in Ouspensky's other major books the Fourth Way and In Search of the Miraculous. All these books require real effort in the area of study to learn the language that they contain as-well-as enough of a development in your life in the areas of physical activity, creative activity and the absorbtion of the lowest to the highest influences in the realms of art, philosophy, music, imaginative literature, history, religion and science. At first you're fighting your own ignorance. Later you fight your own laziness. The ultimate goal is to, in a very practical and real way, build your inner, spiritual body which requires conscious efforts in the right direction (a right direction that it is very possible to find on your own without the 'guidance' of a group or so-called school, in fact Ouspensky himself said late in his life that this Work could be learned on one's own without a school ['school' as that word is understood by the common schools associated with the Fourth Way, yet in the Work 'school' has a higher meaning as well, and is found in your everyday surroundings and the friction of going up against what in the Work is called the General Law...]) Learning a book like the Psychology of Man's Possible Evolution puts you on the road to the whole experience.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: if you recognize its worth this book is invaluable
Review: Some people have very negative opinions of Ouspensky and his books but for reasons that rarely have anything to do with the books themselves or the knowledge they contain. Usually they are associating everything with a bad experience they had in one cult or another that probably exploited all or some of the knowledge in books like the Psychology of Man's Possible Evolution, or, they're working from some uniquely conceived intellectual fetish like the 'Laws of Manu' and how their tradition is attempting to renew itself and strike terror into Democratic Man, or whatever... There's nothing about the Laws of Manu in this book by Ouspensky, nor is there anything having to do with cults or cult manipulation. The book itself explains very clearly the basic psychological side of what has come to be known as the Work, which is simply the universal ideas and practices of inner, spiritual development put into a very clear and precise and practical language. Aside from its unique terminology it is the inner meaning and goals of the New Testament, Stoic philosophy and some Buddhist literature (just to name a few examples from the full spectrum of universal influences...) This book doesn't contain the cosmological side of the Work which provide the metaphor and models for understanding the psychological side of the Work, but that can be found in Ouspensky's other major books the Fourth Way and In Search of the Miraculous. All these books require real effort in the area of study to learn the language that they contain as-well-as enough of a development in your life in the areas of physical activity, creative activity and the absorbtion of the lowest to the highest influences in the realms of art, philosophy, music, imaginative literature, history, religion and science. At first you're fighting your own ignorance. Later you fight your own laziness. The ultimate goal is to, in a very practical and real way, build your inner, spiritual body which requires conscious efforts in the right direction (a right direction that it is very possible to find on your own without the 'guidance' of a group or so-called school, in fact Ouspensky himself said late in his life that this Work could be learned on one's own without a school ['school' as that word is understood by the common schools associated with the Fourth Way, yet in the Work 'school' has a higher meaning as well, and is found in your everyday surroundings and the friction of going up against what in the Work is called the General Law...]) Learning a book like the Psychology of Man's Possible Evolution puts you on the road to the whole experience.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Power Packed in this small volume
Review: This book, a little over 100 pages, is packed with Ouspensky's philosophy. This book might be a good place to start if one is trying to evaluate Ouspensky to decide whether or not to read the larger (in number of pages) books "The Fourth Way" and "In Search of the Miraculous". I own both of these other books and have just started reading "Miraculous". I can see why many prefer Ouspensky's writings over Gurdjieff himself.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Fourth Way Explained
Review: This little book is one of those that is worth its weight in diamond. If you are on the fence about it - buy it. You owe it to yourself to search out and develope an understanding of these powerful ideas.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Potentially life changing: explosive knowledge within...
Review: When you have had your first 'education' by the way of years of "ordinary" life; when you have been exposed to thousands of works of literature, art, science, religion--and these have created a hunger in you; at a certain point, you may be ready to receive a certain quality of knowledge. When you do, when you recognize its value and if you apply it to your daily life, you yourself can truly change. This book, in the hands of one who seeks, can be a key to the start of a path to a larger and richer world.

How well do you *really* know yourself? Are you willing to go digging? The world is waiting, and a man named Piotr Demianovich Ouspensky saw fit to help you know both it, and yourself, in ways you never guessed.

Yes, there are books that can truly change lives. This is one of them. Do not read if your aim is only to remain comfortable. I wish you the best on your Way.


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