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Rating: Summary: unique joy Review: a razzle dazzle trip through math, mysticism and madness that will surely make the poet rejoice while the "rational" scientist churns. Among McKenna's work, I find this one to require the greatest stretch or leap of the imagination - which makes it one of my favorites!To fully enjoy and understand the brilliance of McKenna, one must open up their intuition and greatest capacity for open-mindedness. We are dealing with visionaries musing at the extremes and blissing out with philosophic rapture or torture at almost every turn. These are experiences way beyond the "realities" most will ever know. Another remarkable capacity of Terence was his ability to spin the words in a way that adventurously captures the essence of the experience while entertaining his readers literally BEYOND BELIEF! As for the entheogen-cynics that knocked McKenna: He had more insight and made more contribution than all the cynics put together. Long live his indomitable spirit!
Rating: Summary: a title for my review Review: I enjoyed this book tremendously. When combined with other reading materials, I think this book gaines value. The authors give a general overview into what the popular world would refer to as "mystic". This is a good book to read for a general reconfirmation of quasi-cosmology. The math is a bit strewn together, and there are many leaps of faith, but all in all the book presents a glimpse of the magic which can be harnessed by everyone one of us, but the journey is taken on by only a few. According to the authors, however, everyone will soon be aware that the journey was always taking place.
Rating: Summary: ...has gone to rejoin Dr.Leary-in the sky Review: Like Castanada, he believed plant extracts..like psilocybin, had transformed mankind..& have been largely destroyed,in Amazon. He died of brain cancer at 53, 4-6-2000
Rating: Summary: Entheogens: Professional Listing Review: Terence McKenna and his brother relate their experience with a South American psychoactive plant, and the mind-blowing (mind-blown?) insights that they gained from it. The I Ching's 'King Wen sequence' of the 64 hexagrams is interpreted as a digital code, and in fractal geometry-like fashion, concatenated onto itself to create a wave function for the entirety of the universe, with its peaks and minima related to rises and falls in the rate of 'novelty' in reality as different dimensional realities interpenetrate in the McKennas' version of 'the end of the world as we know it.'
Rating: Summary: Great hypothesis, flawed delivery Review: The authors have a great hypothesis regarding the relationship between consciousness, neurochemistry, quantum mechanics, and the I Ching, but they get bogged down in a writing style that seems aimed at a very narrow segment. There is no need to write in such a way as to confuse readers. If they had decided to write a book more accessible to the average reader in its style, I believe that their ideas would be more widely known and believed today. As it is, I doubt that more than several hundred people have any idea of the connections that they have made. Overall, just a shame to lose such a great idea.
Rating: Summary: pseudo-science for seared minds Review: The authors present some interesting theories here, but fail to answer the most important question underlying the propagation of any new theory: 'so what?' In other words, why should we care if the universe is holographic, and more importantly, why should we care if it's all going to end one day? Few people today, including even fundamentalist Christians, believe either we or the universe will last forever. The discovery of the existence of dinosaurs in the early 19th century put an end to all notions of the permanence of species, and toppled religion from its cosmological place of primacy. Impermanence of our earth and the human race is now accepted by both secularists and the religiously inclined alike.
As a piece of very baroque art, this is an interesting read. If the authors could have stepped back and created a frame of relevance for the whole, this might have become a truly influential book.
As it turns out, it has merely become an entertainment for those who enjoy the recreational use of psychedelics. Judging from the number of spelling and grammar errors in the rave Amazon reviews for this book here, one wonders just how critically such readers can evaluate McKenna's theories.
McKenna's 'time wave zero' theory was so complex no one could understand it but him, which left him high and dry with anyone skeptical of the theory, and left him surrounded by all followers and no questioners: a recipe for the negation of real inquiry in the end.
Rating: Summary: CYBERETHNOPHARMACOLOGICALLY FLAWLESS! Review: This book is in short, in my opinion is the best book to read if your interested in the more technical aspect of hallucinogens, hard to grapple with theories of reality, and mathematical bliss on subjects which have no previous advent to! Terence and Dennis Mckenna are the foremost spokesmen's on the Psychedelic experience, Terence Mckenna being more philosophical in his understandings, and Dennis Mckenna, being a ethnobotanist, and neurobiologist, presents work on models of drug activity that should be redefining this field! They Thoroughly cover Psychedelic's in the shamanic sense, cover their trip to the amazon and the understanding that came out of that applied to these hard to conceive theories such as the King Wen Sequence as a Quantified Modular Hierarchy, and Temporal Hierarchy and Cosmology (I-Ching) Which leads me to my second rave, Terence's Timewave Zero Theory, coinsiding with the mayan calander endate, with all the mathematics in order to support his theory, its compelling what's come out of that since. Dennis and Terence are artists with complex words and ideas, presenting them into painfully easy forms of causation "The total unity of an event can only be understood with reference to the totality of process, that is, to the whole of nature. Thus, in this view a way is cleared not only for the implicit reference to past events to be found in the formulation of scientific laws but for our own psychological unity of memory, immediate realization, and anticipation" In a way not imposing change, but merely the vantage point on science, is that science has polarities and dogmas inherient in their own practices, and terence skillfully shows these with ease. This book perhaps to complex in chemistry, math and radical yet supported ideas for the average reader, yet i think a must read for those who have an interest in either the Mind, Hallucinogens, I Ching, Science, Mathematics, Temporal Resonance, Epistomolgy, Quantum Physics, and many others realting to these!
Rating: Summary: read the review Review: This is a funny book. I've had trips like that. And sometimes they make that much sense but it comes down to how much you want to trust any dream. I love Mckenna as he wades out into the lets figure things out pool because like Colombus he usually ends up in the wrong places and names it whatever he feels. Right or wrong he did it and you probably didn't. Read this book and watch the Mckenna boys fall apart.
Rating: Summary: Revolutionary! THE Future of Psychology! Review: _The Invisible Landscape_ by Terence and Dennis Mckenna is a highly modernized, up-to-date version of Jungian psychotherapy with an emphasis on brain-chemistry at the molecular level. Mckenna has fascinating theories on the nuances and inner workings of the subatomic particles within the DNA molecules in the human brain. According to Mckenna, the behavior of the atoms within our DNA actually determines the very nature of our conscious existence. Specifically, the patterns in which the electrons orbit the atomic nuclei in our DNA atoms form an Analog representation of what we are seeing; the electrons themselves move in such a manner as to create a type of morse-code which translates our sense perceptions into conscious being. This "analog theory of the brain" represents the crowning achievement of this book. The vibrations of the subtomic particles in our brain create reality in the same way in which digital and analog code create images on a computer screen. But all of this has yet to be proved. Nevertheless, _The Invisible Landscape_ is a modern masterpiece of speculative philosophy/psychology. It represents the outermost reaches of far-seeing speculative theory. It is, therefore, a welcome departure from more conservative forms of thinking. Terence Mckenna also tries his hand at claivoyant soothsaying, providing the reader with his own unique doomsday prophecy loosely based on the hexagrams of the I-Ching. This so-called "timewave zero" graph maps the cycles of cultural and social "novelty" mankind has experienced over history. Suffice it to say that this theory is still open to debate. Overall, the analog theory of mind, along with the "holographic theory of mind", make this book worth reading. _The Invisible Landscape_ is a hidden gem of psychological theory that should not be overlooked. Even though its emphasis is on complex molecular theories, it is quite readable and entertaining. It is geared toward the literary mind as well as the scientific mind, so I would recommend it to any ambitious reader regardless of their experience in neurology or chemistry.
Rating: Summary: Revolutionary! THE Future of Psychology! Review: _The Invisible Landscape_ by Terence and Dennis Mckenna is a highly modernized, up-to-date version of Jungian psychotherapy with an emphasis on brain-chemistry at the molecular level. Mckenna has fascinating theories on the nuances and inner workings of the subatomic particles within the DNA molecules in the human brain. According to Mckenna, the behavior of the atoms within our DNA actually determines the very nature of our conscious existence. Specifically, the patterns in which the electrons orbit the atomic nuclei in our DNA atoms form an Analog representation of what we are seeing; the electrons themselves move in such a manner as to create a type of morse-code which translates our sense perceptions into conscious being. This "analog theory of the brain" represents the crowning achievement of this book. The vibrations of the subtomic particles in our brain create reality in the same way in which digital and analog code create images on a computer screen. But all of this has yet to be proved. Nevertheless, _The Invisible Landscape_ is a modern masterpiece of speculative philosophy/psychology. It represents the outermost reaches of far-seeing speculative theory. It is, therefore, a welcome departure from more conservative forms of thinking. Terence Mckenna also tries his hand at claivoyant soothsaying, providing the reader with his own unique doomsday prophecy loosely based on the hexagrams of the I-Ching. This so-called "timewave zero" graph maps the cycles of cultural and social "novelty" mankind has experienced over history. Suffice it to say that this theory is still open to debate. Overall, the analog theory of mind, along with the "holographic theory of mind", make this book worth reading. _The Invisible Landscape_ is a hidden gem of psychological theory that should not be overlooked. Even though its emphasis is on complex molecular theories, it is quite readable and entertaining. It is geared toward the literary mind as well as the scientific mind, so I would recommend it to any ambitious reader regardless of their experience in neurology or chemistry.
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