Rating: Summary: Half-Baked Qusai-Philosophy Review: Chapter two is worth reading, and so is chapter three. The rest of the book is unintelligble. Capra's cultural and historical analysis and argument are logically inconsistent with "the new physics." Furthermore, Capra offers no treatment of Chinese civilization and culture aside from exploiting pop Chinese mystical terms. Most of the book is a grand exercise in equivocation. I'm sorry to run contrary to so many other readers, but my opinion is that this book will not be remembered well--if at all.
Rating: Summary: Mindwalk Movie Review: Hey Kevin - you were looking for "Mindwalk", the movie based on this book (great movie). Head over to Reel.com and do a search for it. You should find it there. Enjoy.
Rating: Summary: A must read for anyone with an abundance of intelligence. Review: I had never heard of this book or the author, until I took a class at college and this was the textbook for the class. We had to read it, but as soon as I started it, it became a pleasurable experience and not an assignment. I couldn't put the book down and read it all within a week or so, much exceeding my deadline for the class. I don't think I have ever learned so much from one book, as I did with this one. Capra definitely knows what he is talking about. There has been a movie made that was based on this book, we watched it in class also, it provides a shorter, slightly simpler presentation of the ideas contained in the book. It is called "Mindwalk," but I have been unable to find it anywhere. Anyway, if you live in today's world, and you would love to have some kind of idea as to exactly what is happening to this world today, this book will be a great help.
Rating: Summary: A must read for anyone with an abundance of intelligence. Review: I had never heard of this book or the author, until I took a class at college and this was the textbook for the class. We had to read it, but as soon as I started it, it became a pleasurable experience and not an assignment. I couldn't put the book down and read it all within a week or so, much exceeding my deadline for the class. I don't think I have ever learned so much from one book, as I did with this one. Capra definitely knows what he is talking about. There has been a movie made that was based on this book, we watched it in class also, it provides a shorter, slightly simpler presentation of the ideas contained in the book. It is called "Mindwalk," but I have been unable to find it anywhere. Anyway, if you live in today's world, and you would love to have some kind of idea as to exactly what is happening to this world today, this book will be a great help.
Rating: Summary: Important messages Review: I think Fritjof Capra is making some very important observations in this book. Through his observations, the author states that Western Civilization is gradually approaching the climax of a major turning point in its evolution. He suggests that the cause of this is in our consciousness, a certain way we are seeing and understanding our experiences. This is leading to many of our present day environmental, social, political, and financial crises. We are all sitting on a treebranch that is gradually getting too heavy. Many modern theorists try to explain this phenomena but Capra articulates this in a way that many people can understand. This book as well as "The Ever-Transcending Spirit" by Toru Sato do a very fine job in trying to open the public eye to these issues. Both of these books are highly recommended for people who want to understand things from a wider, larger, and deeper perspective.
Rating: Summary: A brilliant and important book. Review: It's all here. Everything we ever needed to know to begin to change our world and ourselves. Totally brilliant. Many years in the making, this book covers a very wide spectrum of knowledge and is fascinating all the way through. Like The Tao of Physics, this book looks toward a world view that encompasses a balance of science and spirit. Capra is also not shy about deconstructing or critisizing popular economic and political mythology, which may disturb some readers, but he has the benefit of input from some of the greatest minds of our time and his analysis is unassailable. Female readers will probably appreciate his sensitivity and balanced approach to feminist perspectives as he discusses what's wrong with our world and what we can do to change things. My experience was that I read his other book "Uncommon Wisdom" first, which was in large part about Capra's experiences leading up to the writing of The Turning Point with the people and minds that inspired and enlightened him. Reading that first made all of The Turning Point flow even smoother. But Uncommon Wisdom is getting hard to find, so don't quibble. Read Turning Point no matter what! It is still 100% relevant to today and comes from a man who has been at the forefront of cutting edge thinking since the 1960s. This book is filled with Capra's take on insights obtained over the years from people like Werner Heisenberg, E.F. Schumacher, J. Krishnamurti, Hazel Henderson, Gregory Bateson, Pitirim Sorokin, Stanislav Grof, Margaret Locke, R.D. Laing, David Bohm, Adrienne Rich, Lyn Margulis, and many others. With The Turning Point, you're getting into the thoughts of a whole lot of brilliant thinkers, both male and female, that Capra has known personally or studied thoroughly. All of Capra's books are fascinating. Check out "The Web of Life" which is another 5 star book in my opinion.
Rating: Summary: The Paradigm Shift Review: The book has an extremely broad sweep and tries to get to the very root of our crisis as a civilisation. Building his case from a very logical historical perspective that covers the very essence of our academic and intellectual foundations, Capra argues for a paradigm shift in order to bring about sustainable development. The book is not a mere superficial recipe for survival but provides a blueprint for excellence in the new era of globalisation and economic change. Written in a lucid and fluent manner, the arguments flow systematically and call for a radical change in our approach to both seeing and solving problems. The book is both philosophical and practical in its approach and therein lies Capra's greatness. He has been able to weave the enormous research into a comprehensive tome that is as useful for the expert as it is fascinating for the layman. Highly recommended. Mohit Misra, Asian Institute Of Management, Manila.
Rating: Summary: An Outstanding Review and Critique of Reductionism Review: The Reductionist model of the world holds sway today with incredible tenacity and effect. Capra's tracing of it's history, implications and role in present society is outstanding. His advocacy for system thinking is likewise terrific. In the second portion of the book Capra attempts a prescriptive dialog in several areas. This prescriptive section was interesting and contains some good ideas, yet lacks the power of the first part. My recommendation: Everyone should read the first portion while the second is very optional.
Rating: Summary: Excellent questioning of commonplace ideas! Review: The text contains criticism on several commonly accepted concepts, from drugs advertising to public health to physics (almost a summary of The Tao of Physics) to agriculture to nuclear power, all extremely relevant topics to anyone.
As I graduated in Business Administration, one of chapters I liked most is about Economics - exposing the lack of proper concepts to start with, then the common weak and biased conclusions reached based on those weak and biased concepts. Ecology discussions are also great, though alarming - but I think few people can stay calm reading about that in any media today.
The title refers to a bigger idea, that of an overall crisis and upcoming transformation of our society. The "jump" from criticism of specific issues (above) to this conclusion is highly subjective, and so many will disagree to it. Even if you do disagree, read the specifics anyway; they are still interesting.
It's also wonderfully written; in almost every paragraph you can take out one or two thoughts. I ended up underlining most of the book.
I highly recommend it. The exercise of questioning our concepts helps understanding. Even if you reach other conclusions yourself, it's still worthy to question!
Rating: Summary: Ditto Austin Review: This is a critical book in my collection of research; artifacts which contain clues for redefining the way we interact with each other and do business. I find it curious that many physicists I talk to denounce Capra's work. So be it. His message is not for them. While preparing an industry presentation to help a bunch of left-brained technologists think in right-brained terms, I relied heavily on Capra's work along with some of the research I had already followed for Margaret Wheatley, the minds of the Santa Fe Institute (esp. Steward Kauffman) and Michael D. McMaster. I was fascinated, but yet not much surprised to find that many of the analogies and issues I had already woven into my presentation were key components of Capra's thoughts (the "failure" of Western medicine models, finding a balance like riding a bicycle). His work continued to support my conclusions that the optimization of all conditions is to focus on the "middle"...not the exact middle, but an ever fluctuating point that optimizes the "poles". It's not about focusing on success while hiding failures, but on celebrating both to capture the optimal between: creativity. In organizational structures, it's not about creating structures for order to avoid chaos. It's about celebrating and supporting mechanisms to optimize the in-between: complexity. In technology, it's not about the objects or the data; it's about the relationships between which define dynamic assemblies of possibilities. Individually they have limited worth; collectively the possibilities are exponential. This has already been confirmed by the lessons we've learned from the behaviors of Internet economies.
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