Average customer rating:
- Castaneda
- To Carlos, with gratitude
- buy, buy, buy
- Un-Reviewable
- Ambiguous at Best
|
Separate Reality
Carlos Castaneda
Manufacturer: Washington Square Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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Castaneda, Carlos
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The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge
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Tales of Power
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Fire from Within
ASIN: 0671732498 |
Book Description
"A man of knowledge is free...he has no honor, no dignity, no family, no home, no country, but only life to be lived."
--don Juan
In 1961 a young anthropologist subjected himself to an extraordinary apprenticeship to bring back a fascinating glimpse of a Yaqui Indian's world of "non-ordinary reality" and the difficult and dangerous road a man must travel to become "a man of knowledge." Yet on the bring of that world, challenging to all that we believe, he drew back.
Then in 1968, Carlos Castaneda returned to Mexico, to don Juan and his hallucinogenic drugs, and to a world of experience no man from our Western civilization had ever entered before.
Customer Reviews:
Castaneda.......2007-07-01
Not my favorite of his books but still worth reading it. Mentions many of the discussed topics to follow as Castaneda takes you further on the journey of self-discovery. It opens up a new field as he reaches out with this book. Strays away further from the beaten path of hallucinigens and all and starts to elucidate on the subject matter on hand - sorcery. Be careful, not for the faint of heart.
To Carlos, with gratitude.......2007-06-22
Carlos Castaneda was one of the most controversial writers of the twentieth century. Some in academia branded him a fraud for claiming his stories were biographical rather than fiction, while lauding him as a great novelist for exposing a mass audience to otherwise inaccessible philosophical abstractions they claimed were largely plagiarized. Each of his works is a piece of a larger puzzle, which makes it impossible to critique any one book without addressing the larger context into which it fits.
His first two books, "Teachings of Don Juan" and "A Separate Reality" describe experiences induced by ingesting psychotropic hallucinogenics prepared by a Yaqui Indian shaman from Sonora, Mexico he called don Juan Matus, and accounted for his becoming a guru to a generation seeking short cuts to spiritual enlightenment, as well as his lifelong interest in the relationship between perception and reality, a theme now explored in many popular books on consciousness and quantum physics. Unfortunately, these books remain his best selling works, in spite of Castaneda refuting their importance in his later works. Readers would be best served to skip these and avoid the risk of being turned off to Castaneda and missing the more stimulating works that followed.
His third and fourth works were "Journey to Ixtlan" and "Tales of Power." In Ixtlan he admits to over-estimating the value of his drug experiences, which caused him to overlook the more profound teachings of don Juan which became the focus of future writings. What emerges is a spiritual discipline dating back to the Pre-Colombian Toltec sorcerers of Latin America, culminating with don Juan's departure from our world, effectively ending Castaneda's direct affiliation.
In his fifth and sixth works "Second Ring of Power" and "Eagles Gift" Castaneda suffers strange flashbacks of what seem to be memory fragments of events he is unable to fit into any logical time sequence. In his seventh and eighth works, "Fire From Within" and "Power of Silence," Castaneda succeeds in reconstructing his lost memories, which derive from teachings previously administered by don Juan while Castaneda was in a "heightened" state of awareness.
In books nine and ten, "Art of Dreaming" and "Active Side of Infinity," Castaneda focuses on what he describes as inorganic predators from another dimension, some having the power to imprison humanity in "ordinary reality" so they can feed on the dark emotional energies we produce when succumbing to the negative thoughts they insert into our minds.
In later years several seemingly substantiating works appeared by two of Castaneda's female apprentices, Taisha Abelar and Florinda Donner-Grau. In addition, two scathing exposés were also published by two of his ex-wives. The first, "Magical Journey with Carlos Castaneda" by first wife, Margaret Runyon, offers little corroboration, since her marriage pre-dates the time when the bulk of Castaneda's adventures were claimed to have occurred. While steadfast that Castaneda was a sorcerer, she doubts the existence of don Juan, even claiming authorship of many of the concepts Castaneda ascribed to him.
The second, and more credible work, is "Sorcerer's Apprentice," by well-known writer Amy Wallace, daughter of the late best selling novelist Irving Wallace. Here again, we find little corroboration since the time of the events she describes is well after the period when Castaneda's relationship with don Juan is alleged to occur. What the book does provide is a troubling look inside Castaneda's final years, a picture of descent into what seems sexual addiction and possibly madness, leaving one to wonder if Castaneda was just one cup of cool-aid short of a Jonestown.
Many have asked why I put any stock whatsoever in Castaneda. A story from my autobiography, "The Vortex" may shed some light. A year before Castaneda published his first book I had an experience that would remain a mystery until Castaneda published "Power of Silence" twenty years later.
For a brief time, in my youth, I became a practicing Muslim, meticulously performing the complex prayer ritual five times a day. Then one night, sitting in my car, frustrated and complaining at not being able to find the address of my next sales appointment, something inside me snapped. It was as if some part of me had disconnected from my body and assumed control, lecturing me about my lack of discipline. A profound calm settled over me, rendering me simultaneously detached and engaged. For two days my sales figures soared. It was as if no one could say no to me. On the evening of the second day I decided to put my new state of being to the acid test by visiting my parents. Their behavior was so uncharacteristically supportive I hardly recognized them. It was enough to convince me that I was now living in an altered reality. But by the following morning I had returned to "normal." So distracting had this event been that I completely forgot to perform my Muslim prayers, and in fact, never did so again.
Twenty years later, in a chapter of "Power of Silence" entitled "Place of No Pity" Castaneda describes a very similar experience. In the aftermath of the event don Juan explains that humans are like televisions stuck on a channel called "self-preoccupation," lacking the energy to tune into any of the vast array of other channels available to us. To change channels, he explains, we first need to accumulate energy, by practicing rituals that are deliberate, precise and repetitious. Do this long enough and eventually our stored energy precipitates a shift to a channel where self-importance and self pity become impossible. Once this happens we connect with the force that controls the entire universe, a force don Juan called "intent," and everything can be bent to our will and even more channels can be opened, assuming we remember to keep practicing the rituals that save our energy.
This one realization alone was enough to inspire me to dedicate my autobiography "To Carlos, with gratitude."
Maxwell Austin van Lack, Author of The Vortex: A True Story of Passion and Karma
buy, buy, buy.......2007-06-11
Unless you are a die hard christian who could not ever consider any other possibilities for life except the one in the Bible then this is for you. I loved it you will too.
Un-Reviewable.......2007-05-28
To write a review for this book, positive or negative, is fruitless and futile. For the most part, readers will begin with some sort of inherent bias. Whether you have a predilection for psychedelic drugs or you think the entire premise is a sham, this is not a book that can be reviewed in the standard way.
Whatever you take from this book, regardless of whether that is nothing at all or a newly-inspired way of living, I do think one point must be made. Whether or not don Juan Matus was real or fictional, and whether or not any of Castaneda's experiences are credible, I think one must realize that this book is not a bible. There is present what one may construe as advice for living, but primarily this is a first-hand account of a set of experiences that most likely nobody else has or will come to undergo. I personally think it is beautifully and convincingly written, and I think it would take a truly rare person to replicate any of Castaneda's experiences, real or imagined. Impossible? Perhaps not. But I think that, unfortunately or not, this is brain candy for virtually all readers, and cannot be anything more.
Ambiguous at Best.......2007-01-08
Story of an American anthropologist's 1960s experiences with the possibly fictional Indian shaman "Don Juan Matus." Reads a little like a cross between a research log and ethnopoetry. In their conversations Don Juan constantly challenges Western ideas of knowledge and perception. Carlos can look but he really does not "see." "You don't see, you only look at the surface of things." He tells Carlos that when one "sees," one sees human beings as "fibers of light." When the two discuss accidents, Don Juan says, "No man can control everything around him, but not everything is an unavoidable accident. Life for a warrior is an exercise in strategy." The text is strewn with other examples of magical thinking. Now primitive people do frequently engage in magical thinking, but so do people who have ingested mind altering drugs. We don't know whether we are hearing the actual words and thoughts of a genuine shaman, or the ramblings of a 1960 UCLA anthropology student in a drug induced haze.
If you like 1960s counter-cultural philosophy, you'll love this book. For those more grounded in reality, you find reading it at least frustrating, if not repulsive. One thing, anthropologists, especially the 1960s variety, had a very distorted picture of pre state people. They thought that bands, tribes and chiefdoms were largely peaceful people. We now know the very opposite is true as they existed in an almost constant state of savage warfare. This whole story lacks credibility.
Average customer rating:
- Brunner's Art Does It All
- popculture and beyond
- Great story, but avalible elsewhere.
- Could have been magical but isn't.....
- Beautiful art, overdone plots and a lack of cohesion.
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Dr. Strange: A Separate Reality TPB
Steve Englehart
Manufacturer: Marvel Comics
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ASIN: 078510836X |
Customer Reviews:
Brunner's Art Does It All.......2006-02-02
The art and the color win this series, plus a little Eastern religion thrown in. Dr. Strange overcomes the personal fear of his imperiling situation, which is crucial to his struggle to get back to the "real" universe with his girlfriend Clea, manservant Wong, and life as he knows it. The underestimated opponent Silver Dagger is a good physically agile foil to Strange's retiring meditative nature, and Strange's "reunion" with his allies, the Defenders, adds a unique twist. The plot is a little simplistic once you get over being awed by Brunner's artwork, but I first read it when I was 12 years old and it was right at my level then. Each comic book, too, had to have a limited amount of closure until the next issue to avoid too much frustration (back then a month was a long time to wait), so that adds to the excitement--you think it's over but it's not.
My favorite line in the whole saga is: "Do you not yet underSTAND that I am a Sorcerer Supreme???"
popculture and beyond.......2005-09-04
This book is a collection of early Dr. Strange stories Marvel Premiere 9-10 and 12-14 as well as Dr. Strange (vol 2) 1,2, 4,5. I dont think they hold a candle to contemporary stories, but if your looking for a bit of nostalgia its a decent read. These stories set the stage for Dr. Strange's transformation from apprentice to sorcerer supreme. My recomendation for someone looking for a good story in this genre would be Neil Gaiman's Sandman, the most recent Captain Marvel books, and the Earth X series.
Great story, but avalible elsewhere........2005-07-11
This is a great story, however it's avalible in Essential Dr Strange vol 2, for about $5 cheaper, plus you get tons of other Dr Strange stories.
Could have been magical but isn't............2004-11-15
I am a big fan of Dr. Strange. It is wonderful to see the mystical and magical brought into this format. My one complaint is the sad small minded treatment of other world views in these 1970's reprints. For instance, by the time you finish the second story you find that one of the villans is called "The Living Buddha" with a mock drawing to go along. Could you imagine a comic with "The Living Christ" as a villan? Then there is a picture of evil taking over in the world. You see a Christian church in flames while a pagan symbol rises as a sign of evil. It would have nice to see this team learn a little of other world views before bashing them. The world has enough of this misunderstanding.
Beautiful art, overdone plots and a lack of cohesion........2004-07-12
The obvious selling point of this volume is the MAGNIFICENT and unique art of Frank Brunner, who worked in comics only a short time (Why do so many of the talents who come into comics with a nearly complete style seem to stay such a short time, ala Brunner, James Sherman, Mike Nasser, even Barry Windsor-Smith for a long time). Brunner's art was simply a decade ahead of it's time, at least, and this is probably the first time it has even been showcased on paper that befits it.
The stories are a mixed bag here. To be sure, the plots are about as cosmic as cosmic gets, but the execution isn't always. It always seemed to me that the best Dr. Strange stores (which are invariably the Steve Ditko ones) succeed because they emphasize the humanity of the hero, even if only through the mechanism of stressing how INHUMAN his opponent is. That's not really the case here, as he is very detached from his humanity during this era. There is some nice interaction with the Ancient One, but even that isn't as emotional as it ought to have been for someone who was Strange's de facto "second father".
The plots themselves borrow a bit from Lovecraft and even Michael Moorcock at times, which seems logical for Doctor Strange, I suppose. The only really weak story here is the one with a magician who essentially "becomes God" (or becomes absorbed BY God, depending on how you read it). The tales seems to jump about ten magnitudes of cosmic at the last minute without any natural flow. One minute the guy is a ho-hum villain, the next he's becoming God. Huh?
That aside, this is a really fine collection of Brunner art and, certainly, some of Steve Englehart's most...innovative... stories.
Average customer rating:
- ...quietly intelligent debut novel...
- Rather Uninspired Coming-Of-Age Novel
- Coming of Age in America
- Portrait of a confused, alienated pre-teen
- A New Kind of Coming of Age Novel
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A Separate Reality: A Novel
Robert Marshall
Manufacturer: Carroll & Graf
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 0786717157 |
Book Description
Set in the early 1970s, A Separate Reality is the story of Mark Grosfeld, a twelve-year-old growing up in Phoenix with politically active liberal Jewish parents. Mark, who is lonely and unhappy, meets Anna Voigt, a teacher who becomes his mentor. Anna, an ex-hippie poet, encourages Mark to write, and he becomes part of a circle of teenagers who meet at Anna’s house to smoke pot and read poetry. She introduces him to the Beats, Zen Buddhism and the popular pseudo-anthropologist, Carlos Castaneda, author of Journey to Ixtlan. Mark goes on a semi-comic suburban vision quest, trying to conduct his life according to the teachings he uncovers in the books he finds through Anna — most significantly, Castaneda’s. Mark soon discovers all these books share the belief that through a loss of “self” one can, somehow, transcend reality.
A Separate Reality is a novel about the risks and appeal of the desire to be perfect; a portrait of the artist as a young man in the Seventies.
Customer Reviews:
...quietly intelligent debut novel..........2007-03-18
"deeply sincere and ironic" ...I loved it! ....Debra Liese writing in The Literary Review describes it best: "This quietly intelligent debut novel about one lonely, creative adolescent's search for identity amid the indignities of middle-school life is precisely what most literary novels I've read this year are not: as deeply sincere as it is ironic. There are no clever turns of phrase here, nothing sardonic. Marshall's is a gentle, but progressively urgent interweaving of idea and emotion that, in its exquisite loyalty to the rhythms and patterns of thought, lays bare the contact of the conscious mind with the unconscious one; the tension between the real and the unreal. . . . Like Holden Caufield and adolescent narrators everywhere, Mark is painfully aware of falsity, but in Marshall's hands, this awareness is elevated to the level of a philosophical inquiry."
Rather Uninspired Coming-Of-Age Novel.......2007-02-14
I guess I must dissent from the glowing reviews of this book. There have been dozens of books like this since Michael Chabon's Mysteries of Pittsburgh where a young man grows up confused and picked on only to discover that he's gay. This novel begins in the present with a homosexual love scene then for some reason jumps back into the past where Marshall recalls his childhood in very close detail. It's not quite accurate to call this a "novel", for the detail is to particular to someone who's lived in the Phoenix area. But most important here is that there is no conflict here. The young man at the beginning of the book (which starts in New York) does not seem conflicted, worried, angry or anything that would compell him to remember his past back in Arizona. The reader moves from chapter to chapter simply absorbing detail, and that's what passes for conflict here.
Some readers will be drawn to this book, as was I, because of its use of the writings of Carlos Castaneda (and to a lesser degree, the Tao Te Ching). This I found to be the oddest aspect of the story. Marshall succumbs to the notion (common in fiction today since Orson Scott Card published ENDERS GAME) that children are preceptive, mature, and articulate. The narrative voice in A SEPARATE REALITY is that of a mature thirty-something man living in New York, but in going back to tell the story of a boy in Phoenix, Arizona, Marshall allows that boy to think and make judgments like a man. (This is what Card does in Ender's Game. His children--these are six and seven year-olds--speak and act like fifty-something men and women. Readers love this, but nowhere in the world do children do this except in American fiction.) I remember what it was like to be young, but I was nowhere as smart and observant as the boy in Marshall's book.
But, I guess, that's the attraction. The reader's who've posted here have pointed out the "perceptive" nature of this book. But I wonder how many pre-teens (or even teenagers) are totally savvy about their world. Most kids are inarticulate and confused most of the time. I found myself reading and just turning the pages. There was no reason for Castaneda to be quoted; no reason for the Tao Te Ching to be quoted. There was just no FIRE to this book. And most certainly the boy doesn't take much to heart from Castaneda's writings, other than the occasional quote, because he ends up being a rather stable, homosexual New York artist like the author.
This in itself isn't a bad thing. I just thought that there would be a reason for the author to tell his story . . . that SOMETHING caused all of this to come about. But there isn't. Read MYSTERIES OF PITTSBURGH if the coming-of-age as a gay male interests you. Or read A SEPARATE REALITY by Carlos Castaneda if the Toltec Wisdom system interests you.
Coming of Age in America.......2006-12-25
Marshall, Robert, "A Separate Reality", Carroll & Graf, 2006.
Coming of Age in America
Amos Lassen and Literary Pride
"A Separate Reality" by Robert Marshall is brilliant. Marshall tells the story of Mark Grosfield, a teem misfit growing up in Phoenix of the 1970s. He is a man and a boy, wise and not real bright, awkward and delicate and more than all else, he is complex. He is a wild man in thought and intelligent and creative. He is not easily understood by those around him and all of his pain and torture and misery of adolescence are captured here. He seeks spirituality, he wants guidance, and he rebels against it as he strives to find a place for himself.
Mark is the middle son of a politically active, Jewish intellectual family and suffers from self consciousness on hand and is very aware of the insincerity that surrounds him. He searches for the meaning of life and looks to his art teacher who nurtures his poetic talents and introduces him to the mysteries of Taoism, Carlos Castaneda and Buddhism.
Mark's quest for meaning is so much a part of him that it is hard to imagine him without it. Some of the issues he looks for meaning about are the dynamics of his family the death of his grandmother, his own homosexuality and the depth of his poetry. The words hr writes in his poems mirror his soul and provide him with a world where everything and anything can happen. His thoughts are almost existential and when he makes the statement that he "keep (s) thinking about not thinking", we get a clue to his personality. He sees himself as a reflection of himself and he aspires to live in the moment. He worries about the future and how it will affect him and wonders how people will think about him. He is funny, endearing and lovely and all of his complex parts build a guy whom you can't help but love (and most likely identify with).
The book also studies the dynamics of Mark's family. He loves his mother but knows that his feeling for her will not last; he is at odds with his father and can't seem to establish bonds with his sister. His family is e stereotypical Jewish liberals who dwell on the fate of the Rosenbergs, who cannot understand what to George McGovern's bid for the presidency. This is overwhelming to Mark who just cannot find the key to family harmony.
What "A Separate Reality" really is is a coming of age story as one kid tries to make the mundane and everyday happenings of the world in which he lives have some sort of meaning. Written in the stream of consciousness style of writing the author draws the reader into the narrative and shows how one can make sense of his life. It gives meaning to the idea of being one with the world on one hand and being at odds with it on the other.
This is a book to make you think--to consider what is really important in life and what really matters. There are passages of brilliance and this is a book to be thought about again and again. It is one of those books that scream me "Read Me" and you will be glad that you did.
Portrait of a confused, alienated pre-teen .......2006-12-20
Based on his own childhood in the early 1970's, author Marshall presents 12 year old Mark Grosfeld as a confused and socially-alienated pre-teen, product of a upper-middle-class liberal and political-savvy Jewish family, who had been closest to his understanding Nana (grandmother), recently deceased, and is somewhat intimidated by his grandfather. With his non-interest in sports or girls, Mark dreads his school, except for the oasis afforded by a hippie-like Art teacher, who encourages his poetry writing and gets him interested in reading books that explore the meaning of life, such as Carlos Castaneda's "Separate Reality", as well as studies about alternate forms of spirituality. The book meanders through young Mark's streams of consciousness as his daily life unfolds, punctuated by "reality checks" consisting of weekly visits with a pyschiatrist. Although the boy is clearly more eclectic and analytical than most boys his age, the novel does an excellent job of exploring the underlying factors that cause alienation as well as the resulting confusion connected with pressures by peers, teachers as well as well-meaning friends and family.
To be honest, I likely would have passed on reading "A Separate Reality: A Novel", if not for the fact that it is about a gay (though he didn't realize it at the time) boy growing up in Phoenix, although more than a decade before I arrived. The book is hardly a page turner, actually quite long (448 pages), prodding and psychologically complex, but is so well-written and thought-inspiring that I found myself not wanting to put it down. Not everyone's cup of tea, though I have no regrets in reading it. Four stars out of five.
A New Kind of Coming of Age Novel .......2006-10-19
Robert Marshall's wry, delicate prose rejects every cliche about boyhood, in search of fresh insights about family, the suburban West, childhood longing, and consciousness itself.
Average customer rating:
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A Separate Reality: Further Conversations with Don Juan
Carlos Castaneda
Manufacturer: Touchstone
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Castaneda, Carlos
| ( C )
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The Eagle's Gift
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ASIN: 0671210742 |
Average customer rating:
- A mystical spiritual journey
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A separate reality;: Further conversations with Don Juan
Carlos Castaneda
Manufacturer: Pocket Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
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Castaneda, Carlos
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General
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ASIN: B0006W0VY2 |
Customer Reviews:
A mystical spiritual journey.......2006-04-27
In his second book, Castaneda resumes his apprenticeship, determined to go deeper into Don Juan's world of sorcery. A Separate Reality is the record of a glorious mystical spiritual journey.
Average customer rating:
- Lessons in Sensemaking for Knowledge Workers
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Separate Reality
Carlos Castaneda
Manufacturer: Pocket Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
Shamanism
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ASIN: 0671507281 |
Customer Reviews:
Lessons in Sensemaking for Knowledge Workers.......2006-04-25
Carlos Castaneda, actually wrote a whole series of book on this one "journey" he had to learn about the secrets of peyote and to become a Man of Knowledge, as he phrases it in "A Seperate Reality".
The table of contents are quite simply:
* Introduction
* The Preliminaries of 'Seeing'
* The Task of 'Seeing'
* Epilogue
Some direct quotes from the book:
"We were talking about my interest in knowledge; but, as usual, we were on two different tracks. I was referring to academic knowledge that transcends experience, while he was talking about direct knowledge of the world." p.10
Carlos Castaneda was a graduate student in anthropology at UCLA gathering information on various medicinal herbs used by the Indians in Sonora, Mexico, when he met the old Yaqui Indian on which these books are based. More quotes from the introduction:
"Don Juan's method of teaching required an extraordinary effort on the part of the apprentice. In fact, the degree of participation and involvement needed was so strenuous that by the end of 1965 I had to withdraw from the apprenticeship. I can say now, with the perspective of five years that have elapsed, that at the time Don Juan's teachings had begun to pose a serious threat to my 'idea of the world'. I had begun to lose the certainty, which all of us have, that the reality of everyday life is something we can take for granted." p.13
"Apparently in this system of knowledge there was the possibility of making a semantic difference between 'seeing' and 'looking' as two distinct manners of perceiving. 'Looking' referred to the ordinary way in which we are accustomed to perceive the world, while 'seeing' entailed a very complex process by virtue of which a man of knowledge allegedly perceived the 'essence' of the things of the world." p.14
I find it difficult to stop quoting and I could go on forever this stuff is so relevant to what we now understand as the subject of sensemaking!
He talks about and defines concepts such as "sensible interpretation", "units of meaning" and "practitioner" (in modern terms a knowledge worker).
Average customer rating:
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3 PBs, Carlos Castaneda: Seeing Castaneda, Journey to Ixtlan, A Separate Reality
Carlos Castaneda
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Castaneda, Carlos
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ASIN: B000SSVFWG |
Product Description
1 Med Sz PB, 2 Small PBs
Average customer rating:
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Carlos Castaneda(the Teachings of Don Juan,a Separate Realty ,Journey to Ixtlan,tales of Power) (the teachings of don juan:A yaqui way of knowledge, journey to ixtlan :the lessons of don juan,tales of power,aseparate reality:further conversations with don juan)
Carlos Castaneda
Manufacturer: touchstone
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Castaneda, Carlos
| ( C )
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ASIN: B000UGD1XC |
Product Description
set of 4 books in case designed by Peter Schaumann
Average customer rating:
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Four (4) Books: The Teachings of Don Juan, A Separate Reality, Journey to Ixtlan, Tales of Power
Carlos Castaneda
Manufacturer: Pocket Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
Castaneda, Carlos
| ( C )
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| Religion & Spirituality
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| Books
ASIN: B000IS0D60 |
Average customer rating:
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Frank S. Hermann 1866-1942: A Separate Reality
NY. Museum Gallery of the White Plains Public Library. Catalog by Peter Hastings Falk White Plains
Manufacturer: Sound View Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
ASIN: B000UPNQ7E |
Books:
- Stranger in a Strange Land
- Strategic Management and Business Policy (10th Edition)
- Swingers
- The Aeneid
- The Annotated Uncle Tom's Cabin
- The Best American Essays 2005 (The Best American Series)
- The Brothers Karamazov
- The Celestine Prophecy
- The Chronicles of Narnia CD Box Set
- The City of Ember (The First Book of Ember)
Books Index
Books Home
Recommended Books
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- Nutrient Requirements of Horses: Sixth Revised Edition
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- Rabbit Ears Treasury of Tall Tales: Volume One: Davy Crockett, Rip Van Winkle, Johnny Appleseed, Pau
- Micromammals and Macroparasites: From Evolutionary Ecology to Management
- The German Experience of Professionalization: Modern Learned Professions and their Organizations fro
- Improving Tourism and Hospitality Services: Analysis Design Management
- J.K. Lasser's How to Pay Less Tax on Your Retirement Savings: Ira - Keogh - 401