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Looking for a book and can't find it? Please write us at writeus@bobnancy.com
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Philosophy
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Two Fish on One Hook
A Transformative Reading of Thoreau's Walden
Raymond P. Tripp, Jr.
Softbound
$14.95
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This study of Thoreaus transcendental work offers us
the task of doing as Thoreau does, exhorting us to follow
the patterns Thoreau sets up in Walden and to approach his
work as an act of communication-- one that urges us to listen,
to hear, and to act upon what he has to say: one that becomes
a transformative experience.
It is all too easy, however, to admire Thoreaus art
and miss his meaning. Thoreau has constructed Walden on transparent
overlays of meaningbiography, literature, philosophy,
and religionbut in whatever way we read it, Thoreaus
words are what work the communicative transformation of his
readers. Form, meaning, and language are Thoreaus instruments
for unearthing the truth, and Tripp steadfastly follows their
spiraling movement down the concentric intricacies of Thoreaus
message through the broad structure of Walden, section by
section, chapter by chapter, sentence by sentence, word by
word until at last they merge, patterns and purposes, form
and idea, heaven and earth, at Walden Pond.
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The Boundaries of Natural Science
Eight Lectures
Rudolf Steiner
With an introduction by Saul Bellow
Softbound
Sorry - out of print
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The widespread penetration of twentieth century life by modern
science has created a troubling gulf between the inner experience
of human consciousness and the external scientific investigation
of the physical world. This is reflected in the so-called
"mind-body split" in our modern times.
These two "worlds" collide again and again in our
daily experience. Increasing efforts are expended to order
modern society "scientifically"; yet, as Nobel prize-winning
author Saul Bellow states in his lucid foreword, "the
scientific method . . . is powerless to explain the consciousness
that directs it."
For this crucial dilemma Rudolf Steiner suggests a solution
beyond the "boundaries of natural science." Steiner
argues for a twofold extension of consciousness. The first
involves mental disciplines leading to a pure, sense-free
thought activity. The second requires the mind to learn how
to set aside thinking and give itself over to pure perception.
Both exercises can lead to the development of higher cognitive
faculties that enable us to grasp the vital connections between
the inner and outer realms.
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