Full description not available
D**L
Thought provoking
Awesome book from an intelligent man.
R**N
The Title Is Literal
Great book and brilliant author, who reveals how the perceptions and perspectives around the realities of science and Magick have finally been married, through exhaustive and stringent, clinical experimentation, and documentation.He also reveals the woes of bucking the established scientific/educational systems, with his own findings, who can still cling to archaic biases and belief systems, that refute the significance and certitude of these fields of knowledge and practice. Such politics within the greater institutions, stands in the way of the true expansion and progress of ACTUAL science, as it's defined!Also, interlaced are some cool accounts of the author's remarkable, personal experiences, and a very clear chapter on three reliable ways of actually PRACTICING Real Magick, without the associated frills of elaborate ritualization and tradition.It is a VERY technical piece, but there are visual aids included, to help one field all of that. I can't wait to plumb some his other works!
D**Y
Its Time to Take Both Magic and Psi Seriously
Dean Radin, one of the world's foremost parapsychologists has written a very ambitious book which explores magic from a scientific point of view, demonstrates its validity through a number of his own ingenious experiments, outlines its history and relationship with science, religion and philosophy and attempts to explain both its power and limitations.For many people magical events are terrifying or unsettling, upsetting their rational conceptions of being able to explain and control their lives yet most people believe in some kind of paranormal phenomena (psi) and many indulge in positive thinking hoping to influence themselves and their environment. But psi and magic are essentially the same. Radin explains that psi is a real phenomenon because, after 150 years of research, " telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition, and psychokinetic effects have all been independently repeated in laboratories around the world".Over two thousand years ago, Plato and then later neo-Platonism proposed that there was a deep connection between mind and matter and that man could access a higher consciousness through his own "divine spark" from which he could directly influence the physical world. This was a world view which supported the development of magic and was also adopted by the esoteric traditions of religion like Gnosticism, Kabbala, Sufism, Shaivism, Tantric Yoga and Buddhism. It was also studied by scientists like Paracelsus and Isaac Newton. Perceived as very real threats to the church's monopoly over the truth, all forms of magic were considered heresy and outlawed by the Catholic church in the 13th century. In the early twentieth century, Max Weber celebrated the disenchantment of western society from all supernatural concepts (including magic and religion), as a liberation from the beliefs of savages. Paradoxically while Weber celebrated ,the very foundations of 19th century science, based on the assumptions of realism, causality and locality, were being undermined and eroded by quantum theory and Einstein's theory of relativity. For example, as Radin points out " from quantum theory we also know that “spooky action at a distance” definitely exists, so the commonsense meaning of locality is a special case of a more comprehensive world view." Today we have a new church, the "church of science", where the editor of Nature referred to Rubert Sheldrake's first book "A New science of Life" as the best candidate for burning while the editor of a journal on psychology retracted the publication of one of Radin's experiments and refused to publish a further paper because proving psi was real was like showing "pigs could fly". The church of science is fighting hard to preserve the dying dogmas of materialism at the same time that some quantum physicists are pointing to the evidence for retrocausation (the future influencing the present) and for panpsychism (the idea that matter at all levels, including fundamental particles, has an inherent property of sentience, or mind.)Against this background, Radin conducted a number of experiments to test the New Age belief -"You create your own reality" which is the core of magic practice.Radin elaborates "The essence of magic boils down to the application of two ordinary mental skills: attention and intention. The strength of the magical outcome is modulated by four factors: belief, imagination, emotion, and clarity."In one study, Radin showed that force of will produced objectively measurable changes in plant growth with odds against chance of 38 trillion to 1.Another study by Radin showed that intention influences RNG (random number generator) outputs not by “pushing” the RNG by force but rather through a goal-oriented or teleological effect. This accords with magical lore that " one way to manifest a goal through force of will is to affirm that the goal has already been accomplished". Our intentions seem to cause a gravitational space-time warp.A third study with 80 million trials of precognition of card selection by a computer showed that precognitive perceptions are influenced by the probable (and not the actual) future.A fourth study demonstrated Global Consciousness, where 32 quantum noise generators(QNG) (sampling random electronic noise for 5 days) showed a common (non-random) spike within minutes of the surprising results of the 2016 US presidential elections. The odds against chance are 226 million to 1. This suggests "that when millions of minds intently focus on the same event it causes a ripple in the fabric of space-time" because the samples over time should be independent in a random system and the QNG devices should be acting as separate objects.Further studies by Radin show how a controlled use of a positive magical technique influenced the fingertip volume and heart rate of the targeted volunteer.There is enough proof that magic is real but what are its limitations? Psi ability is normally distributed in the population just like any other ability so we all have some ability but we can't all be psychic super stars. Psi is produced by our unconscious so if there is a conflict between our conscious will and our unconscious, our psi ability may be blocked by self-defeating behavior. Beliefs influence psi ability and our cynicism may block us. Most importantly though my will may be the opposite of your will so the net result is a natural tendency for inertia and stability in the universe. On the other hand, when millions of people have the same emotion, they resonate together and that ripple is strong enough to make random events more coherent. For most of the time everyday reality remains solid and predictable.Radin concludes that we need to start taking magic seriously.I recommend you to take this book seriously.You won't be disappointed.
Y**E
Very Important Book, But Could Have Been More
Sometimes authors with great minds who tackle difficult topics write very challenging and lengthy tomes, but Dean Radin has an ability to dumb it down for the masses- but that's a double-edged sword. On one end, I actually finished and understood this 220-page book, but on the other end, I was longing for more. What could have been a transcending, historical important book felt like an airport bookstore paperback.Dean's hypothesis is that magic is really psi and psi is a proven fact. Radin briefly tackles the esoteric, and gets into the weeds with experiments. The book is not all about facts, his opinions are revealed when he attacks the way scientists dismiss magic, makes a veiled Trump attack, is anti-organized religion and speculates about the future.If you have read Manly P. Hall, Mitch Horowitz, or have watched New Thinking Allowed or Closer to Truth this book should be right up your alley. Dean attempts to demystify the occult by fitting it the scientific method, so quantum mechanics and the mysterious nature of consciousness are the paths he takes to explain psi.
M**E
Excellent read!
I've been watching Dean Radin on multiple shows on GaiaTV and love what he has to say. So I just HAD to read this book! Was not disappointed!
Trustpilot
1 day ago
1 month ago