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Book Series

The collected works of Ken Wilber

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4.5
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6
BOOKS
2,679
PAGES
~44h 39min
READING TIME

About Author

Ken Wilber

Kenneth Earl Wilber II is an American philosopher and writer on transpersonal psychology and his own integral theory, a philosophy which suggests the synthesis of all human knowledge and experience.

Description

"This book presents one of the first truly integrative models of consciousness, psychology, and therapy. Drawing on hundreds of sources - East and West, ancient and modern - Wilber creates a psychological model that includes waves of development, streams of development, states of consciousness, and the self, and follows the course of each from subconscious to self-conscious to superconscious."--Jacket.

How the series evolves

beginning
Integral psychology
0.0· tough start
peak
A brief history of everything
4.5· best book in series
finale
Sex, ecology, spirituality
0.0· messes up the ending
overall
0.8· maybe series needed more care

Books in this Series

Integral psychology

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"This book presents one of the first truly integrative models of consciousness, psychology, and therapy. Drawing on hundreds of sources - East and West, ancient and modern - Wilber creates a psychological model that includes waves of development, streams of development, states of consciousness, and the self, and follows the course of each from subconscious to self-conscious to superconscious."--Jacket.

Grace and grit

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"Here is a new edition - with a new introduction - of the deeply moving account of the five-year journey of philosopher Ken Wilber and his wife, Treya Killam Wilber, through Treya's illness, treatment, and death. Ken's wide-ranging commentary, which questions conventional and New Age approaches to illness, is combined with Treya's journals to create this portrait of health and healing, wholeness and harmony, suffering and surrender."--BOOK JACKET.

Sex, ecology, spirituality

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In a tour de force of scholarship and vision, Ken Wilber traces the course of evolution from matter to life to mind, and describes the common patterns that evolution takes in all three of these domains. In each case, evolution has a "direction," a tendency to produce more highly organized patterns. The "spirit of evolution" lies in its directionality: order out of chaos. After arriving at the emergence of mind, Wilber traces the evolution of human consciousness through its major stages of growth and development, pointing out that at each stage there is the "dialectic of progress" - every increase in consciousness is bought at a price: new freedom also means new license to choose destruction and new ways to implement disaster. He particularly focuses on the rise of modernity and post-modernity - what they mean, how they relate to gender issues, to psychotherapy, to ecological concerns, and to various liberation movements, and, most important, how the modern and postmodern world can even conceive of Spirit. How can spiritual concerns be integrated with the massive developments of the modern world? Where is God, where the Goddess? . Already being hailed as one of the great books of this era, Sex, Ecology, Spirituality is grand in its sweep and compelling in its vision, and it fundamentally changes the nature of the dialogue in each of these domains.