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Michael Talbot – The Holographic Universe (Interviews and Workshop, 1991)

Michael Talbot – The Holographic Universe (Interviews and Workshop, 1991)
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As the title mentions, this is a combination of interviews and a workshop – not the book (which you’ll find @ ).The book: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060922583/4.5 / 5 stars (229 [!!] customer reviews)This is a re-upload because of database problems with the original product (which had received two 5 star ratings).roony wrote (back then):Quote:ive got the book by talbot, gr8 book, but it has very little to do with dimensional transcendism, it just goes into the concept of holograms.The interviews do go into dimensional transcendisms, excellent productInfo from Amazon about the book (to give you a feeling what this is all about):Quote:Author Talbot writes that “. . . there is evidence to suggest that our world and everything in it. . . are also only ghostly images, projections from a level of reality so beyond our own it is literally beyond both space and time.” Hence, the title of his book. Beginning with the work of physicist David Bohm and neurophysiologist Karl Pribram, both of whom independently arrived at holographic theories or models of the universe, Talbot explains in clear terms the theory and physics of holography and its application, both in science and in explanation of the paranormal and psychic. His theory of reality accommodates this latest thinking in physics as well as many unresolved mind-body questions. This well-written and fascinating study is recommended for science collections.- Hilary D. Burton, Lawrence Livermore National Lab., Livermore, Cal.Quote:This is one of the most provocative books I have read in years. In the first few chapters Mr. Talbot describes the emerging holographic paradigm in science, drawing on David Bohm’s work in quantum physics and Karl Pribam’s work in neuroscience. I found both descriptions to be fascinating, and especially enjoyed the historical context for the work of these two seminal thinkers. As a person with a master’s degree in neuroscience and chaos/complexity theory, I found a couple of his simplifications misleading, but would give him high marks for his overall comprehension of the conclusions of Pribam and his followers.The remaining 2/3 of the book is a discussion of how the holographic paradigm may provide a rational basis for interpreting a wide variety of phenomenon located around the fringes of established science. He looks at everything from strange historical “miracles” like stigmata and appearances of the Virgin Mary to modern psychic abilities and LSD experiences, from out-of-body and near-death-experiences to UFO abductions. In addition, he compares language used in the modern scientific discussion of holography with the language used by ancient mystical traditions.Mr. Talbot’s writing style is unusually clear and lucid. All of this makes for a highly engaging book. It kept me up late every night for more than a week. I am a person who has had an OBE/NDE (out-of-body, near-death-experience), and can tell you that his description of such events is an astoundingly accurate portrayal of what I experienced.I am also a scientist, and know that most of my highly rational, empirical colleages would have trouble accepting a majority of Mr. Talbot’s conclusions. This work addresses something so completely out of the realm of everyday experience for most people, and probes a world that is normally invisible to the five senses. Hence, objective, empirical science — as defined by a conventional theorist or practicing technician — simply cannot address these experiences. They are outside the range of focus of the tool that Western minds currently rely on.The service that Mr. Talbot provides is a challenge to rethink the conventional definition of science so that it can take into account a much wider range of human experience. What he argues for is the acceptance, as valid scientific data, of the experiences of individual humans, across cultures and throughout history, that are remarkably consistent with one another. These experiences address aspects of reality that are invisible to the skeptical eye, but become obvious to the person who chooses to develop other forms of perception.As a person who was unwittingly thrown into an OBE/NDE experience, I am naturally inclined to read a book like this one with an open mind, and felt immensely rewarded for doing so. However, if I had reviewed the same book before having my own personal experience of some of the phenomena it describes, I would have reviewed it as a new-age excursion into a realm of fantasy. I am completely sympathetic to some of the reviewers who see it that way, and respectfully disagree.I believe there is an extraordinary synthesis happening among the realms of human experience, one that can validate each individual’s story, however unusual, and also one that honors all the different ways of knowing. I see Mr. Talbot’s work as one of the more important bridges yet constructed between traditional science and spirituality, between rational discourse about repeatable, empirically verifiable phenomenon and the quirky, esoteric or mythological elements of personal experience that actually define most people’s experience of reality. This book is a “must read” for any passionate seeker of truth.

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