How to Know God: The Soul's Journey into the Mystery of Mysteries
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Average customer review:Product Description
In this work we are taken on a journey of self and spirit, teaching us how to come face to face with the beginning of life, eternity and the essence of our being. This is an exploration of seven ways in which God can be experienced.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #165977 in Books
- Published on: 2001-02-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 288 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
How to Know God is a truly remarkable work and in many ways it can be viewed as a summation of Deepak Chopra's work so far. A distinguished physician and lecturer, Deepak Chopra is also renowned for the small library of inspirational titles he has authored. His core subjects are physical and spiritual health, moral responsibility and ancient wisdom, and throughout he offers an insightful and holistic approach to the deepest questions in our internal and external lives. How to Know God draws upon all of these subjects in a profound study which marks an evolution in Deepak Chopra's thinking. The key factors here are religious philosophy and quantum physics, neuroscience and mysticism. Together they form a synthesis--a seven-stage theory of how we can know, understand and reach God. The stages are a series of responses: fight or flight, reactive, restful, intuitive, creative, visionary and sacred. At each stage we are learning to understand the complexities within ourselves, our environment, humanity as a whole and the totality of existence--the totality that equals God or "infinite intelligence".
It's an immense undertaking to explain. But in 300 pages, Deepak Chopra guides us through with simplicity and skill and with a deep sense of empathy. He also avoids the rarefied academic tone which a work such as this could fall prey to. How to Know God is both accessible and easily absorbed. It's about the God within ourselves and the God we perceive around us; it's about how we can reach our God and effect positive change. No less an authority than the Dalai Lama commented, "I absolutely agree with Dr. Chopra's view that if we want to change the world we have to begin by changing ourselves". --Lucas LoBlack
Bernie Siegel, M.D., Author of Love Medicine and Miracles and Prescriptions for Living
"A brilliant mind has created a book which SHOULD BE READ BY BELIEVERS AND NONBELIEVERS. It is a treasure chest of knowledge that everyone should open and explore regardless of one's belief or faith. The knowledge presented can change your life."
Review
Chopra is an incisive and persuasive writer. Here, he takes as his subject the most profound mystery of all: how to know God. Chopra, a former doctor, uses anecdotal evidence along with scientific argument, exploring phenomena such as clairvoyance and telepathy as well as aspects of psychology and neurology. It's an interesting and stimulating read, and the authoritative tone does much to sweep the sceptical reader through. However, his premise - to examine God as an objective entity - is almost immediately belied by his stated search for God as subjective; as a component or state of the mind. 'We are trying to find the basic facts that will make God possible, real and useful,' he asserts, adding that 'God is as we are'. A 'useful' God seems an unattractive and rather pointless proposition, but Chopra does not pursue this line, choosing instead to focus on the brighter picture of the divine within - the limitless self. (Kirkus UK)
Customer Reviews
Understanding Self
This book is such a wonderful description of the spiritual journey, both of the individual and of humanity as a whole.
Deepak Chopra takes us through various stages of evolving consciousness, showing how our understanding of God goes together with our understanding of ourselves.
The spiritual journey can offer up some bewildering times. Books like this, which clarify the process, offer both comfort and a way forward.
Awesome
A great book. Highly recommeded. Well written and organised. A must read for anyone on the path or considering it.
A Transcendental Look at Our Connection to God
This is a challenging book for a reviewer, because it does not follow the normal rules of nonfiction exposition. As such, one has to evaluate the book for what it is . . . not compare it to what it is not. I have read several of Dr. Chopra's books, and find that they are all written at the transcendental level. By that, I mean that they are intended to be tested by your unconscious mind rather than your conscious mind. So the words either resonate or they do not. The way this work communicates has a lot in common with Gary Zukov's works on the soul, such as Soul Stories.
One of the things that this book is not, is a book about religion. That may seem strange for a book about knowing God, but it does permit a more holistic look at the question than the context of a single religion sometimes offers. In a very free-ranging discussion, Dr. Chopra cites examples from all major religions as well as those who report paranormal experiences (whether contacts with angels by ordinary people, mind-reading, or psychic healing).
From these straws in the wind as examples, he constructs a hierarchy of contact to God that is similar to one that Maslow espoused for the human hierarchy of needs. Dr. Chopra's main point is that our psychological development is tied to our spiritual development, which limits or opens us to new ways to perceive God. He neither condemns nor exalts one state greatly over another, although he does put them on a continuum (beginning with God as protector and moving to God as what "I am"). He ties this percpetual ability to make contact in terms of the physical world, the quantum domain (the area where spirit and the material world meet), and the virtual domain (the area of pure spirit).
The work is an original and interesting application of thinking from a variety of fields to find what appear to be their common elements. Whether he is right or not is basically a matter of personal perception and faith.
Most of us could use a novel context for having a good spiritual conversation with a trusted religious or spiritual adviser. How to Know God? would make a great book for such a conversation. Whether you agree with it or not, you are probably going to find yourself opened to the possibility of appreciating God's presence in some ways that you did not appreciate before. That's a very worthwhile accomplishment when it happens, and my perception that it is likely is one reason why I gave the book a five star rating. The other reason is simply that the book resonated with me at a very profound level, which left me with a sense of deep peace. I cannot predict what you reaction will be.
Anyone who wants a tightly woven book about religion, or a logical argument for this point of view, would do well to go elsewhere. This book simply doesn't explore that part of the potential domain about knowing God.
Good luck in transcending whatever limitations you are experiencing now in knowing God!




