1 result for (book:deavf1 AND session:885 AND stemmed:new)
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
During this session hiatus I’ve been spending much time upon a series of letters to the publishers of Seth Speaks in Switzerland and in the Netherlands, as well as to those in charge at Prentice-Hall.1 Last Saturday night we had a very interesting meeting with a psychologist from New York City. Our visitor taped Seth’s copious material, and is to send us a transcript of it.
[... 32 paragraphs ...]
                                When all of summer’s
 splendid leafery is gone
 then space seems to surround
 us everywhere, far and close.
 The immense vault of the universe
 turns intimate,
 reaches to our chimneytops
 in shining swirls of sudden openness
 just outside of our back doors.
 Space from the galaxies
 rushes in to fill the new emptiness
 where a million million leaves were,
 and the valleys hold
 natural cupfuls of space,
 filled to their transparent brims.
                                
[... 7 paragraphs ...]
Aside from anything Seth has said or ever may say about other probable realities, or even about human origins here on earth, I think it most risky at this stage in history for anyone—scientist or not—to dogmatically state that life has no meaning, or is a farce, or that attributes of our reality of which we can only mentally conceive at this time do not really exist. Discoveries in the “future” are quite apt to prove such limited viewpoints wrong. The history of science itself contains many examples of theories and “facts” gone awry. Moreover, why would our species want to depend upon as fragile a conception as epiphenomenalism through which to comprehend our reality? Or better yet, why does it in large part? Truly, our individual and collective ignorance of just our own probable reality is most profound at this time in our linear history (in those terms). Jane and I wouldn’t be surprised if ultimately, as a result of mankind’s restless search for meaning, we didn’t end up returning in a new official way to our ancient concepts of spirit within everything, animate and inanimate. Such an updated animistic/vitalistic view would take into account discoveries ranging from subnuclear events to the largest imaginable astronomical processes in our observable universe. Human beings do know their own worth, as Seth stated in this session.
[... 5 paragraphs ...]