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The Unfolding Self

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Transformational experiences are as unique as they are profound, yet each portrays universal truths of human nature. In The Unfolding Varieties of Transformative Experience, Ralph Metzner, PhD, unveils common dynamics and archetypes of the transformative experience, offering seekers and those in the throes of personal or societal transformation a reliable guide. Drawing from multiple disciplines ranging across the world’s cultures (beginning with his collaborations with Dr. Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert at Harvard University in the early 1960s), Dr. Metzner explores subtle concepts using a tapestry of myth, allegory, and historical context. The Unfolding Self promises to provide its reader with valuable tools to become "wise, impartial judges" in their process of transformation into becoming a more integrated and fulfilled person. Readers who immerse themselves in these masterful descriptions can catalyze their own process of evolution. No comparable psychology of spirituality exists that draws from such a rich lifework of scholarship, experiment, and spiritual practice. Drawing from multiple disciplines and ranging across the world’s cultures, Dr. Metzner goes beyond his roots in transpersonal psychology to uncover universal structures of spiritual transformation. Readers who immerse themselves in these masterful descriptions can catalyze their own process of evolution.

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First published May 1, 1998

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About the author

Ralph Metzner

88 books121 followers
Ralph Metzner Ph.D. was an American psychologist, writer and researcher, who participated in psychedelic research at Harvard University in the early 1960s with Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert (later named Ram Dass). Dr. Metzner was a psychotherapist, and Professor Emeritus of psychology at the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco, where he was formerly the Academic Dean and Academic Vice-president. He received his undergraduate degree at Oxford University and his doctorate in clinical psychology at Harvard University, where he was also the recipient of an NIMH Post-doctoral Fellowship in psychopharmacology at the Harvard Medical School. He had a life-long interest in the many different realms of consciousness and its modifications.

He is the author of The Well of Remembrance, The Unfolding Self, Green Psychology, Birth of a Psychedelic Culture (with Ram Dass); editor of two collections of essays on ayahuasca and on psilocybe mushrooms; and author of a new series of seven books on The Ecology of Consciousness.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
37 reviews1 follower
November 7, 2023
The book is sectioned into common metaphors in spiritual transformation around the world. The book is incredibly useful for two main reasons. The first is the extensive amount of width that this book has with many pages of notes/comments/references and bibliography. The second is he often associates modern language/phrases and the way we use them to help open the doors to the examples.

While the width is great there is a common source of references to individuals and texts which clearly had a large impact on the author and these individuals are often referenced in each section. The latter half of the book started feeling less impactful and more grasping. Sometimes this grasping is problematic because of quiet a few factual issues I was discovering in the latter chapters. These factual issues weren't on the main point, but on the corroborating "evidence" (or "evidence" presented in a way to be corroborating). Such an example is that Gilgamesh never had the "immortality herb" (p. 292/C. Journey to the place of vision and power/s. Returning Home) which changes both the value of the referenced source and how it's used.
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49 reviews9 followers
March 17, 2018
I really enjoyed this book, Ralph Metzner reaches across many traditions to illustrate different growth processes. Its very approachable and insightful. His depth of knowledge has lead me to a number of other readings I wasn't aware of, and his interpretations of familiar stories shed a whole new light on them.
138 reviews
September 26, 2024
Awesome explanation of transformation myths and experiences, great counterpart to The Hero with A Thousand Faces. A lot of alchemical references and some woowoo psychedelic nonsense but a phenomenal book with excellent ties and exposition.
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Author 3 books29 followers
March 4, 2023
Metzner presents twelve archetypal metaphors of transformative experience. There's nothing really groundbreaking in this book, but I felt that reading the descriptions of these archetypal images did tap my own inner place of connection with the transformative process.
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