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Dark Pool of Light, Volume One: The Neuroscience, Evolution, and Ontology of Consciousness

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In books like Embryogenesis and Embryos, Galaxies, and Sentient Beings , author Richard Grossinger brought together the subjects of biological embryology and the esoteric process of human consciousness becoming embodied ("The embryo is the universe writing itself on its own body"). In Dark Pool of Light , his latest creation, Grossinger weaves neuroscience-based behaviorism and the phenomenology of "being" and reality together with psychological and psychospiritual views of "that single thing which is most difficult to understand or our own existence."
 
In 2008 Grossinger began studying with noted psychic teacher John Friedlander, who helped him refine his vision of cerebral and somatic awareness to still-subtler levels. " Dark Pool of Light began unnamed in the journals of my psychic work with John Friedlander," says Grossinger, "not so much a record of actual practices as insights from them and extensions out of them." An expansive inquiry into the nature of consciousness, the series examines the tension between the scientific and philosophical, and psychic views of the same phenomena, and includes "field notes" and experiential exercises that invite the reader to make their own explorations.
 
Dark Pool of Light is divided into three volumes, which the author calls "movements"; the allusion to music is apt, for the book unfolds in a truly symphonic manner. In Volume 1, Grossinger begins with the scientific and philosophical, analytical views of reality, exploring the science, parascience, philosophy, and psychology of consciousness. Covering topics as diverse as current discoveries in neuroscience and the philosophy of the ancient Greeks, the book gives a broad overview of the bodies of knowledge concerning the nature of reality and consciousness.

448 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2012

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Richard Grossinger

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Profile Image for Dan Pfeiffer.
139 reviews8 followers
December 31, 2015
A good read if you want to expand your scientific vocabulary. Unfortunately the writing was couched in such pompous intellectual verbosity to render the tome nearly unreadable. Faithfully I trodded on in hopes of finding a few cogent ideas extractable from the linguistic clutter but alas, it was not to be. Contemplating the nature of consciousness is heady material to tackle, no doubt. I myself would not tread into such waters without the expert navigation of a great editor.
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