| Stop Treating Me Like a Child (But First Can You Lend Me Some Money?): Opening the Door to Healthy Relationships Between Parents and Adult Children
Publisher: Carol Publishing Corporation |
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| ISBN: 0806517050 List Price: $12.95 Amazon Price: $12.95 Usually ships in 24 hours |
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| The Mystery of Manna: The Psychedelic Sacrament of the Bible
Publisher: Park Street Press |
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| ISBN: 0892817720 List Price: $16.95 Amazon Price: $11.86 Usually ships in 2 to 3 weeks |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 1 Reviews: Summary: MANNA IS MONATOMIC GOLD the author's interpretation of what Manna is wrong. Laurence Gardner has the truth of this substance in "Lost Secrets of the Sacred Ark". That truth being that they are monatomic gold. Also know as ORMEs Orbitally Rearranged Monatomic Elements Summary: I'm changing my opinion on this book. A year and a half ago I wrote the below book review of Mr. Merkur's work. After serious and long study, I have decided to give Merkur and second look. I've decided that in some instances, what I said below/previously was incorrect, or at least not wholly accurate. Here are the following reasons why. If Mr. Merkur had written a comparison between the Amanita, and the later "substitute" of the showbread/unleavened bread/ Presence bread and bitter waters, his book would have been incredible. Instead, he decided to steer clear of anything whatsoever associated to Allegro and the Amanita muscaria. "If the psychoactive cult object that was euphemistically called manna was not the showbread, it was something else." Dan Merkur This was Merkur's primary downfall in the writing of this book. If Merkur had taken the time to reinvestigate the scandal surrounding John Strugnel and members of the international team of "scholars" who in 35 years did nothing but suppress the Dead Sea Scrolls, and anyone's career who challenged them, maybe he wouldn't have been so quick to judge Allegro. (See Dr. Robert Eisenman, Judith Anne Brown, Biblical Archeology Review, Baigent and Leigh, etc.) It is unfortunate that so few really take the necessary time to discover the scandal of the Dead Sea Scrolls which finally ended Strugnel's career in a state of international embarrassment--irony at it's finest. Merkur provides an EXCELLENT case for a "SUBSTITUTE" manna of the Bible, and states so himself. But as I said in my previous review, many of his statements clearly back Allegro and references to the Amanita (and other mushrooms that both have missed), and it seems that he missed the mushroom references, or wanted to ignore them. "What among the ritual objects of Solomon's temple was described in biblical narrative as Manna? The answer is not far to seek. According to Josh. 5:11-12, unleavened bread was SUBSTITUTED [caps mine] in Canaan for the manna of the wilderness years." Dan Merkur Pg. 5 I should mention here that Strong's Concordance clearly relates the Hebrew word for wilderness, "midbar," in this passage as being related to cattle pastures, and therefore most likely related to Psilocybe mushrooms: 4057 midbar mid-bawr' from 1696 in the sense of driving; a pasture (i.e. open field, whither cattle are driven); by implication, a desert; also speech (including its organs):--desert, south, speech, wilderness. ~ Strong's Concordance The main problem with Allegro's research, was that he attempted to link a "language bridge" between Greek and Hebrew through Sumerian to show the FACT of entheogens in the Bible. Though Allegro also used Sanskrit, if he had only used Sanskrit, probably near none of his work (except his misunderstanding of effects, taste etc.) would have been contested. Though philologists today still contest Allegro's work in The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross; none seem to be qualified (in my humble opinion) in the study of both entheogens and fertility rites as well...and can not be used to make a strong claim against Allegro. As I said in my previous review, this book is an EXCELLENT source for discovering entheogen references in the bible, and as an argument toward a substitute manna, this book is fantastic. "Immediately after the Israelites crossed the Jordan River and ate the produce of Canaan, Yahveh ceased to provide them with manna. Unleavened bread REPLACED [caps mine] manna in their diet. Interestingly, the Israelites did not eat the produce of Canaan on their first night in Canaan." Dan Merkur Pg. 5 I also should have given Merkur more credit for his valid discoveries of ergot. While I still feel that many of my previous statements were correct, I should have substantiated them, and not been so hard on Merkur for taking the orthodox path of bashing Allegro. It seems to be the fashionable thing to do. But it was Allegro who was the first to take a serious look at the Bible for Entheogens. Allegro said the Bible is based on drugs, and if you don't believe Allegro, read the hundreds of wonderful biblical passages Merkur has provided for you to discover on your own. It is also highly recommended that one seriously interested in this field take a look at Clark Heinrich's book "Magic Mushrooms," and Professor Ruck and Heinrich's "Apples of Apollo" and make a comparison to Merkur AND Allegro. The final problem I still have with Merkur's work is that he does appear to be lacking in areas of ancient mythology, and attempts to historicize and literalize fictitious mythological characters. Upon a deep study of entheogens, one realizes that the Hindu gods, Greek gods, Phoenician gods, Native American gods, Celtic gods, Egyptian gods etc. were all primarily based on drug anthropomorphisms (See McKenna, Myerhoff, Ruck, Staples, Heinrich, Wilson, Spess, Wasson, Hofmann, Ratsch, Ott, Narby, etc.)... ...and were also often based on star worship or "Astrotheology" (See Jordan Maxwell, Manly P. Hall, Acharya S. Ernest Brusenbark, Kersey Graves, Gerald Massey, G.A. Wells, etc.)... One realizes that it's more of a stretch of the imagination to attempt historicity of these characters than to just accept their anthropomorphized reality and understand these ancient texts for what they are... Shamanic MYTHOLOGY! I am changing my previous rating of this book from 2 to 4. To "Substitutes"! Summary: Merkur and the so-called Mystery of Manna After reading Dan Merkur's book The Mystery of Manna, it has become quite clear that the author has no comprehension of Mythology, Mycology, or Shamanism it self. Mr. Merkur in his notes of Chapter #1 footnote #5 states that "Neither is there evidence to support the cavalier allagation of John M. Allegro, The sacred Mushroom and the Cross...That manna was Amanita Muscaria, the fly agaric mushroom." Mr. Merkur is clearly not a world leading Philologist/Mythologist, and has written an entire book backing John Allegro's theory, but does not even see it himself, and clearly had to ignore volumes of other's research in order to make his case. Although Merkur makes a couple of good points about the bitter waters being ergot, his entire thesis backs Allegro, where he points out numerous statements about the Bread (In most cases, a term for the Amanita), the rock (A baby Amanita) and the staff (The stem of the Amanita) caused fire to come from the rock (the term for the undeveloped Amanita bursting forth its red cap), the miraculas fire (The red of the Amanita), The Oak (One of the few trees the Amanita grows under), the wilderness (The place where the Amanita grows), The Ark (Another name for Amanita, as well as the burning bush), and both Manna and water in the wilderness (The tea made from the Amanita), as well as the so-called 'Angels', which is a simple morphing of the words AAHKUT, AKKHUT, AAK HUT, ANGKHUT, and ANKH, which are simply ancient words for Hongo, or Hanggo, and Anggelos which are in and of themselves words for "Mushroom". Mr. Merkur's lack of experience with these substances becomes painfully clear, as he just does not get it. He is by no means a Shaman who is writing about Shamanism, which he refers to as "Cults", which depicts a clear lack of understanding of what this is all about. Mr. Merkur's book is excellent for finding the passages in the Bible that refer to entheogens, and he does make a few good points...But, for one with a firm understanding of mycology, and especially of that surrounding the Amanita, by changing the ergot references to Amanita, the book becomes somewhat readable. Regardless, Mr. Merkur is so far off base that it appears that his indoctrinated PH.D. has got the best of him. I would recommend reading his book only if you're doing your own research for writing purposes, etc. But for factual information on what Manna is, this guy doesn't even come close to the target. Summary: |
| Stop Treating Me Like a Child: (But First Can You Lend Me Some Money?)
Publisher: MJF Books |
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| ISBN: 1567312462 List Price: $8.98 Amazon Price: $8.98 Usually ships in 24 hours |
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| Psychoanalytic Approaches to Myth (Theorists of Myth)
Publisher: Routledge |
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| ISBN: 0824059360 List Price: $125.00 Amazon Price: $125.00 Usually ships in 24 hours |
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| Mystical Moments and Unitive Thinking
Publisher: State University of New York Press |
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| ISBN: 079144063X List Price: $23.50 Amazon Price: $23.50 Usually ships in 4 to 6 weeks |
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| The Psychedelic Sacrament: Manna, Meditation, and Mystical Experience
Publisher: Park Street Press |
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| ISBN: 089281862X List Price: $12.95 Amazon Price: $12.95 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Entheogenic, rational, short-session mysticism Merkur shows the existence of a more or less continuous tradition of psychoactive Western religion. Various separate threads of mystic techniques have sometimes come together to form an approach to the mystic altered state that is based on rational reflection, together with short-session use of visionary plants, rather than continuous long-term meditation. This book associates a seemingly overlooked tradition of short-session meditation with the use of psychoactive, visionary plants. The use of psychoactives enables a more rationality-oriented approach and obviates the need to constantly meditate for long-term periods. This entheogen-using, short-session, rational form of mysticism is being increasingly recognized throughout Western history. Meditation, psychoactives, and rational thinking can be and historically have been brought together to augment each other. Merkur helps entheogen researchers focus not only on revealing the presence of particular plants in mystic-state practices, but also on the traditions of using the plants in a shared religious framework and reflecting on the experiences produced by the visionary plants. The field of mysticism greatly needs such coverage of the important and challenging semi-secret tradition of not only entheogen use, but entheogen use combined with rational mysticism and short-session meditation. I don't think Merkur is claiming that the mystics who combine these approaches claim that every aspect of mystic experiencing is entirely rationally explainable and conceptually tangible; the vision of the transcendent cosmic throne may still include a certain aspect that is, in a way, beyond the reach of complete, direct conceptualization. Despite the seemingly entrenched assumptions that mysticism is inherently slow and laborious, drug-free, and non-rational, rational short-session meditation forms an effective alternative tradition or alternative view of what approach makes sense. This proposal contradicts the dominant assumptions about the techniques and conventions of mysticism: the assumption, perhaps misguided, that mysticism ideally should not use psychoactives, is not rationality-oriented, and must be conducted for extended, endlessly long meditation periods. In some semi-obscured traditions that are recently coming to light, these approaches have come together naturally and effectively. This seems similar to the "lightning-bolt" short-path variety of Buddhist meditation technique as portrayed by James Arthur in Mushrooms and Mankind, which points out that Vajrayana was created by combining Tantric Buddhism and the native Bon shamanism of Tibet. The approach Merkur describes also seems equivalent to the evident visionary-state experiencing on tap in the Hellenistic mystery-religions, in which a person commonly undergoes a moderate number of limited-duration initiations to achieve spiritual purification and mental transformation, reshaping the mind's conception of the self by the encounter with transcendent experiencing. Merkur, as psychologist, contrasts the experience of loss of the sense of personal freedom, which he portrays as being conventional mysticism, with a supposedly different experience of a psychoactive rational mysticism that involves panic attacks. However, I'd point out that the loss of the sense of being a metaphysically free agent is integral to a mystic-state panic attack. When the psychoactive perspective and self-sense, combined with rational analysis about our assumption of personal sovereign agency, suspends the sense of wielding metaphysically free power, that is the very cause and central vortex of the panic attack. The self-commanding part of the mind panics because the mind perceives the lack of metaphysical freedom and self-control, and sees the mind's vulnerable dependence on the mysterious uncontrollable arising of personal control-thoughts, like discovering that one's controllership is dependent on whatever happens to come up from an underground spring in a cave. Merkur uses the Psychology interpretive paradigm, but that would be strengthened by a stronger Philosophy of Metaphysics background, including the philosophy of time and responsible control agents. The book doesn't really explain what the union with God experience, or the vision of the invisible transcendent controller on the cosmic throne above one's personal controllership level, would be like for a modern entheogenic rational mystic. Merkur reveals the occasional conjunction of Western religion and psychoactives, and also a kind of rationality which I would call, with Ken Wilber, "vision-logic" or visionary rationality. Fortunately, this book does not depend on identifying mystic sacraments as any one visionary plant. There is consensus in the field of the entheogen theory of religion that it is more important to identify scriptural allusions to psychoactives, and find how psychoactives were combined with meditation and visionary rationality, than to identify the main and minor entheogens used. The important point is to recognize the terms "sacrament" or "manna" as meaning visionary plants. Subsections include The Necessity of Vision; Philo's Meditative Practices; Other Varieties of Ecstasy in Philo; The Contemplative Practice of Aristotle; Discursive Meditations in Islam; Bernard on Intellectualist Mysticism; Bernard on Trance-Based Mysticism; Death and Resurrection at Sinai; Maimonides on Meditation, and others. Merkur provides essential coverage of primary religious experiencing at the origin and heart of Judeo-Christianity, providing highly valuable contributions that help to discovering the semi-suppressed tradition and history of entheogens in Western religion, as well as expanding our expectations about the nature of mystic experiencing. This book is a step toward covering entheogens casually as just one part, not especially novel or controversial, of a system of philosophy and religion. This scholarly book is clear, organized, and presents a focused and well-supported thesis -- an excellent source for researchers to cite. Merkur is a clear writer who states where he's headed, states why he's covering subjects, and summarizes what he has established. An invaluable, much needed, must-have contribution to research in the history of mysticism, theory of mystic-state insight and experiencing, and the entheogen theory of religion. Summary: |
| High-Performance Sierras and Merkurs 1983-90 Gold Portfolio (Brooklands Books)
Publisher: Motorbooks International |
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| ISBN: 1855200767 List Price: $24.95 Amazon Price: This item is currently not available. |
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| Mustang, Capri, Merkur 1979-88 (Chilton Model Specific Automotive Repair Manuals)
Publisher: Haynes Manuals, Inc. |
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| ISBN: 0801978254 List Price: $18.95 Amazon Price: $18.95 Usually ships in 24 hours |
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