Product Details
Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse: Contemplating the Future with Noam Chomsky, George Carlin, Deepak Chopra, Rupert Sheldrake, and Others

Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse: Contemplating the Future with Noam Chomsky, George Carlin, Deepak Chopra, Rupert Sheldrake, and Others
By David Jay Brown

List Price: $28.00
Price: $22.40 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

39 new or used available from $5.83

Average customer review:

Product Description

In his latest interview collection, David Jay Brown has once again gathered some of the most interesting minds of today to consider the future of the human race, the mystery of consciousness, the evolution of technology, psychic phenomena, and more. The book includes conversations with celebrated visionaries and inspirational figures such as Ram Dass, Noam Chomsky, Deepak Chopra, and George Carlin. Part scientific exploration, part philosophical speculation, and part intellectual rollercoaster, the free-form discussions are original and captivating, and offer surprising revelations. Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalpyse is a new look into the minds of some of our groundbreaking leaders and is the perfect gift for science fiction and philosophy fans alike.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #403283 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-06-06
  • Released on: 2005-04-21
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 288 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
Science fiction author (Brainchild; Virus) and journalist David Jay Brown is keenly interested in the future and what it forebodes for humanity in terms of our ability to navigate through our current world of uncertainties and its ongoing conflicts. To get a better idea of where we are going, he interviewed over 20 visionary and provocative thinkers, ranging from Deepak Chopra, Noam Chomsky, Edgar Mitchell, Ram Dass, and Rupert Sheldrake, to Douglas Rushkoff, Robert Anton Wilson, Peter Russell, and iconoclastic comedian George Carlin. Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse is the result. Instead of a predictable roadmap to the future, Brown and his interview subjects paint a provocative picture of possibilities both perilous and exhilarating. Along the way, they also repeatedly explore the essential role consciousness will play, and already is playing, in shaping the world we are collectively heading towards, as well as how it is impacting and being impacted upon by such factors as language, politics, chemistry (including consciousness-expanding drugs), emotions, psychic phenomena, robotics, spirituality, shamanism, art, and alien encounters. This is a book that will appeal to all readers interested in becoming more aware of current world developments, both positive and negative, and what can be done about them to ensure a better world tomorrow.--Larry Trivieri Jr.

From Publishers Weekly
The Big Questions addressed in these hazy, wearisome interviews-Is there a God? Does consciousness survive death?-are the kind of imponderables your Aunt Martha would know as much about as the thinkers showcased here. But these interviewees are more likely than Aunt Martha to invoke "nonlocality" and "quantum holography" to give their mysticism a pseudo-scientific gloss. Brown, author of interview collections like Mavericks of the Mind, has a rigid, checklist style of interviewing in which he invites discussion of his pet spiritual and New Age hobbyhorses, including parapsychology and extraterrestrials. Sheldrake, Dean Radin and Apollo-14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell, all of the "Institute of Noetic Sciences," insist on the "vast abundance of compelling scientific evidence for psychic phenomena," while the late Harvard psychiatrist John E. Mack calls the alien abduction phenomenon "totally real," although he's "not sure how it's real-in other words, in what dimension it's occurring." Brown is especially interested in the interviewees' ubiquitous use of psychedelic drugs for consciousness-raising; predictably, they respond with vague dilations ("psychedelics helped me to see the vastness, the nondimensional, the altered dimensional... a tumbling of awareness," says medical marijuana activist Valerie Corral) that readers will find an inadequate substitute for dropping acid themselves. Brown also includes some skeptics, like the redoubtable Chomsky and sci-fi novelist Bruce Sterling, who pithily pours cold water on Brown's enthusiasms. On the whole, this is a dull, opaque and implausible commentary. Photos.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review
"'Once again David Jay Brown has assembled some of the most interesting minds in our culture to comment on some of the most interesting topics we can dream of. Every interview offers a fascinating look at our universe and the unique mind of the interviewee.' - Jeremy P. Tarcher, Publisher, Jeremy P. Tarcher, Inc. 'As an interviewer, David Jay Brown has an unusual talent for teasing out unexpected hunches, intuitions, and insights from some of the most brilliant people on the planet. This exciting book is the nearest thing to a crystal ball in which we can view the future of humanity through the eyes of the foremost personalities that are shaping that future.' - Nick Herbert, Author of Quantum Reality, Faster Than Light, and Elemental Mind 'Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse could not be more timely. These interviews of visionary thinkers, and the provocative interactions between those people interviewed, provide diverse road maps for navigating our way through an era of terror, conflict, and incipient disaster. Readers who are interested in novel paradigms, especially worldviews that will help humanity survive and even prosper, will find David Jay Brown's book a source of delight, of wonder, and even of hope.' - Stanley Krippner, PhD, Co-author of Extraordinary Dreams and How to Work with Them; Co-editor of Varieties of Anomalous Experience"


Customer Reviews

Enlightening perspectives, interesting read.5
After reading the Publisher's Weekly review of *Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse*, I decided to read the book to see if I agreed with the anonymous reviewer--because I just couldn't imagine how a collection of interviews with some of the greatest minds on the planet, about some of the most interesting questions that I can think of, could possibly be as "dull" as the reviewer claimed. It just looked too interesting. After reading the book, the big question that I now have about that review is: Why didn't Publisher's Weekly pay somebody to read the book who actually has an interest in exploring philosophical ideas? Since I have some questions about our approaches to the implausible, that go beyond clinging to normative standards, I found this book to be a fascinating gateway into a lot of fabulous minds.

Most interesting book I've read all year!5
I was delighted to find such a diversity of brilliant people interviewed in one book. Many of the ideas expressed give me tremendous hope for the future, which is something I've needed lately. I can't believe somebody found this dull...but then again, I can't believe republicans continue to hold office either. If you are so firmly set in your beliefs that there's no room for any questions or varying perspective, this is not a good book choice for you- it will probably enrage you. But if on the other hand you don't automatically scoff at open minded or liberal perspectives, this book is well worth reading.

Mind expanding ideas on controversial scientific topics4
This book contains interviews with experts about diverse subjects such as genetic engineering, neuroscience, robotics, psychic phenomenon and consciousness. Besides the regular questions there are some that are asked every interviewee. This way, the reader gets informed about topics from different viewpoints and ideologies. Questions such as:

- What do you think happens to consciousness after death?
- What is your perspective on the concept of God?
- Do you think that the human species is going to survive the next hundred years?

The well chosen questions, the extensive philosophic and divergent ideas of the interviewees make a fascinating, informative and mind-expanding book.