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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
74 of 81 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
liberating and enlightening,
By Simon "jones" (sydney, australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Fall: The Insanity of the Ego in Human History and the Dawning of a New Era (Paperback)
I bought this book after reading Eckhart Tolle's endorsement: "A fascinating and important book on the origin, development and the imminent demise of the ego...Highly readable and enlightening, as the author's acute mind is imbued with the higher faculty of spiritual awareness." Eckhart Tolle's books have changed my life so I was sure this book would be important for me too, and haven't been wrong. I've read it through over the last three days and feel also though my whole outlook on the world has been altered. This book is a complete revisioning of human history from a spiritual point of view, seeing human history in terms of the development of the ego, looking at how the ego has given rise to thousands of years of violence and oppression. Taylor looks in turn at warfare, male domination, social inequality, alienation from the body, abuse of the natural world and so on, showing how the over-developed sense of ego produces these problems.
The book makes the important point - using a massive range of research - that earlier human beings and many of the world's native peoples - did not have our strong sense of self or ego and so were free from all of this disorder. The book's depiction of how the insanity of so much human behaviour is produced by the ego is riveting and extremely impressive. After reading this there is no way you can look at "normal" human behaviour in the same way. Taylor makes it absolutely clear that what we consider as normal is, in many ways, insane. And just as impressively, Taylor puts together an extremely good case for the idea that we are beginning to transcend the insanity of the ego and moving into a new era. This is one of those books which makes you look at the world in a new light, and gives you inspiration and hope for the future. Somehow it gives me the inspiration to try to fight for a better world, to contribute to the collective change which is taking place, and rekindle the state of harmony which the human race has lost.
59 of 66 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A book with a vast scope,
By inner child "inner child" (Birmingham , England) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Fall: The Insanity of the Ego in Human History and the Dawning of a New Era (Paperback)
This book is amazing - a review of human history over thousands of years and looking into the future as well - it has a vast scope. But most of all it has a powerful spiritual perspective, looking at how the human mind (the over-developed ego as the author calls it) has given birth to most of our problems in history and in terms of our own psychology. For the last 6000 years human life has been full of suffering - but now, according to the this book, we may be moving into a new evolutionary phase, in which we are beginning to transcend our insanity and the social and psychological problems which come from it. I saw this book recommended on Eckhart Tolle's website, and have not been disappointed. A powerful combination of history, psychology and spirtuality.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An ego-busting page-turner,
By Oscar Del Santo (Spain) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Fall: The Insanity of the Ego in Human History and the Dawning of a New Era (Paperback)
Steve Taylor knows how to keep his readers hooked in spite of the many quotes and historical references in this oterhwise compelling read.
The basic premise - that the birth of the 'ego' in human consciousness brought forth a host of unwanted consequences such as wars, selfishness, angst and separation from nature - is supported by not only history but our own sense of inadequacy and alienation but by the way humans relate to their own bodies and their surrounding environment. While Taylor could be accused by Wilberians of falling into the 'pre-trans fallacy', his book serves as a reminder of how stages of consciousness cut across our social, psychological and spiritual lives. Deserves to be read.
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