2021/03/06

The Master Game: Pathways to Higher Consciousness de Ropp, Robert S., Lourie, Iven

The Master Game: Pathways to Higher Consciousness (Consciousness Classics): de Ropp, Robert S., Lourie, Iven: 9780895561503: Amazon.com: Books


Explores the human psyche and the specific techniques through which one can achieve the highest possible levels of consciousness.

The Master Game: Pathways to Higher Consciousness (Consciousness Classics) Paperback – April 1, 2003
by Robert S. de Ropp (Author), Iven Lourie
4.7 out of 5 stars    46 ratings
Part of: Consciousness Classics (9 Books)
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272 pages
Language
English
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April 1, 2003
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"An indispensable guide for those seeking a more meaningful life."  —The Berkeley Gazette


"Inspired an entire generation to seek a synthesis of science and mysticism."  —Kenneth R. Pelletier, author, Mind as Healer, Mind as Slayer
About the Author
Robert de Ropp is the author of Drugs and the Mind.
Product details
Publisher : Gateways Books & Tapes; 3rd edition (April 1, 2003)
Language : English
Paperback : 272 pages
ISBN-10 : 0895561506
ISBN-13 : 978-0895561503
Item Weight : 14.5 ounces
Dimensions : 6 x 0.62 x 9 inches
Best Sellers Rank: #299,443 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
#574 in Consciousness & Thought Philosophy
#758 in New Age Mysticism (Books)
Customer Reviews: 4.7 out of 5 stars    46 ratings
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master game highly recommend read this book book and read deropp spiritual ideas based path development ropp copy seeking teachings useful advice early gurdjieff perspective presents

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M. Clifford
5.0 out of 5 stars Holds up well over time
Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2013
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First, I should disclose that I am currently living in the house that deRopp built on Sonoma Mountain as the Church of the Earth. I learned this a couple of years after I moved in, when my landlord showed me a copy of the "Church of the Earth"), a book by deRopp with great stories and photos of the process of building this place. That book, which seems to be unavailable currently, also details deRopp's "Three Pillars" philosophy of community: the Garden, the Temple, and the University). It was an experiment to try to create a community united by spiritual principles living in sustainable harmony with the earth. It failed after deRopp drowned on one of his sea kayaking trips, during which he would gather food from the ocean for the community. (disclaimer: the story of deRopp's drowning is based on oral tradition told among long-term residents of the North slope of Sonoma Mountain. I have not fact-checked it.)

There was a powerful synchronicity in learning this. After living here for a year--before I learned about the origins of this place--one day a flood of ideas came to me about a new religion; I wrote the ideas as they came in a composition book. The religion was called "The Church of the Earth is God" and it's main premise was that the religion our species needs now should be based on the premise that the Earth is God... and that this should not be held in the way that we think of "ultimate creator God" but instead as a way to cultivate reverence and respect for the earth. Was I channeling deRopp? Who knows. But I digress.

I first read The Master Game in the late 1970's. It made a lot of sense to me then. It's been good to revisit it in this new edition. I can see how deRopp's ideas have influenced me over the years. The writing style is very much of the period in which it was written, which to me feels like a sweet contrast in tone with more current pop psychology/spiritual guidance/self-help books (it's all three of those categories, in my opinion). It is hard for me to sort out how much of my enjoyment of it is sentimental, and how much is based on its objective qualities; therefore I have not been recommending it to my friends and students---just quietly enjoying it on my own while I sit under the Oak Tree where the residents of the Church of the Earth eventually learned to make peace with the bees.

That said, I acknowledge that Robert deRopp has a place among the ancestors of the various lineages that have guided my development, and for this I am grateful to him.
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David Getzschman
5.0 out of 5 stars Relevant, full of insight and speaks to our need to evolve as a species
Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2016
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"The Master Game: Pathways to Higher Consciousness" may have been written in the 1950s, but it is astonishing in its relevance to the present.

de Ropp frames human existence in terms of the games man plays, grouping them into object games (the pursuit of wealth, fame, and resources) and meta games (the pursuit of beauty and truth), and identifying the Master Game (the pursuit of enlightenment) as the only one worth playing.

I've found his candor and utter disdain for object games and organized religion really refreshing, and he is as eloquent on the drug experience as he is honest about how it will not lead to enlightenment.

I haven't read anything with this much enthusiasm in years!
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Joshua
5.0 out of 5 stars Time well spent
Reviewed in the United States on October 23, 2014
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I believe this is worth reading no matter how advanced your practice is. Ideas influencing your practice compound over time and this has become one of my favorite books ever. I've read a lot of Trungpa and his teachings utilized external theater, but i've always had a hard time integrating such teachings due to a resentment of not feeling genuine. This book has given me a better perspective on the subject and one that i can more readily utilize daily.
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Thomas M. Mcgovern
5.0 out of 5 stars Self-realization 101
Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2015
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This is the book that I read in 1970 that started me on the path of self-development. It was written by a bio-chemist and is based loosely on the Gurdjieff system, but it includes information from many traditions. You might think of it as a "Self-realization 101" book.
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Jennifer Wherrett
5.0 out of 5 stars I highly recommend it, although it is not light reading
Reviewed in the United States on July 17, 2016
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He's absolutely right! This book is extraordinarily revealing and provides valuable insight into human psychology and the human psyche. I highly recommend it, although it is not light reading. You can actually look back over human history and see the different, often dangerous games that have been played out. This book provides the insight into those different games humans play and the reasons for those games. More importantly, though, which game do we, as individuals, tend to play? And why?
6 people found this helpful
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MS
5.0 out of 5 stars Top 10 book of all-time. Major takeaways having to ...
Reviewed in the United States on July 10, 2017
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Top 10 book of all-time. Major takeaways having to do with the pitfalls that can arise when alters states of consciousness. Such a blessing.
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kirtida gautam
4.0 out of 5 stars Really good book on Creative Psychology
Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2017
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This is not some stupid new age BS book. It is one of the best books on Creative Psychology. The author knows his subject and presents it in matter-of-fact manner.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars ) I'm pleased it is back in print
Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2016
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I picked up the original edition of this book at a used book store in 1975 when I was 19 years old. I read it, and it has had a profound influence on my life ever since! :) I'm pleased it is back in print. I feel all young adults need to read this book to put everything about life in perspective! It is a game changer! I'm rereading it forty one years later, and it is still very enlightening! Highly recommended!
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Michael A Holden
5.0 out of 5 stars Is Cosmic Consciousness the only game worth playing.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 6, 2013
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This book is about the different ways in which we can raise our consciousness. De Ropp describes the 5 levels of consciousness as 1. Deep Sleep, 2. Dreaming sleep 3. Waking sleep (aka normal everyday consciousness) 4. Self-transendance (bliss) 5. Cosmic Consciousness.
Written in the 1960s, the book does go into a lot of detail into the various ways in which people use pyschadelic drugs to reach level 5. We are left in no doubt, however, that 'Creative Pyschology' is the only way. ie Go into the silence as much as possible and for as long as possible - stops thoughts. Secondly know what you are doing and why - mindfulness.
I'll be honest in that I will need to re-read this book several times, but isn't that the case with books that are worthwhile.
I would recommend that anyone on a spiritual journey add this to their collection.
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wacrompton
5.0 out of 5 stars Good for those who know what they're doing.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 30, 2014
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For those who have done a little work on themselves, and would like to see how some of the cults, gurus,
phoney teachers, tricksters (yes, and even genuine 'teachers') act, this book will be a help. I read it and loved it.
The more you discriminate on the different kinds of advice given, the better. Expensive, but in MHO, worth the dosh.
Warning. Don't fall for Gurdjieff rubbish. It's years out of date, and the likelihood is, the man lost his way years
before he setled in Paris.
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K2
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good book which ties in with Gurdjieff
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 18, 2014
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Very good book which ties in with Gurdjieff, Bennett and most other "systems" out there but this is very clear and he writes like he knows what he's talking about! Good Book!!
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David Farmer
5.0 out of 5 stars excellant
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 24, 2013
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brilliant book every home should have a copy.makes adifficult suject easy,simplyfied and possible to under-stand.would not live with out it.
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The Master Game (Consciousness Classics)
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The Master Game (Consciousness Classics)
by Robert S. de Ropp, Iven Lourie
 4.21  ·   Rating details ·  183 ratings  ·  15 reviews
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s/t: Pathways to Higher Consciousness
This book is a compelling exploration of the human psyche and of the specific techniques through which man can achieve the highest possible levels of consciousness. This exploration, which involves every aspect of human behavior--the instinctive, motor, emotional, and intellectual--is, in the words of the author, "the only game worth playing"--the Master Game. This best-known consciousness classic by Robert S. de Ropp sold more than 200,000 copies in the '60's and '70's and influenced two generations of readers on their spiritual paths. Scientist de Ropp's summary provides a fine introduction to the various practices of meditation, yoga, Fourth Way, and other paths. (less)
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Paperback, 272 pages
Published April 1st 2003 by Gateways Books Tapes (first published January 1968)
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LISTS WITH THIS BOOK
The Alchemist by Paulo CoelhoTao Te Ching by Lao TzuThe Book of Lies by Aleister CrowleySiddhartha by Hermann HesseA New Earth by Eckhart Tolle
Religion, Occultism, Mysticism, Metaphysical and New Age
477 books — 410 voters
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 Average rating4.21  ·  Rating details ·  183 ratings  ·  15 reviews

Ho
Oct 30, 2009Ho rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition

THIS IS AN IMPORTANT BOOK TO READ WHEN YOU ARE YOUNG. 
ACTUALLY, THIS IS AN IMPORTANT BOOK TO READ ANYTIME YOUNG OR OLD.

 AND IT IS CERTAINLY WORTH A RE-READING. ALTHOUGH WRITTEN IN THE 60s IT IS JUST AS RELEVANT NOW AS THEN.
flag3 likes · Like  · comment · see review
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Johanna
Aug 16, 2013Johanna rated it it was amazing
Excellent read for any Seeker or anyone who is interested in the topic. The book covered several areas of discussion on consciousness, and delves into some of the reasons why human beings have struggled to reach levels of higher consciousness in their lives. To me, it is a must read!
flag3 likes · Like  · comment · see review

Zendali
Dec 01, 2011Zendali rated it it was amazing
Shelves: religion-life-philosophies-etc
I can see why this is a classic and a bestseller.
This book has a lot of good ideas to give some thought to, I’ll come back to this book many times.
flag2 likes · Like  · comment · see review

Kirtida Gautam
Sep 21, 2017Kirtida Gautam rated it really liked it
Shelves: chakra-5
This is not some stupid new age BS book. It is one of the best books on Creative Psychology. The author knows his subject and presents it in matter-of-fact manner.
flag2 likes · Like  · comment · see review
Ed
Nov 06, 2012Ed rated it it was amazing


This book was recommended to me as an introduction to the Gurdjieff work. Splendid. It remains prominent on my bookshelf today and I often refer to it.
flag2 likes · Like  · comment · see review
Whoof
Sep 21, 2013Whoof added it  ·  review of another edition
Flippin great
flag2 likes · Like  · comment · see review
Erik Graff
Feb 06, 2011Erik Graff rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: everyone
Recommended to Erik by: no one
Shelves: psychology
One social current central to "the sixties", a current in addition to the political, was what may be called "the human potential" movement. For me it began with a public speaking course taken during summer school at Maine Township High School South. Among other research projects, inspired by articles in Life Magazine, I did one on psychedelic drugs. The owners of Time-Life themselves were, as the CIA put it in those days, "experienced" and the articles were generally very positive, alluring even. I hadn't taken any drugs whatsoever at that point, but the study of them and of the persons who took and studied them got me to continue such researches and to begin experimenting myself soon thereafter.
De Ropp's book was one of many I read on the subject of consciousness enhancing drugs. It also discusses other methods of expanding the boundaries of human being such as various yogic disciplines and encouraged me to experiment with them in college. (less)
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David Hamilton
Mar 27, 2008David Hamilton rated it it was amazing
Recommends it for: self-improvement types
Recommended to David by: Sunday School
This book comports very well with early, Oriental Christianity.

It was the finest and most advanced of the "games people play" or "transactional analysis" genre of books that came out in the late 60's toward the end of the Vietnam War. It has frequent references to the social pathology of warmongers, while offering devotees of the Way a rewarding, yet difficult path to higher consciousness and being. (Devotees will be largely scorned by modern society.)

The author is an exceptional biochemist. (less)
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Pax Analog
Jan 05, 2010Pax Analog rated it it was amazing
I re-read the earlier edition of this text, as I was interested in all game tropes, adding it to Finite and Infinite Games, by James P. Carse, and Gamer Theory, by McKenzie Wark. This text is an excellent reminder of the neglected seniority of the rigor of Consciousness, a la Zen, Gurdjieff, and other sources. Contrasted with other life games, it stands out in bold relief. I was particularly struck by the inadequacy of the Art game divorced from the Master game, and the efficacy of the two in tandem. (less)
flag1 like · Like  · comment · see review

Ray Greenberg
Dec 07, 2011Ray Greenberg rated it liked it

Great concept, well executed. Some ideas a little scary but a lot that rang true also....
flag1 like · Like  · comment · see review
James Hockings
Aug 23, 2011James Hockings rated it really liked it
Dated now, but the aim is still true.
flag1 like · Like  · comment · see review
David Hunter
Aug 24, 2020David Hunter rated it really liked it
Shelves: non-fiction, occult, philosophy, self-help
I feel like this book might have started the trend of "self-help" books that include the really useful advice and exercises in appendices. Smarter, Faster, Better does this, as does another book by Duhigg. Why do authors put the really helpful pieces in the area after the main text? It makes no sense.

Still, a very interesting read, and I think very helpful as well, if you read the appendices. (less)
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Tony Buckland
Dec 19, 2018Tony Buckland rated it really liked it
Exceptional guide to the young man planning his life. I intend now to refer to the book to determine if the outcomes of my life have gone as planned through this book and other readings by re reading it.
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John Sidwell
Jul 15, 2015John Sidwell rated it did not like it  ·  review of another edition
Of occasional insight and interest but basically a self help book framed as something much more. The deployment of Sheldon's typology is particularly dubious as are the author's endeavours to reduce historical error to immature consciousness. (less)
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Robert S. de Ropp - Wikipedia

Robert S. de Ropp - Wikipedia

Robert S. de Ropp

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Robert Sylvester de Ropp (1913–1987) was an English biochemist and a researcher and academic in that field. After retiring from biochemistry, he brought other long-time personal interests to the fore, becoming a prominent author in the fields of human potentials and the search for spiritual enlightenment.

Early life[edit]

de Ropp was born in Bath, England, on February 1, 1913, the son of William de Ropp (originally Wilhelm von der Ropp) by his marriage to Ruth Fisher. The Ropp family had been land-owning barons in Lithuania. William was of Teutonic and Cossack descent, being entitled to use the title “Baron”, and was perpetually in shaky financial circumstances. He had settled in England in 1910 and become naturalised in 1913. de Ropp's mother, Ruth, was a daughter of Albert Bulteel Fisher,[1] whose brother was the academic historian Herbert William Fisher.[2] Ruth de Ropp died in the 1918 flu pandemic.[3] Robert de Ropp had also contracted the flu during the pandemic, and by the time he fully recovered from its ravages he was seven years old.[2]

Much later in Robert's life, one of his mother's cousins, Adeline (the first wife of composer Ralph Vaughan Williams) was to figure quite importantly in his development.[2]

After de Ropp's recovery from the flu, his father sent him as a boarder to a preparatory school, and during the school holidays he lived with various relations on his mother's side, including an aunt in Leicestershire and a great aunt at Salisbury. This institution, Cheam School, offered the then-conventional curriculum of the Greek and Latin classics, English literature, and Muscular Christianity. Although subsequently questioning the premises of formal religion, de Ropp had his first spiritual experience during his confirmation.[2]

In 1925 de Ropp's father, being in financial difficulties, could not pay the school fees and took him out of the school. His father also remarried, and the family went to live on the old baronial estate in Lithuania. Shortly after relocating, de Ropp's father obtained work as an agent for an aircraft company in Berlin and, taking his wife there with him, abandoned Robert in the rambling ruin of the family home, where he lived with a family of Latvians attached to the old Ropp baronial estate. He lived a rustic existence in Lithuania, left to his own devices and picking up the ways of the peasants. Two years later, when he was fourteen, his father shipped him off to the semi-desert south-Australian outback to live with, and work for, a hardscrabble-farm family. Three years later, the farmer went bankrupt amid dust storms. The farming family had to leave the lad to his own devices, and the situation made him bitter and confused. Lonely and nearly penniless, hard-bitten Robert eventually made his way back to England, where one of his maternal aunts took him in. In a while, he moved in with his mother's cousin, Adeline, who lived in Dorking with her husband, Ralph Vaughan Williams.[2]

The traumatized and embittered Robert de Ropp gained some perspective and matured during this period of support and advanced education. Like many intelligent, humane people of his time, de Ropp was appalled by the staggering destruction and carnage that had occurred during World War I. However, he was also dismayed by the spread of fascistic ideologies in Europe in the 1930s. Given his values and desire to commit himself to a positive effort, he allied with many other British intellectuals of similar inclination in Richard Sheppard’s Peace Pledge Union — only to find hopes for effective peaceful negotiation with the Nazis dashed when Germany invaded Poland and then France.[2]

Career as biochemist[edit]

The Vaughan Williamses had paid for Robert’s further education at the Royal College of Science in South Kensington, where he eventually specialized in biology. He earned a PhD degree in plant physiology at the Royal College. During this period, as well, he developed interests in politics, philosophy, and spirituality.[2]

In this earlier portion of his life, de Ropp was active in plant physiology and cancer research. In 1939 he was at the Research Institute of Plant Physiology at Imperial College of Science and Technology in London. In the first quarter of 1939, at Paddington, he married Eileen M. Trinder, with whom he had lived for a number of years.[2][4] He and Eileen had two children. During the Second World War, de Ropp worked as a bacteriologist and plant biologist. He met Kathleen Elizabeth (Betty) Knowlman when during the War years he carried out research, and she worked as a gardener, at Kew Gardens (England's botanical research and education institution). Betty later joined him in the United States after he moved there, at which time they married.[2]

In the early 1940s, de Ropp wrote a number of research papers relating to plant physiology and tumours. By 1945 he was a Research Officer of the Agricultural Research Council at the Rothamsted Experimental Station.[5] After emigrating to the U.S., de Ropp's professional life included a stay at the Rockefeller Institute as a visiting investigator. At various times, his research was centered on cancermental illness, or drugs that affect behavior. During a ten-year period working for the Lederle Laboratories near Pearl River, New York, de Ropp wrote a book for the general reader in the field of psychoactive substances (many of which are plant-derived): Drugs and the Mind.[2]

Avocational interests[edit]

de Ropp's intense avocational interests, stemming largely from a spontaneous childhood spirituality, were nurtured by the influence of P. D. Ouspensky, whom he met in 1936. "The work" (as the Ouspensky disciplines were termed) was an approach to establishing an integrated human awareness at a higher level — considered to be a true inner freedom. de Ropp went regularly to Lyne Place for "work" weekends from 1936 to 1945 and was particularly attached to Madame Ouspensky as a deeply insightful guide, until 1940. In that year the Oupenskys emigrated from Britain to the United States; after living through war conditions in Britain, de Ropp joined the Ouspenskys there on a New Jersey farm in 1945, the European hostilities being past. However, de Ropp felt the Ouspenskys' milieu had by this point become stagnant and ineffective, and he became disillusioned about the work. "Ouspensky was no longer a teacher," de Ropp opined in his autobiography.[2]

After arriving in the U.S., Robert de Ropp, by his own efforts, built two houses, one in Connecticut, another in New York state; he and his second wife, Betty, lived in Rockland County, NY. de Ropp met G. I. Gurdjieff (the Ouspenskys' famous teacher) during Gurdjieff's final visit to New York, in 1948.[2]

Years in Sonoma County[edit]

After working for the Lederle Laboratories for 10 years, de Ropp's attachment to the northeast U.S. waned, and he felt a pull to the West Coast. In 1961 he purchased a small house on several acres, in Glen Ellen (slightly east of Santa RosaCalifornia), where the climate was mild and soil could be worked to high fertility.[2] In time he became an independent writer and teacher — much concerned about humanity's growing environmental and spiritual crises — and set up a learning community on his land around 1967 [6] The idea behind it was experiential learning at the levels of body, mind, and spirit.

de Ropp's family included the two children from his first marriage, and the children he had with his wife Betty.[7] To support his family and finance their transition into the direct economy of living from the land and ocean, de Ropp worked until 1973 as a research scientist at the University of San Francisco. The family put down roots in their rural Sonoma-County locale, working at living simply. They grew fruits, vines, vegetables and wheat, as well as many ornamental plants. de Ropp fished in the ocean and Betty raised chickens.[2] It was also during this time that de Ropp had an encounter with his neighbor, Hunter S. Thompson, that was immortalized in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. In the book, Thompson writes that "acid guru" de Ropp's name was "redacted at insistence of publisher's lawyer," but interestingly, in the original Rolling Stone article, both Robert S. de Ropp and his residence on Sonoma Mountain Road are unredacted.[8]

de Ropp wrote most of his books during his Sonoma County years. Among his most influential books (concerning spiritual development) are: The Master Game and Warrior's Way: The Challenging Life Games. The first of these stands as his report on what he had learned from his teachers and from the writings of similar figures, as well as more mainstream psychologistspsychiatrists, and researchers into fields such as religion and the spiritual life. The second is in part a sequential biography, and was written near the end of his life; a significant dimension of its content is his very personal evaluation of the characters and contributions of Gurdjieff, Ouspensky, Madame Ouspensky, John G. Bennett (another direct disciple of Gurdjieff), Gerald HeardAldous HuxleyTimothy LearyStephen GaskinAlan WattsCarlos Castaneda, and other figures serving as teachers of those engaged in spiritual quests. He is critical of those he views as false gurus or merely pompous, and attempts a fair-handed assessment of those he deems verbose but limited, whilst yet expressing genuine gratitude for those whose efforts he believes have enriched human life.

de Ropp died in 1987, in his mid seventies, in an accident while ocean-kayaking.[9]

Publications[edit]

Sample list of academic papers[edit]

  • R. S. de Ropp, The Effect of Preliminary Soaking of the Grain on the Growth and Tropic Responses of the Excised Embryo of Winter Rye Studies in the Vernalisation of Cereals. Annals of Botany 3: 1939 243–252
  • R. S. de Ropp, Studies in the Physiology of Leaf Growth: III. The Influence of Roots on the Growth Annals of Botany 10: 1946 353–359
  • R. S. de Ropp, The Growth-Promoting Action of Bacteria-Free Crown-Gall Tumor Tissue Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, Vol. 75, No. 1 (Jan. - Feb. 1948), pp. 45–50
  • R. S. de Ropp, The Interaction of Normal and Crown-Gall Tumor Tissue in in Vitro Grafts American Journal of Botany, Vol. 35, No. 7 (Jul., 1948), pp. 372–377
  • R. S. de Ropp, The Action of Some Chemical Growth Inhibitors on Healthy and Tumor Tissue of Plants Cancer Research 11, September 1, 1951 663–668,
  • R. S. de Ropp and Doris McKenzie, The Transplantation of Small Numbers of Tumor Cells Cancer Research 14, September 1, 1954, 588–590
  • R. S. de Ropp and Elizabeth Markley, The Correlation of Different Aspects of Auxin Action Plant Physiol. 30 (3): May 1955; 210–214.
  • E. Jack Davis & R. S. de Ropp, Metabolic Origin of Urinary Methylamine in the Rat Nature 190 (13 May 1961) 636–637

Books[edit]

  • Drugs and the Mind (1957)
  • Man Against Aging (1960)
  • Science and Salvation (1962)
  • The Master Game: Beyond the Drug Experience (1968)
  • Sex Energy: The Sexual Force in Man and Animals (1969)
  • The New Prometheans (1972)
  • Church of the Earth: The Ecology of a Creative Community (1974)
  • Eco-Tech: The Whole-Earther's Guide to the Alternate Society (1975)
  • Warrior's Way: The Challenging Life Games (1979)
  • Self-Completion: Keys to the Meaningful Life (1988)
  • Warrior's Way: A Twentieth Century Odyssey (1995)

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Ruth Fisher"Community Trees. FamilySearch. 28 July 2009. Archived from the original on 1 August 2013. Retrieved 2012-05-31.
  2. Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Ropp, Robert S. de, Warrior's Way: a Twentieth Century Odyssey (Nevada City, CA: Gateways, 1995 and 2002)
  3. ^ Office for National Statistics - Death Indices
  4. ^ Office for National Statistics - Marriage Indices
  5. ^ Oxford Journals - Robert de Ropp Studies in the Physiology of Leaf Growth Annals of Botany 1946
  6. ^ Sophia Wellbeloved, Gurdjieff: The Key Concepts (Routledge, 2003, ISBN 0-415-24898-1)
  7. ^ Obituary of Betty de Ropp from The Davis Enterprise Thursday, February 12, 2004, (Yolo County, California)
  8. ^ Thompson, Hunter S.; Thompson, Hunter S. (1971-11-11). "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas"Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2020-08-15.
  9. ^ Get New Visions

The Master Game by Robert de Ropp 1

알라딘: 마스터 게임- 삶의 의미, 의식의 탐구, 깨달음을 향한 여정 로버트 드 로프

알라딘: 마스터 게임

마스터 게임 - 삶의 의미, 의식의 탐구, 깨달음을 향한 여정   
로버트 드 로프 (지은이),김기현 (옮긴이)좋은땅2018-04-10

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양장본432쪽148*210mm (A5)648gISBN : 9791162223536
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국내도서 > 자기계발 > 성공 > 성공학
이벤트

이 달의 적립금 혜택

이 시간, 알라딘 굿즈 총집합!
책소개수십 년간 각고의 노력으로 얻게 된 깨달음의 정수를 담았다. 삶의 핵심을 관통하는 날카로운 시점, 강인하고 직설적인 표현, 보다 높은 곳을 향해 나아가려는 굳은 의지를 통해 얻은 삶의 의미에 대한 해답과 깨달음은 우리에게 많은 것을 시사한다.
목차
역자 서문

I. 게임과 목적
II. 약물 경험
III. 다섯 개의 방
IV. 고요의 세계
V. 자아들의 극장
VI. 가면과 본질
VII. 정신 중추에 대한 교육
VIII. 창조 심리학과 정신질환
IX. 창조적 공동체
X. 결론

부록 A 신체적 자각과 운동
부록 B 자율 훈련법
부록 C 진심 어린 기도
부록 D 영혼의 사원 세우기

역자 후기
미주더보기

저자 및 역자소개
로버트 드 로프 (지은이) 
저자파일
 
최고의 작품 투표
 
신간알림 신청

로버트 드 로프 (지은이)   
리투아니아 출신의 부모로부터 1913년 영국에서 태어났다. 어려운 가정환경으로 리투아니아, 베를린, 호주 등으로 이사하며 힘든 어린시절을 보냈다. 청소년기가 끝날 무렵 영국으로 돌아와 사우스 켄싱턴의 로얄 컬리지에서 생물학을 전공했고 그곳에서 식물 생리학 박사학위를 받았다. 이후 식물 생리학 연구소 및 식물 생물학자로 일하였고 1936년에 우스펜스키를 만나 1945년까지 주말마다 우스펜스키가 사는 라인 플레이스를 방문했고 우스펜스키로부터 그리고 우스펜스키를 통한 구르지에프의 가르침으로부터 많은 영향을 받았다. 우스펜스키를 따르는 사람들은 1940년 미국 뉴저지로 건너갔는데, 드 로프도 1945년 미국으로 건너가 이들과 합류했지만 곧 이들 공동체에 환멸을 느끼고 떨어져 나왔다. 미국으로 이주한 드 로프는 록펠러 재단의 조사관으로 일했고 이후 뉴욕 펄 리버 근처의 레덜 연구소Lederle Laboratories에서 10년간 일하면서 정신 활성 물질에 대한 책을 썼다. 1961년 그는 캘리포니아 산타 로사의 동쪽, 글렌 엘렌Glen Ellen에 정착하였고 독립적인 작가이자 교사가 되었다. 이후 1967년 자신의 사는 곳 주위에 깨달음의 지역공동체를 세웠다. 그는 자신의 대부분의 책을 소노마 카운티에서 저술했다. 그는 약 11권을 저술했는데, 대표작으로는 《마스터 게임》(1968), 《자기 완성》(1988) 그리고 《전사의 길: 20세기 오디세이》(1995) 등이 있다. 70세 중반인 1987년, 바다 카약 타던 중 사고로 사망했다. 접기
최근작 : <마스터 게임>
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김기현 (옮긴이) 

재활의학과 의사, 서울 거주
최근 번역으로는 《마스터 게임》, 《백만장자 습관》이 있다.
intrus@hanmail.net
최근작 : … 총 4종 (모두보기)
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출판사 제공 책소개

수십 년간 각고의 노력으로 얻게 된 깨달음의 정수를 담았다. 현대의 우리가 이 책을 통해 깨달음을 얻을 수 있다는 건 저자의 시대를 뛰어넘는 깊은 통찰력과 깨달음 때문일 것이다. 삶의 핵심을 관통하는 날카로운 시점, 강인하고 직설적인 표현, 보다 높은 곳을 향해 나아가려는 굳은 의지를 통해 얻은 삶의 의미에 대한 해답과 깨달음은 우리에게 많은 것을 시사한다. 이 책이 당신의 삶의 고뇌에 대한 만병통치약은 아니지만 인생의 의미와 깨달음을 찾아가는 데 있어 하나의 지침을 제공해 줄 수는 있을 것이다.

그 무엇인가가 존재한다고 느껴지지만 그것이 종교에서 말하는 그것은 아닌 듯하고 또 가르침을 주겠다는 사람들은 잠시 동안의 표면적인 정신적 먹거리만 제공할 뿐, 깊은 곳에 막힌 답답함을 뚫어주지는 못했다. 이 책을 읽기 전까지는.

수십 년간 각고의 노력으로 얻게 된 깨달음의 정수를 담았다. 현대의 우리가 이 책을 통해 깨달음을 얻을 수 있다는 건 저자의 시대를 뛰어넘는 깊은 통찰력과 깨달음 때문일 것이다. 삶의 핵심을 관통하는 날카로운 시점, 강인하고 직설적인 표현, 보다 높은 곳을 향해 나아가려는 굳은 의지를 통해 얻은 삶의 의미에 대한 해답과 깨달음은 우리에게 많은 것을 시사한다. 이 책이 당신의 삶의 고뇌에 대한 만병통치약은 아니지만 인생의 의미와 깨달음을 찾아가는 데 있어 하나의 지침을 제공해 줄 수는 있을 것이다. 접기
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리뷰쓰기
공감순 
     
인생의 의미와 의식에 관한 통찰이 담겨있습니다. 새창으로 보기
.어렵지만 좋은 책입니다.삶의 의미 목적 그리고 의식수준에 따른 자세한 경험과 지침이 있습니다.명상을 많이 하시거나 초월의식에 관심 많은신분수련중인 분들은 구입권합니다.소량만 찍어서 곧 절판예정일거에요.

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