2023/09/28

The Perennial Philosophy by Aldous Huxley | LibraryThing

The Perennial Philosophy by Aldous Huxley | LibraryThing





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The Perennial Philosophy
by Aldous Huxley (Author)

Members Reviews Popularity Average rating Mentions
1,788 14 8,982 (3.93) 25

Adelaide.L.M.'s review


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Aufgrund zu viel bla bla und Langeweile beim Lesen abgebrochen.
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Flagged flagchepedaja3527 | Aug 23, 2022 |

This is a great example of why I don’t assign number ratings to books.

I mean, he’s excessively fearful of conformity; he talks about Luther the way that I talk about Emerson.... Nobody seems to talk smack about Emerson, so I’m not worried about him. And anyway, he was a veneer of respectability and manliness (which I don’t much like anyway, the manly type) over a sewer of self-concern and self-glorying. Luther would have ranted about the devil the way I’m ranting now and lacked charity the way I lack it now, but at least he would have understood. But I digress.

Christ said to make disciples in every nation, (maybe not setting up empire in order to do it, right), but I don’t think that every nation stands in equal need, despite the fact that a universal message should be universally available. But Hinduism and Taoism and most of the Asian religions, at least in their most pure forms—and who knows what impure forms of Christianity would look like to a Muslim missionary— are the higher religions of mankind, and not less developed than Catholicism and Calvinism. They’re not like the sex cults of paganism, which magnify sex-violence and diminish the poor, and from which Europe and Africa have stood in such need of saving.... Paganism is the stuff of desire, but I would have had far less love in me had the gospel of Jesus Christ not restrained, with my co-operation, my desire.

[It’s not unique; nothing really is. But it’s rare. It’s not the default....

Agnes Wickfield: This Christmas I want to remember the birth of our Savior so that I can have a new birth of gratitude and hope, so that I can cultivate a more perfect charity and be more like Christ, a help to God and my neighbor.
*beat*
Dora Spenlow: I hope it snows.]

So Huxley gets some things right and some wrong. “Everyone should be perfect if I’m going to let them on Team Perennial, so Calvin is out because he’s a murderer like David, and anyway the Bible is rot because people like it too much.” Nirvana shirts, only ten dollars, right.

“And we really all need the higher life, and we should quit persecuting each other, especially because of the pettiness that’s in it.” How to add to that, right.

.... Huxley is a little too cerebral, in that he thinks he’s going to say just the right thing and give everybody exactly what they deserve, you know. I don’t think I could do that. I fuck up my reviews all the time. So who’s Huxley? I mean, don’t you have to reach out into the darkness, and accept that you’ll see the outlines but not the whole thing? It’s the heart that does it; a mental production is a very mixed bag.

*British accent* ‘So that’s why I don’t do no bloody number ratings, love.’
| flagsmallself | Dec 12, 2019 |

Agnostic quasi-religious treatise on how to realize divinity (a.k.a. reality). It seems Huxley's The Divine Within was more than enough for me.
| flagjasoncomely | Dec 3, 2019 |

Aldous Huxley, who brought us 'Brave New World,' and almost fifty other novels and non-fiction works is the author of 'The Perennial Philosophy." Quoting Rufus M. Jones, who was ". . .an American religious leader, writer, magazine editor, philosopher and college professor. . ." Source: Wikipedia.com "I am amazed at the range of the author's knowledge. . .It is both an anthology and an interpretation of the supreme mystics, East and West. There are well-known books on Western mysticism. There are studies of Oriental and Mohammedan mysticism, but this is the first time that anybody has adequately covered the entire field and showed an equal familiarity with all fields. It is a magnificent achievement."
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Flagged flaguufnn | Apr 20, 2019 |

It's a good book in principle, but rather repetitive, and a touch too religious in its own way, rather than philosophical. I am not sure of the value of transcending the illusion of "I", in favour of being "nothing", or "everything", according to the book. I leave you with a quote I liked at p.83, "Love seeks no cause beyond itself and no fruit; it is its own fruit, its own enjoyment. I love because I love".½
| flagPrincesca | Mar 27, 2018 |

This book in itself is incomplete. Huxley considers this work a metaphysical study of what saints and sages experienced. Their 'personal' experience lay beyond human understanding, but the initial progress was understandable. Huxley does not give his own opinion alongside the sages' texts. I have not yet read his ‘The Doors of Perception.’ I am inclined to think he does pose his opinion there.

Huxley had read many philosophical and religious texts to arrange them to support a philosophy he himself constructed (empirical theology). He termed this the title of the book. Generally speaking, Huxley argued that all systems of thought and especially religious mysticisms all converged. After moving beyond the point of convergence, there could be an encounter with 'God' as the Ground of all Being. This anthology of brief texts attempts to help the reader approach this ground of Being (or Reality) as much as possible through knowledge. Huxley says that any change in the knower accompanies "a change in the nature and amount of knowing."(Introduction) By becoming acquainted with many wisdom traditions, Eastern and Western, direct knowledge can become "immediate" or personal for each person. Huxley says that Catholic Christianity taught a version of the Perennial Philosophy but overlaid it with excessive sacramentalism and idolatry. Huxley, instead, encourages people to view all things as symbols and sacraments in relation to the universe and its Ground (p. 271). His presentation is Hindu in orientation but lacks a teleological frame in the Christian sense. Huxley seemed to aim at promoting the unitive aspect of God as primary in this world and a mystical Sanjuanist conception of the Ground of Being itself (Nada). I would categorize this book as syncretist mystical thought but not comparative religious thought since Huxley felt that all people should encounter the Ground without taint from religious traditions, each tradition lacking some aspect to aid a person regardless of their geographic location. Huxley wrote this at a time when this sort of eclectic thinking was not common.
4 | flagsacredheart25 | Dec 31, 2011 |

This book brought all spiritual and religious thought down to several basic commonalities. These are the tenets, then that have more likelihood of real truth.
1 | flagAdrianesc | Nov 23, 2010 |

What have all the mystics of all times and all religions in common? What are all of them telling and doing with their lives? Mr Huxley goes find about and tell you in this masterpiece, that happens to be double masterpiece for the fact of being published in the most atheist period of Humanity, and not even in a way that would fight such atheism. Because the book is not trying to bring you to any religion. In fact, religions are presented as obstacles to reach the total knowledge (and the total love, which for a mystic I guess is just the same). Precious.
1 | flagqgil | Mar 1, 2009 |

documented brilliance. this is a wandering intellects encyclopedia that embodies all the Eastern religions and critiques most of the Western ones to in a way only the great late Mr. Huxley could do.

a book that changes minds forever
1 | flagTakeItOrLeaveIt | Jan 28, 2009 |

WONDERFUL FIRST EDITION QUALITY
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Flagged flagBrightman | Jan 17, 2009 |