2020/01/29

Spiritual Ecology: The Cry of the Earth by Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee | Goodreads

Spiritual Ecology: The Cry of the Earth by Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee | Goodreads



Spiritual Ecology: The Cry of the Earth

 4.37  ·   Rating details ·  335 ratings  ·  32 reviews
Showing the deep connection between our present ecological crisis and our lack of awareness of the sacred nature of creation, this series of essays from spiritual and environmental leaders around the world shows how humanity can transform its relationship with the Earth. Combining the thoughts and beliefs from a diverse range of essayists, this collection highlights the current ecological crisis and articulates a much-needed spiritual response to it. Perspectives from Buddhism, Sufism, Christianity, and Native American beliefs as well as physics, deep psychology, and other environmental disciplines, make this a well-rounded contribution. The complete list of contributors are Oren Lyons, Thomas Berry, Thich Nhat Hanh, Chief Tamale Bwoya, Joanna Macy, Sandra Ingerman, Richard Rohr, Wendell Berry, Mary Evelyn Tucker, Sister Miriam MacGillis, Satish Kumar, Vandana Shiva, Pir Zia Inayat-Kahn, Winona LaDuke, John Stanley, John Newall, Bill Plotkin, Geneen Marie Haugen, Jules Cashford, and Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee. (less)FRIEND REVIEWS

 | 
Sejin,
Sejin, start your review of Spiritual Ecology: The Cry of the Earth
Wil
Jul 02, 2013rated it it was amazing
This is certainly the most powerful book I have read in years and one that I hope to continue reading for the rest of my life.

Spiritual Ecology is a collection of essays written by religious/spiritual and environmental leaders. I was blown away by the selection of authors that were chosen for this book and the insight that each of them shared. Each essay touches upon ecology in a unique, inspiring way.

I originally bought this book because I was interested in Thich Nhat Hanh, who wrote a great piece for this book. However, some of my favorite pieces were written by Joanna Macy, Wendell Berry, Bill Plotkin, Thomas Berry, and Richard Rohr.

The authors come from diverse backgrounds: from Thomas Berry and Richard Rohr who are Christian ecotheologians, to Thich Nhat Hanh, a Buhhdist monk, to Chief Oren Lyons, a member of the Onondaga Nation.

If you know and appreciate any of the writers, reading this book is a great way to find other writers that you will really enjoy.

I also want to point out that essays are really uplifting. A lot of ecological literature, like Eaarth by Bill McKibben, use fear tactics to spread environmental awareness, which I don't think is as enlightening. This book invokes concern, but it is also very positive, and practical.
 (less)
Florence Millo
Jul 20, 2013rated it really liked it
Don't you love it when a book puts into words what you have felt but couldn't articulate? That is what this book did for me-- things I had pondered and felt but couldn't quite turn into words.
This is a collection of essays by several thoughtful, spiritual people writing from a variety of perspectives. All point toward a lack spiritual groundedness at the core of the ecological devastation we are currently participating in.
It is not a book to be read in one easy sitting but should be read
 ...more
Melissa
Jul 06, 2013rated it it was amazing
Shelves: favorites
I absolutely loved this book and fought the urge to highlight and apply tabs to every page, but only because it was the library's copy...my own copy coming soon.

This is a fantastic collection of essays on behalf of the earth. In these varied essays, we are faced with all the ways we, as a species, fail the planet, how we started failing thousands of years ago, and how industrialization is taking us beyond the tipping point. Susan Murphy's essay really drove home ways we are failing. Through our
 ...more
Ilona Meagher
Aug 14, 2013rated it it was amazing
This book is so refreshing, so empowering, so magic-revealing and so human meaning-making. If your response to the environmental challenges we face (yes, they *are* serious and quite painful to digest) is to tune out and weep as if all is already lost, this book may buy you some hope.

More of us putting its concepts to practice may also buy Gaia (and all of her life forms) more time.
Guttersnipe Das
Nov 02, 2013rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
If you arrive suddenly in a foreign city, a city where you do not know the landmarks and do not speak the language, you may find yourself urgently in need a guide. In the same way, this book is vitally necessary, now that we find ourselves in a changed and unfamiliar world. If we wish to survive as a civilization, we need to find new paths - and we need to find them quickly. You would do well to call in sick to work - and stay home to read this.

A few of the texts here I'd found previously, including one that blew open my mind when I read it aged 19: Joanna Macy's "Greening of the Self". It is even more amazing than I remember. Thich Nhat Hanh is here as well and just because he's a beloved Zen master who knows the right way to eat an orange doesn't mean he pulls his punches: "In my mind I see a group of chickens in a cage disputing over a few seeds of grain, unaware that in a few hours they will all be killed." He knows we may not make it. Even acknowledging we may not survive, there is a way forward, a way to take action and not be paralyzed by helplessness.

Of the thinkers I discovered for the first time while reading this book, the most helpful and inspiring was Sister Miriam MacGillis. The interview here with Sister Miriam, a contemplative inspired by Thomas Berry, was stunning - perhaps the most profound example of skillful means united with a vast perspective that I have ever come across. Her understanding is so vast - and she brings it to bear on the farm that is in her stewardship. I read it three times in a row. It is magnificent.

I loved, too, Susan Murphy's essay, "The Koan of the Earth". Susan Murphy is a Zen teacher in Australia and her gaze is stark and clear. When the situation is as serious as this one, it is best to have a physician who does not mince words. In order to survive, we will need vast compassion, and it is compassion like this, tough as nails. (After reading this essay, I wanted very much to read `Minding the Earth, Mending the World', Murphy's book on this subject, but it appears to be unavailable. Somebody please bring this book back to print!)

I was particularly grateful to Geneen Marie Haugen and the essay "Imagining Earth". Haugen writes about how the imagination can be used to reacquaint ourselves with the sacred in the land and how this practice, which involves some "make-believe", might turn out to be essential for our survival.

Haugen helped me a lot to understand my own experience. As a boy in New Hampshire, I experienced my family's farm as a place vastly alive and full of spirits. Certain places had certain powers; there was even an area I believed to be "the heart of the farm". I grew up, thought myself foolish, and it was years before I was able recognize how correct I'd been as a child! This essay is a beautiful guide to this practice. She helped me understand, too, why I find the unfortunate fate of my family's farm (and life in Tokyo) so wrenching. Haugen writes, "A practice of attending an animate world may have a cumulative effect of rearranging our own consciousness in a way that we cannot later withdraw from without pain"(166). Yes, indeed.

Anthologies like this one aim to reach many people by providing many styles and approaches. I admit there were a few essays here that seemed to me "keynote addresses" - general statements aimed at an audience already convinced. I hope that this book will serve as a sort of general introduction for a series of books on this subject.

Hopefully these essays will serve to fuel discussion. Admittedly, I did not agree with all the approaches found here. A few, like the essay by Sandra Ingerman, seemed to be examples of cheesy, old-style New Age thinking that is too busy being airy and optimistic to actually be useful. This sort of thing was good enough for 1987 (when "The Aquarian Conspiracy" was going to save us all) but - we're going to need to think a lot harder now.

In a book of strong essays, there was one essay that dismayed and even offended me: Satish Kumar's "3 Dimensions of Ecology: Soil, Soul, Society." As a keen student of Hinduism and Buddhism, I think the ecological perspectives of these traditions are both fascinating and urgently necessary. This essay, however, is an embarrassing concoction of platitudes, generalities and sentimentality. This is not 1893, Mr. Kumar is not Swami Vivekananda, and we do not need dumbed-down, platitude-ridden, soft-serve presentations of Hinduism anymore. Pardon me for being rude, but I think this is an argument worth having!

Kumar translates yagna, tapas and dana as soil, soul and society. I'm sorry, but that's not what those words mean. If he wishes to give a creative translation or reinterpretation, that's great, but he should give the traditional meanings and the reasons for his reinterpretation - not just assume that we are ignorant and cannot handle the actual definitions of words. It is no longer necessary to gloss over what is complicated in these faiths -- we can handle the complexity of the real tradition. For a brilliant discussion of how Hindus see the divine as manifest in the land around them, please read Diana Eck's marvelous book India: A Sacred Geography, a book that is as necessary to ecologists as it is to students of religion.

I am grateful to this wonderful collection of essays for giving me so much to investigate and ponder - as well as a few things to argue about! May there be more books like this one - and fast! May the conversation continue deep into the night.
 (less)
David Salmon
Sep 12, 2013rated it it was amazing
Spiritual Ecology is a collection of essays illustrating humanities past relationships with the Earth and the current issues our relationship faces. It is beautiful, insightful and inspiring to read. Not only does it motivate you to deepen your connection to the land, it also keeps you grounded. Each writer comes from a unique background and shares their understanding of spiritual ecology in a beautiful way.
Stephanie Bogdanich
Aug 05, 2014rated it it was ok
I thought this would have some interesting and unique ideas about communicating about climate change but it's the same old stuff I've read elsewhere.
Justin
Sep 02, 2014rated it it was amazing
Shelves: environment
This is an extraordinary compilation of short essays that successfully updates the concept of deep ecology. The well chosen authors offer a diversity of perspectives that run the entire imaginable gamut. I am especially impressed with this book because the authors are not afraid to boldly state and explore the vital spiritual dimension of ecology.

As Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee says, “In only relating to our planet from a physical perspective, much of the ecological movement perpetuates the concept of the earth as something solely physical, without sacredness or soul, and so reinforces the divorce of matter from spirit.”

Our external world accurately reflects the current state of our internal world. I like that very few lines in this book were dedicated to describe the symptoms of the current ecological crisis as this turns into scare tactics all too easily. Rather, several authors took the time to bring to light this spiritual dimension of both humanity and the soul of the living Earth.

Perhaps the essay I enjoyed most was written by Joanna Macy called The Greening of the Self. In it she argues that the current environmental crisis comes from understanding of ourselves based on Newtonian physics which separates us from the material world and gives us dominion over it.

The argument that we are part of the Earth system is one of the two or three deepest roots of all ecology. It goes without saying that since we want to take care of ourselves, then it is obvious that we need to take care of our environment. This perspective is brilliantly explained by Joanna Macy:

“The obvious choice, then, is to extend our notions of self-interest. For example, it would not occur to me to plead with you, ‘Don’t saw off your leg. That would be an act of violence.’ It wouldn’t occur to me (or to you), because your leg is part of your body. Well, so are the trees in the Amazon rain basin. They are our external lungs. We are beginning to realize that the world is our body.”

Logical enough, but it contains a nearly fatal flaw that the author fails to address.

This thought process is aimed at Western culture because it is based on logic. However, it won’t hit its target because it fails to take into account that Western culture has long since decided to not take care of itself.

The mantra that advertising agencies bombard people with is: be free; do as you wish. Happiness comes from a life unhindered by restrictions to pleasure.

Nowhere is this attitude more evident than in our diet. The so called Western diet can be described in no uncertain terms: it is the antithesis of what our body has evolved to use as nourishment. It is manufactured for maximum immediate pleasure (read: taste). It rests on the bedrock of refined sugar, refined wheat and alcohol. Take these away and far too many people will lose all pleasure they find in life, that is if they survive the withdrawal symptoms.

It is also illustrated in our attitude towards corporal beauty. If you are not pleased with any certain part of your body, then just have it surgically improved. A friend of mine recently attended her 20th high school reunión and found out that she was the only woman present who had not undergone cosmetic surgery. It is increasingly becoming a popular 15th birthday gift from parents to their overjoyed daughters. Undoubtedly the improved self esteem of these girls cannot be overrated, but at what cost?

If by living this type of life you get, for example, high blood pressure, then you take a pill to control it and continue with your life. In fact there are pills for just about every ill imaginable. In this way, we have gradually lost our intuitive sense for our body’s proper functioning. Obesity, diabetes and high blood pressure and even some cancers are increasingly considered normal, even inevitable, exposing both the shortsightedness of our current historical perspective and what can only be called having the wool pulled over our eyes by the broadcast media.

As Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee affirms, “A sacred substance that nourishes our souls and the soul of the world is diminishing. And we do not even know that this is happening.”

So, if individuals under the influence of Western culture are not even interested in caring for their own body in a way that would make sense to any of our great grandparents, then what makes us believe that extending our notions of self-interest will result in harmony between humanity and the Earth? If the body is not sacred, let alone the soul, then how could anybody find sacredness in a tree or a mountain or a pond or a fish or even another human being?

I don’t think that self-interest has a place in this discussion. The self ceases to exist as we know it because we fit into a tide of unity like that among fingers on a hand, like that among fruit on a tree, like that seen among waves on a shore. In this sense we don’t focus our energy on taking care of ourselves, or even others. Rather it is the act of taking care that demonstrates our true nature. In this material world, that takes will, planning, effort, coordination, reflection and strength. Before these, though, it takes comprehension and vision of who we truly are and our place in the world, as Joanna Macy states so eloquently in this book.

Only once does this book wander into the entirely esoteric, new age quagmire. In that essay the author tells us at least 30 times what humanity MUST do to restore harmony. The essay is a sore thumb, though, it stands out from the rest which are insightful, well researched and original.

Overall, this is a must read for anybody interested in deep ecology.
(less)
Paul Rack
Feb 25, 2016rated it it was amazing
A really important and beautiful book including reflections from leaders and thinkers in many different spiritual traditions. The theme is the soul of the planet, which is a different tack than most books like this that examine the physical side of ecological degradation. These writers are more about the degrading of our spirituality and our sense of the earth as sacred, and the disastrous consequences thereof. One essay postulated an expansion of the "I" to include our identification with the planet, rather than just with our own personal current physical self. Why are the water molecules that were once part of "me" now not still "me?" The ecological crisis of our time will not be solved just by laws and policies. It can only be solved by our spiritual maturity and growth, so that we are no longer prone to treat others (things, life-forms, and people) as objects to be used and spent, but as expressions of the Creator with their own integrity and beauty. As a pastor I remain even more convinced that our worship and mission has to be increasingly creation-centered in order to honor and obey the Creator. The other thing about this book that is important is the inter-faith aspect. Yes there are differences between the shamanistic, Buddhist, Muslim, and Christian takes on creation. But none of them support the psychotic fear and hatred of the earth that has resulted in our current exploding crisis. In the end, we are all earthlings fashioned by a good God and placed in a blessed and beautiful garden. Finally, the book makes the point that what we do to the earth we do to our own bodies/souls; they reflect each other and killing the earth is suicide. (less)
Diogenes
May 15, 2014rated it it was amazing
Shelves: favorites
There could be so much said for this collection of truly didactic and spiritual voices not only raising a heightened awareness of our increasingly sickened planet, but also rallying a call to moral arms for each and every one of us to DO SOMETHING about it, by communing with nature, appreciating the universal spirituality of life on both micro and macro levels, and by waylaying the vices of consumerism, myopic narcissism, wanton waste, ruination, and insatiable greed, for the greater good of the planet and all life upon it, present and future. The task is herculean, but one way or another we will all face the drastic imbalances taking over Mother Earth and bequeath it all to the next generations.

"EARTH IS WHERE we all live. Earth sustains us. Earth allows us to be here temporarily. Like a good guest, we [should] respect our host and all the beauty and bounty we are lucky to experience. We [should] do no harm. And then we leave." 
(less)
Daniel Behn
Most excellent, these are the great thinkers of our times. Real paradigm shifters. More to come soon!
Dana
Jan 02, 2014rated it really liked it
A stirring collection of essays discussing the calamity of climate change. Because of our spiritual connection to the earth, we suffer as Gaia suffers.
mylene
Aug 11, 2017rated it liked it
kind of redundant but still a good read
Daveed-yisrael Halevi
Jul 10, 2013rated it it was amazing
Powerful and eloquent essays on eco-pedagogy and our need to return to a loving relationship to our ecosystem .
Stacy Sevier
Oct 31, 2017rated it it was amazing
Earth is sacred, simple enough. My 2 favorite essays are: The World of Wonder (Thomas berry) and The Call of the Earth (Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee). This book is a call to action, to bring us back to the mindset that we are the guardians of this sacred planet and connected to every living thing. Earth is alive and crying for us to notice what is happening to our "Mother". This is not a scientific book about climate change but a collection of essays focusing on our loss of spiritual connection to the natural world and the consequences of such. Reconnecting ourselves to the natural world is necessary in reversing the devastation already begun. (less)
Carmony
Nov 15, 2018rated it liked it
“Spiritual ecology is the fire by which you can sit, to hear the stories of our human legacy and responsibility told once again in clear voices. It is the place where you can understand most intimately and immediately that spirit and nature are one, and that what affects one thing ultimately affects everything.”

I read this book for a class. The message from each author, while coming from a slightly different place of realization/philosophy/spiritual tradition, was powerful and important. It provides a good reflection on the common thinking of humans being separate from nature to acknowledging that humans are part of nature. It just got a bit redundant chapter after chapter.
 (less)
Rob Grady
Jul 28, 2019rated it it was amazing
The opening phrase of chapter 1, "NEYAWENHA SKANNOH," (thank you for being well) reverberates throughout the many surprising chapters, showing soulful links between humans and their environment. The notion of "place," as something other than space/ and time definition, is another surprising theme of the book that is covered from the perspective of many cultures.

Awesome book to start the summer, even better in the midst of a heat wave.
Karen
Jul 07, 2017rated it it was amazing
This is an inspiring collection of essays. Of course, I found some more enlightening than others, but all around good read. I hope to read more books by the essayists. I would read this again! May have to purchase a copy so I can bookmark and highlight my favorite passages!

Journey of the Universe Swimmne, Tucker





Follow the Author





Mary Evelyn Tucker


+ Follow

Journey of the Universe Paperback – October 21, 2014


by Brian Thomas Swimme (Author), Mary Evelyn Tucker (Author)




4.7 out of 5 stars 109 ratings








See all 7 formats and editions

Kindle
$10.87
Read with Our Free App 
 Audiobook
$0.00



Free with your Audible trial 
Paperback
$11.64
35 Used from $4.8437 New from $9.00 

















Read less


Report incorrect product information.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"The book is simply written and easy to read—more like Kipling's Just So Stories than Being and Time—and you may or may not be convinced by Swimme and Tucker's interpretations of modern cosmology and evolutionary history. But it's a fascinating game to play. More theology of physics, please!"—Josh Rothman, Boston Globe (Brainiac blog)


"What’s most striking about Swimme and Tucker’s work is a simple but beautiful assumption: a cosmological orientation opens the human mind to wonder, gratitude, humility, and creativity."—Mitchell Thomashow, Orion

"Strikingly, . . . the co-authors managed to fit 14 billion years of grandeur along with humanity’s most fundamental questions into small spaces. . . . Perfectly tailored for classroom use . . . offering a common ground for discussion among people of myriad points of view."—Julianne Lutz Warren, Journal of Environmental Studies and Science

"In their new book, Journey of the Universe, Brian Swimme and Mary Evelyn Tucker invite us into the scientific story of the Universe, imbuing it with all the passion and purpose of a great religious myth. Their 'invitation into grandeur' carries us into the heart of a story that Homer would have loved to tell—the story of how life began, evolved, and turned into you and me."—Carter Phipps, EnlightenNext

"This highly descriptive text is a poetic expression of the authors’ view of biological and physical sciences."—Choice

Journey of the Universe (the film) has been nominated for an Emmy for the West Coast (winner will be announced 9 June)

"For those of us enmeshed in symbolic consciousness, this is just the story we need to hear, loud and clear. It helps us understand how we happened to be here, and, more important, why."—Bill McKibben, author of Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet and The End of Nature





"This is a wonderful, highly readable account of the history of the universe from the Big Bang through the present moment. . . . There is blockbuster potential in Journey of the Universe, and I recommend it with great enthusiasm."—Thomas Lovejoy, University Professor in Environmental Science and Policy, George Mason University





"Journey of the Universe is eloquent, accessible, and powerful, and conveys a sense of wonder ranging from the cosmos to the microcosm—in itself a considerable achievement. This is one of the most compelling and inspiring works I've read in a long time."—David W. Orr, Oberlin College





"This cosmic saga offers a compelling vision of the grand adventure in which we humans are taking part."—Scott Russell Sanders, author of A Conservationist Manifesto





"The sense of deep time and space that Journey of the Universe establishes is the greatly needed context for students, who do not always appreciate the present predicament and the role of humanity in the world. It puts us in perspective—and conveys wonder that Earth and life are here in the first place and how amazing it is to be in what is apparently one of the most creative nooks in the universe. Also wonderful is the scientific narrative spine and to ask over and over—ok, what does it mean for us?"—Julianne Lutz Warren, author of Aldo Leopold’s Odyssey






Read less
About the Author



Brian Thomas Swimme is a professor at the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco. Mary Evelyn Tucker is senior lecturer and research scholar at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and Yale Divinity School. She is co-founder and co-director of the Forum on Religion and Ecology at Yale.


Product details

Paperback: 192 pages 
Publisher: Yale University Press; Reprint edition (October 21, 2014) 
Language: English 


 
Brian Swimme

 
Mary Evelyn Tucker


Customer reviews


4.7 out of 5 stars

5 star 
87% 


4 star 






5% 


3 star 






4% 


2 star 






3% 


1 star 






2% 







Review this product







Lee Wayne Wimberly 

5.0 out of 5 stars The Journey: A Walk between Science and Religious Narrative

Reviewed in the United States on October 18, 2017


Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase


I read "Journey of the Universe" as a part of an online CourseA lecture series of the same name. In a video interview, author Mary Evelyn Tucker drew a metaphor to the "Journey" being a trip down a river. She said she expected "arrows and barbs" to be shot the right bank where the mechanistic scientists reside, and from the left bank from where the fundamentalist Christian reside.

This phenomena of pushback from these two differing perspectives exemplifies where the content of this book does reside. It is this reviewer’s opinion that it not meant to be a science book. Nor is it meant to be a book on religion. It instead looks at the current science in many fields through the perspective of religious and spiritual narrative.

This reviewer found the information presented in a respectful way, drawing us into, and asking us to, join in a sense of awe of the universe around us.

I identified two principles in the text related Tucker's comment about "arrows and barbs" from the two sides of the river. The first is the principle is what I label as "definitional dissonance” in “Exploring the Gap between Science and Religion." Both sides would find information in the book to be an anomoly to their model/representation of the universe. The second principle is that they have a choice to either reject the information or change their model.

One way that a science-centric thinker would reject the information would be to question the qualifications of the scientists that contributed to the book. Having heard this critique in a casual discussion, I did a network search of each scientist listed in the book. This review easily found each to have extensive credentials.





6 people found this helpful 





Helpful 

Comment Report abuse










Olivier Clerc 





5.0 out of 5 stars what a beautiful and stunning accomplishment

Reviewed in the United States on June 29, 2017


Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase


Managing to tell the history of the Universe in just 120 pages : what a beautiful and stunning accomplishment !
This is the story that all of us should read, or hear about !
There's a DVD in which Brian Swimme tells this modern tale of our fantastic adventure, and it ought to be shown in every school in the country.
This book is just a pure jewel.
Perfect.
Brillant.
PS : I had a publisher buy the French rights of it and I had the great pleasure and honour of translating it into French !





7 people found this helpful 





Vicki P. 

5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful saga of everything!

Reviewed in the United States on May 3, 2017


Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase


Not incredibly technical (and that's okay by me), but it's a wondrous story of the Universe, Big Bang style, in simpler terms. It almost has a poetic feel to it as the story is told as a continuing unfolding of the Universe with life on Earth being a part of the bigger story. It tells how our "smaller" story of humanity fits into the picture and poses the emergence of humans as the Universe looking back at and pondering itself. I found it to be a very beautiful saga of everything!





3 people found this helpful 





Helpful 

Comment Report abuse










Rev. David Price 





5.0 out of 5 stars A Life Changing Spiritual Journey

Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2014


Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase


This is a life changing read for those who value their Spiritual foundation, their understanding of Cosmology and an effort to walk faithfully and knowledgeably in this century. The book gives a great overview of current science of the creation of the Universe and our evolution. It gives great data in a way that is understandable to the layman. It is not iconoclastic and pejorative towards the reader.
This open style of writing is welcome and inviting. It is a great place to start a journey of understanding Cosmology.I invite spiritual seekers to read this book and use it to add to their spiritual practice of reflecting and mindful respect for our earth and the Universe.





6 people found this helpful 





Helpful 

Comment Report abuse










G. Murphy 





5.0 out of 5 stars Mesmerizing Book for our Times

Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2012


Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase


For those whose spiritual quest goes beyond conventional religion and orthodoxy, this is a refreshing and delightful aid to enlightenment; for those who are bio and cosmic nerds with all the blinding 'facts', stats, projections and empirical data of science, but have intuitively glimpsed the underlying mystery and loving intelligence of creation's evolutionary journey, this book will elevate your human consciousness to new and daring heights. In essence 'Journey of the Universe' in clear, poetic prose reminds us - ever so elegantly - of how we got here (on an ever-so-bumpy ride at times) and how we are, and will continue to be, a living, breathing, evolving, integral part of this multi-dimensional, ever expanding universe - a universe that (from our Earthling perspective) has to be our reference point on all matters of coexistence, human dignity, justice, interdependence, and the overall flourishing of our little planet on the edge of the Milky Way Galaxy.





6 people found this helpful 





Helpful 

Comment Report abuse










Loren G. Carlson 





5.0 out of 5 stars The last half of the book paints a wonderful image of the 'recreation' of our planet in a ...

Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2016


Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase


This is a very readable explanation of the un-explainable for non scientists (and most scientists) and especially for those who know still think God is a person or a being. I can now grasp the wonder of the random universe created by the dynamic tension between energy forces and self organizing particles and waves of energy. The last half of the book paints a wonderful image of the 'recreation' of our planet in a cycle of destruction and recreation several times in its 4 billion year history. I cannot comprehend the immensity of the universe or the sense of time but I can see the the egg image of the earth with its thin layers of crust and molten center constantly changing and producing new life. We read this in our men's reading group at our church -- good discussion simulator.





One person found this helpful 





Helpful 

Comment Report abuse










Marion Foerster 





5.0 out of 5 stars Humans are stardust

Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2013


Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase


Brian Swimme's _Journey of the Universe_ is by far the best book I have read in a decade! I have given copies of this book to countless people. Swimme is both a physicist and a poet. His book shows the great wonder of how the universe was created and how it is forever changing. He also notes that there are more galaxies within our universe than we can imagine. He has helped me to regain the wonder I felt as a child exploring the life around me with my field geologist father. The idea that we and all of life came from stardust is intriguing and exciting. For those of a spiritual nature, one gets the idea from Swimme that there is a guiding Intelligence that is part of the mystery that man will probably never completely understand. I appreciated this thought coming from a scientist.





4 people found this helpful 





Helpful 

Comment Report abuse





See all reviews from the United States 

Top international reviews 





Mr. Philip R. Hyne


5.0 out of 5 stars Across the universe in time, in space, and in an armchair.

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 17, 2015


Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase





A fascinating but easily read story of how the universe developed - and is still developing. Even for a non-scientist like me it makes good reading - quite the best explanations I've come across in a long time. 







3 people found this helpful 





Helpful 

Report abuse







Michael Taylor


5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 8, 2018


Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase





This is possibly the most important book I have ever read. 










Helpful 

Report abuse







GE Mitchell


5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 5, 2014


Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase





Riveting 







One person found this helpful 





Helpful 

Report abuse







Don Smith


5.0 out of 5 stars Small Book - Big Story - Even Bigger Message!

Reviewed in Canada on June 15, 2011


Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase





Having just completed this wonderful short (117 pages) book, I am awestruck at the ability of the authors to tell "The Journey of the Universe" in so few pages and yet evoke a deep new awareness of what it means to be human within the Earth Community and Universe today.

I have read Swimme's previous books and much of Thomas Berry's writings and perhaps the best way to describe this book is as a distillation and re-focusing of the best of this previous work. Although not as involved as "The Universe Story" by Berry/Swimme, it brilliantly captures its essence and expounds insights without bogging down in detail. I was amazed at the writing style which is so concise and informative and packs deep and thought-provoking insights into every paragraph. Yet it is a joy to read and what I would call an "easy read" probably requiring not much more than 2-3 hours! The collaboration of Mary Evelyn Tucker (editor of Thomas Berry's later books of essays) and Brian Swimme has created a book which could (and should!) well become one of the most widely read in the English-speaking world.

Although the authors outline the cosmological history of our Universe it never bogs down in scientific jargon and always keeps the reader firmly focused on what this all means for us today. They do, however, paint an awe-inspiring picture of the Universe out of which we have emerged and the cosmological forces which have shaped this emergence.

The essential focus of the book is not at all scientific in nature - most of it is concerned with subtly raising our awareness of the human species' place or role within Earth Community now that we understand all that modern cosmology has revealed. Note that this is subtle. Nowhere do the authors present a dogmatic or ideological agenda for what humans should now do. The book is first and foremost an awareness-raising exercise using only the most established mainstream science and cultural history.

Yet, once you read the book, if you are like me, you will be stunned with the breadth and depth of what this awareness means for our personal, national and cultural lives. It is indeed quite brilliant that the authors leave so much to our own conscience and discernment without beating us over the head with their own conclusions. The wisdom contained in this book needs to be disseminated and discussed much like the sacred scriptures of the world's religions.

This book is written at a level which kids in their early teens could easily assimilate. It would be my hope the "Journey of the Universe" would become a standard part of school curriculum across the globe. Everyone should read this amazing book.

Highly recommended.

7 people found this helpful 



Derry A. Mc Donell


5.0 out of 5 stars An Epistle for the 21st Century

Reviewed in Canada on February 25, 2013

Albert Einstein contended that, at their best, science and religion are not at odds, but totally complementary, mutually supportive and moreover, that Mankind needs both to make sense of Creation. Citing the explosive discoveries recently revealed by modern science (especially in astronomy) and coupling them with an expansive, unified vision of the human experience, Journey of the Universe vividly and profoundly demonstrates Einstein's argument. This is an important book that could and should be read and discussed by anyone with a sense of wonder, or who has ever asked himself "Why are we here?" Recommended for reading in conjunction with Hubble's Universe, by Terence Dickinson.