2021/07/25

Successful Aging: A Neuroscientist Explores the Power and Potential of Our Lives : Levitin, Daniel J.: Amazon.com.au: Books

Successful Aging: A Neuroscientist Explores the Power and Potential of Our Lives : Levitin, Daniel J.: Amazon.com.au: Books


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Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Publishing Group (7 January 2020)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 528 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1524744182
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1524744182
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 15.85 x 4.29 x 23.62 cm


The Changing Mind: A Neuroscientist's Guide to Ageing Well Paperback – 7 January 2020 (different book???)

Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Life; 1st edition (7 January 2020)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 528 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0241379393
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0241379394
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 15.3 x 2.9 x 23.4 cm

The best-selling neuroscientist and author of The Organized Mind explains what happens to our brains from womb to tomb.

We have long been encouraged to think of old age as synonymous with deterioration. Yet, recent studies show that our decision-making skills improve as we age and our happiness levels peak in our eighties. What really happens to our brains as we get older?

More of us are living into our eighties than ever before. In The Changing Mind, neuroscientist, psychologist and internationally-bestselling author Daniel Levitin invites us to dramatically shift our understanding of growing older, demonstrating its many cognitive benefits. He draws on cutting-edge research to challenge common and flawed beliefs, including assumptions around memory loss and the focus on lifespan instead of 'healthspan'.

Levitin reveals the evolving power of the human brain from infancy to late adulthood. Distilling the findings from over 4000 papers, he explains the importance of personality traits, lifestyle, memory and community on ageing, offering actionable tips that we can all start now, at any age.

Featuring compelling insights from individuals who have thrived far beyond the conventional age of retirement, this book offers realistic guidelines and practical cognitive enhancing tricks for everyone to follow during every decade of their life. This is a radical exploration of what we all can learn from those who age joyously.


Author of the iconic bestsellers This Is Your Brain on Music and The Organized Mind, Daniel Levitin turns his keen insights to what happens in our brains as we age, why we should think about health span, not life span, and, based on a rigorous analysis of neuroscientific evidence, what you can do to make the most of your seventies, eighties, and nineties today no matter how old you are now.
 
Successful Aging uses research from developmental neuroscience and the psychology of individual differences to show that sixty-plus years is a unique developmental stage that, like infancy or adolescence, has its own demands and distinct advantages. Levitin looks at the science behind what we all can learn from those who age joyously, as well as how to adapt our culture to take full advantage of older people's wisdom and experience. Throughout his exploration of what aging really means, Levitin reveals resilience strategies and practical, cognitive enhancing tricks everyone should do as they age.
 
The book is packed with accessible and discussable takeaways, providing great material for reading groups and media coverage.
 
Successful Aging inspires a powerful new approach to how readers think about our final decades, and it will revolutionize the way we plan for old age as individuals, family members, and citizens within a society where the average life expectancy continues to rise.


From other countries
JEK
4.0 out of 5 stars This book reinforces many of the habits that my wife and I have adopted since retirement
Reviewed in Canada on 17 February 2020

 
I like the elements that agree with the steps we have taken. Of course it is not a recipe and can make no guarantees. Many of us lack skills or energy that the author seems to take for granted. Will I take up all the activities -- probably not, but I do appreciate that life-long learning is a good approach. My wife has a lot more expertise on socio-medical aspects of neurology as well as experience in gerontology and she recommends it as well. Our parents would have benefitted from this advice to live longer and happier lives -- but they were too stubborn to ever change. And that is the downfall of a book like this. Don't read it without an open mind.
5 people found this helpful

 
Jehad Abu-Ulbeh
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Read
Reviewed in Canada on 28 May 2021
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Loads of info, some I didn't understand. Great reference book that I hope to go to once in awhile. Some pages I had to skip as it was too scientific for me. The book lifted my spirits as it gave me hope, but felt the reality of aging that scared me. I highly recommend this book.
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Lynne
3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting book
Reviewed in Canada on 19 May 2020
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It was an interesting book. Very detailed research to back up any assertions. Sometimes too much detail to wade through. In the end, the list of ways to successfully age is a good, do-able list.
3 people found this helpful
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Andreas74
5.0 out of 5 stars a splendid psychology book
Reviewed in Germany on 12 December 2020
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It is about aging, but the whole psychology is in that book. if you're expecting something short, you should read something else. if you don't mind being introduced in all parts of psychology, the book is great.
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Tom Beakbane
5.0 out of 5 stars Sensitive elegant writing about an important matter
Reviewed in Canada on 11 December 2020
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Unfortunately I am at an age where this book is important to read... a few decades age.
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Johanne Cournoyer
5.0 out of 5 stars Very interesting book about aging.
Reviewed in Canada on 13 May 2020
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Love this book. Was delivered really fast.
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JOSE VICENTE
5.0 out of 5 stars Exciting un pragmatic
Reviewed in Germany on 11 October 2020
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If you are interested in you and you aging the book is a must :)
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Mathias
5.0 out of 5 stars longivity
Reviewed in Germany on 1 February 2021
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has been giving the tools i need to watch my healthy aging
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Robert G Yokoyama
5.0 out of 5 stars I learned a lot of tips about how to age successfully.
Reviewed in the United States on 18 January 2020
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I want to age successfully, and that is why I read this book. I can increase the neuroplasticity in my brain by learning some new things. Neuroplasticity is the ability of the brain to change and adapt over time, I can increase neuroplasticity by learning to speak a new language. I grew up speaking Chinese, but I am hopeful that I can expand my vocabulary by taking lessons. I can also increase the neuroplasticity in my brain by performing in a theater. Learning how to memorize lines and movements can make the neural connections in my brain strong. I am proud of the fact that I have been working for over twenty years, and I am glad that the author says meaningful work is critical to longevity too. I will continue working, but I have been involved in pedestrian safety for people in wheelchair like myself. This secondary job sharpens my spatial, writing and speaking skills. This also increases the neuroplasticity in my brain and keeps me young.

I learned that high blood pressure can lead to hearing loss because the hair cells in my ear can stiffen. This piece of news is a wake up call for me because my blood pressure is slightly elevated. I will strive to keep walking and exercising to keep my blood pressure in check though. I learned that exercise can improve my memory and creativity, so I have more incentive to exercise now.

I like the information about friends in this book. Having a social network of friends improve my mood and keep my brain healthy. I have friends, but I don't see them that often. I am hopeful that I can make new friends to listen to music with and hang out with in person.

I struggle to get a quality night of sleep, but I will follow Levitin's advice and make my room as dark as possible. The author also advises writing in journal to relax, so I will try this. I will strive to get out more to visit park and beaches. This activity will sharpen my senses and keep me young. This is such an insightful book.
129 people found this helpful
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LVZee
3.0 out of 5 stars Buried Nuggets in a Verbal Dumpheap-Might Make You Think
Reviewed in the United States on 19 March 2020
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Like most authors of this type of advisory books, he tends to find studies that support what he does in his personal life. For example:
• He recommends early, big breakfasts, when there is many studies find the opposite
• He doesn’t approve of naps, especially siesta style 90 minutes after lunch
• He doesn’t rate vegetarian diets or active supplementation with vitamins or other nutrients very highly, but favors hormone treatments.
• He doesn’t think brain training sites (Lumosity or BrainHQ) accomplish much

One interesting concept that all these authors miss is that many, perhaps most studies can be debunked because controls weren’t properly chosen, there were problems with statistical methodology and self-interest in reaching certain conclusions or results. This absolutely does not mean that results are wrong, only that they haven’t been definitively proved.

He also merges readily available things one can do (like following the Mediterranean Diet, meditation, exercising or learning a new skill) with technologies that aren’t easily available, and some that are closer to science fiction than reality (brain implants to increase memory or intelligence.)

I am also puzzled why certain obvious questions aren’t asked by either the authors or the researchers. Looking at sleep: They recommend sleeping in a cool room, presumably with pajamas and a heavy quilt, but don’t discuss sleeping nude with little or no cover in a warm room. They don’t study regular nappers who sleep 6 hours (4 cycles) at night and 1.5 hours (1 cycle) in the afternoon vs. 7.5 hours at night and no nap. I frequently read that blue light before sleep is bad and room should be ‘totally dark.’ Didn’t humans evolve sleeping with some ambient like from the moon and stars, even before fire became common?

However, buried in the book are nuggets of very useful recommendations or information that isn’t common in the popular literature. For example, he recommends an additional ‘dementia proxy,’ which is very different than the standard health proxies that are commonly recommended.
51 people found this helpful
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Ethyl
1.0 out of 5 stars Don’t waste your money!
Reviewed in the United States on 16 January 2020
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This book is beyond stupid and definitely NOT worth $16.50!
Another example of why it is important to read a sample before buying the book!
55 people found this helpful
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic, solid, practical, intelligent book on aging.
Reviewed in the United States on 26 February 2020
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As a 66 year old "retired" lawyer and CEO, I struggled in ways I never imagined when I "retired" at sixty. I have read multiple books on aging and am thoughtful and intrigued to try to find a way to live the rest of my life healthily, meaningfully, and happily. This book is the real deal. Smart author that I never read before. Book is based on science and data (400 footnotes!), but this guy writes smoothly and thoughtfully. The book is 400 solid pages but it is so well written that it is easy to read a bit at a time. I did not want it to end. This book is awesome.
48 people found this helpful
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PositiveMojo
1.0 out of 5 stars Long winded
Reviewed in the United States on 24 February 2020
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I wish the author would have gotten to the point. I expected to learn about things I could proactively do with regard to “successful aging”, the title of the book. Instead, the author goes into a deep dive and lecture on the different aspects of the brain and memory. A good editor should have kept the narrative on topic.
40 people found this helpful
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Amazon Customer
1.0 out of 5 stars Over rated
Reviewed in the United States on 17 February 2020
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Very disappointing,the content on the title subject is minimal;far too much fluff,had he kept to point,the 400 pages could be condensed to 40 pages;also nothing new here,and you have to plow through so much to get to the important points.
42 people found this helpful
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Lance B. Hillsinger
5.0 out of 5 stars Much better than then first book
Reviewed in the United States on 9 October 2020
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Successful Aging by neuroscientist Daniel Levitin is much better than his first book, Your Brain on Music. This reviewer gave Your Brain on Music a modest three-star rating. Successful Aging deserves five stars.

While the two books are superficially similar, Successful Aging draws on the latest research. Your Brain on Music came out in 2006. Successful Aging is also simply better written than Your Brain on Music.
Citing numerous scientific articles across multiple disciplines, Levitin expounds on simple concepts, like diet, exercise, genetic factors, etc., which can affect the quality of life as one ages. However, there is no “dumbing down” of concepts. In many places, Successful Aging reads like a good college textbook.

Levitin does offer practical advice on how to age well, but this advice is grounded in the latest scientific research. Moreover, Levitin also offers hope that one can lead a meaningful and productive life, even as one’s body is in the last laps of life. While Levitin offers hope, he is also pragmatic about the physical and emotional impact of aging, particularly for those suffering from Alzheimer’s or other forms of dementia.
5 people found this helpful
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Valerie Goodman
5.0 out of 5 stars Your Brain On Age
Reviewed in the United States on 23 August 2020
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Wonderful book loaded with health information younger eyes should read. I found answers why and how my husband and my own thinking are changing as we approach our sixth decade. The science, anatomical, chemical and time changes accumulated in life is explained with an energy to age with courage, love and laughter. Will keep for future reference!
5 people found this helpful
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Anthony L. Poselenzny
1.0 out of 5 stars A poorly researched book
Reviewed in the United States on 21 March 2020
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There is so much information available today regarding good health and longevity with regard to the appropriate diet that this author has completely missed. Most of his book is full of stories and personal experiences with references to science but with no actual hard science behind it. It’s a waste of time.
5 people found this helpful
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Karrie
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting read
Reviewed in the United States on 22 January 2020
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Very informative well written.
8 people found this helpful
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FrankP
5.0 out of 5 stars Another great book from Levitin
Reviewed in the United States on 1 April 2020
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Daniel Levitin is a neuroscientist that has written several books on how the brain works. The books are highly educational and are written in an easy-to-read style with occasional humor thrown in. This most recent book discusses how the brain changes as we mature and grow older, and what we can do to extend a healthy lifespan so we don't spend our last years living with debilitating illnesses. Highly recommended.
2 people found this helpful
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Keith G. Bernard
3.0 out of 5 stars Serious flaws
Reviewed in the United States on 16 May 2020
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Way too much self-serving name-dropping and aimless wandering. There was some useful information but much of it was repeated more than once. Desperately needed some serious editing. Was it edited at all?
4 people found this helpful
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Stephen V. Connolly
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book
Reviewed in the United States on 10 February 2020
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Chipping away at this book a few pages at a time. Discovering lots of good information.
5 people found this helpful
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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Aging happens
Reviewed in the United States on 30 January 2021
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An excellent book about the scientific aspects of aging and how to live well understanding the aspects of getting older. A book club talk with different generations provided insight as we as elders were able to share our wisdom. I learned a lot about what I am living.
One person found this helpful
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Kayomack
3.0 out of 5 stars Turgid, Slogans?
Reviewed in the United States on 27 June 2020
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I'm still plowing through Successful Aging, and the writing does not fill me with confidence, too academic, a blend of theories and facts from different medical specialties, makes me wonder if Daniel Levitin is mainly interested in making bucks from the increasing ranks of the elderly.
One person found this helpful
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Veric
3.0 out of 5 stars Get the cliff notes?
Reviewed in the United States on 5 May 2021
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I understand perfectly why there's now a summary version of this book by another author. I skip LARGE sections of successful aging. If one has read about recent developments in human health, one will sometimes skip two thirds of a chapter in order to tease out the applications to aging.
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this one
5.0 out of 5 stars Very readable.
Reviewed in the United States on 7 April 2020
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Very readable. I first ordered on kindle but decided on wanted a hard copy for reference and highlighting so I will both. I will use it to enhance my knowledge working with older people and better understanding myself as well.
One person found this helpful
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marla fowler
5.0 out of 5 stars AWESOME
Reviewed in the United States on 23 June 2020
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So much information... Excellently presented. Good guidelines to follow as our age creeps up there. I recommend this for any age.
One person found this helpful
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Dr. Harvey P. Simon
1.0 out of 5 stars Disappointed
Reviewed in the United States on 1 April 2020
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Doesn’t really give you any real life experience. Only scientific facts. STATISTICS EH
3 people found this helpful
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Daphne Simpkins
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Resource for People Interested in Aging Concerns
Reviewed in the United States on 19 February 2021
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I bought this book on Kindle and then bought it again in paperback so I could underline it the second time I read it. The book is worth your time and helps you to think about aging concerns.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars What to expect!
Reviewed in the United States on 7 June 2020
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I found this book very interesting and educational.Alot I didn't know about ageing and a lot I didn't want to except!But had heard for years.Reading this made some of it easier to deal with.
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bluemookey
2.0 out of 5 stars Not what I expected.
Reviewed in the United States on 15 July 2020
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This book reads like a self help book, not hard science. There are a million books like it out there, no new information.
2 people found this helpful
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Popular Answered Questions
Is this the same content as is provided in "The Changing Mind: A Neuroscientist's Guide to Ageing Well"? Has the name just been changed for some countries? It seems odd that two such similar books by the same author are being released at the same time.
1 Like · Like  One Year Ago  Add Your Answer

Deedi Brown (DeediReads) Yes, from the other editions listed above it appears to be the same book.
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 Average rating3.87  ·  Rating details ·  1,830 ratings  ·  322 reviews

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Scott Wozniak
Jan 28, 2020Scott Wozniak rated it it was amazing
This is the best book on aging I've read yet. It covers everything from the social and emotional issues of aging to the neuroscience and even diet and supplements. The author does a great job giving you real science in a way that doesn't feel overcomplicated.

Some of this confirmed things I've read before:
-Your friendships matter tremendously and you have to keep investing in relationships or they will naturally fade as you and your friends age.
-When designing your final chapters of life, think about the people you want to be with more than the places you want to be/things you want to do.
-Don't retire from meaningful work. You can slow down or do a different activity, but to stop doing things that matter is to invite decline and despair.
-Much of the physical decline we say is aging is really just decades of being out of shape. Stay active and push yourself. You might be surprised at what you can do (and how many aches and pains go away when you're back in shape.)
-Sleep is the most important health factor--and it's harder to sleep well when you're old. That doesn't mean give up. It means get more diligent to protect your sleep quality and quantity.

And there were some things that busted a lot of the myths I've read:
-We still don't don't what diets are best. Nutrition is so hard to pin down (hard to isolate it from other factors and it's so different person to person). So most of the supplements we are told to take have no scientific evidence to support them. This includes popular things like Omega 3 fatty acids (we need them, but so far taking pills doesn't actually show any improvements in our blood stream) and popular diets who remove whole categories of food (from vegetarian to Atkins). The key is variety of food types (except processed/fried foods, of course) and limits on the quantity.
-We still don't know how to avoid Alzheimer's and dementia.
-All the studies of communities of people who live 100+ are massively scientifically flawed. They've been discussed and dismissed by all the scientists in the field. They're anecdotal stories by non-scientists. There are just too few people and the variables are so complex that there's no real patterns that hold up under scrutiny. So beware of them.
-Your genes account for only 7% of your longevity (except for those cases when you have a congenital disease, such as a faulty heart valve). It's mostly how you live.

A few bonus ideas:
-We focus a lot on the diseases that keep us from dying (cancer, heart attack, etc.). But we don't put much attention or effort on the diseases that ruin our life enjoyment (diabetes, back injury, etc.). Don't just try not to do. Plan for a life that allows for pain-free mobility.
-Purpose trumps all else. Have a plan for how you can keep learning and make a difference in the world. (less)
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Clif Hostetler
Feb 08, 2020Clif Hostetler rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: health-and-selfhelp
This book combines knowledge from (1) developmental neuroscience and (2) individual differences (personality) psychology to help the reader understand the aging brain and the choices that can be made to maximize the chances of living long, happy, and productive lives. In the book's Introduction the author, Daniel J Levitin, claims that no other book intended for a popular audience has been written that covers the intersection of these two scientific fields.

The book is divided into three parts, (1) The Continually Developing Brain, (2) The Choices We Make, and (3) The New Longevity. Part One focuses on the ability of both the brain and personality to experience change, both good and bad. Part Two explores the ways the choices made made by individuals can influence health. Part Three explores new drugs and technology that have potential for prolonging health span portion of the life span.

This is a long book that seems to go on forever. There are overlapping subjects in the three parts so some material is referenced more than once. It’s written in a conversational tone with occasion mention of curious serendipitous phenomena, which are probably not appreciated by academic readers because I suspect they’re not all verified facts.

Aging has its down side—brain cell atrophy, DNA sequence damage, compromised cellular repair functions, and neurochemical and hormonal changes. But it’s not all bad. Among the chemical changes in the aging brain are a tendency toward understanding, forgiveness, tolerance, and acceptance. As indicated in the following excerpt, the older years are often experienced as the happiest.
When older people look back on their lives and are asked to pinpoint the age at which they were happiest, what do you suppose they say? Maybe age eight, when they had few cares? Maybe their teenage years because of all the activity and the discovery of sex? Maybe their college years, or the first years of starting a family? Wrong. The age that comes up most often as the happiest time of one’s life is eighty-two! The goal of this book is to help raise that number by ten or twenty years. Science says it can be done. And I’m with science.
(less)
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Lou
Feb 28, 2020Lou rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
There are many books on the market that aim to document how to grow old in a healthy and life-affirming manner, however, this is one of the few written and comprehensively researched by a respected expert in the clinical area of neuroscience. The facts and statistics mentioned throughout are proven and so can be relied upon as methods to implement to try to ensure you live a long and happy life. The Changing Mind is a thought-provoking and eye-opening account of what happens to our brain during the ageing process and it turns on its head some of the misconceptions we all appear to have been told about how deterioration, as we age, is inevitable when this is quite far from the reality of the situation. Dr Levitin hits you with inspiring and optimistic information and I feel there are so, so many people who would gain new knowledge and reinvigoration from what they read between these pages, just as I did.

I know one of the most prominent brain diseases of our time, Alzheimer's, is one of the biggest fears many people face when ruminating on cognition and how to keep the memories we have so beautifully collected alive, therefore I am pleased there are plenty of tips to keep the mind sharp and everything intact in this book. That being said, we all roll the dice on such matters and at the end of the day you may be lucky or you may not. Levitin charts the brains development from birth right through to elder years and unlike other nonfiction titles of this nature, I found this both eminently readable and absolutely fascinating. The case studies used to illustrate points made throughout the book were all interesting and if I’m honest I could’ve read another couple of hundred pages.

If you are looking for an easy, non-challenging read then this probably isn’t it but if you genuinely want to learn more about ageing and what we can do to age well this is a must-read. Many thanks to Penguin Life for an ARC. (less)
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Natalie Fincher
Oct 22, 2019Natalie Fincher rated it really liked it
Shelves: stopped-reading
I'm too dumb for this. (less)
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혜정
Jan 06, 2020혜정 marked it as to-read
Iam seventy one years old woman. But I'd like to read new novels and listen to good music so that
I want to live by my self. When I have retired from professor five years ago I had depressed losted my punctual work. In my country many people thought as an unavailable person from retired their work. I have a complaint these conception. So I start to study regular lesson at open college and I always want to know how do I live my more older age.
I hope to meet and practice my life through Successful aging. I'm going to decide to read this book. Thank you (less)
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Julius Adams
Jan 13, 2020Julius Adams rated it it was ok
A lot of science to get to the same results people have known for a long time. Cicero said it all in his treatise in OLD AGE, summarized below. Same findings, just without the science. So what is new here? Don’t waste your money....

Below is a link to an excellent summary written by Dr. John Messerly on his web site, where you can read his entire commentary concerning Ciceros treatise. Thank you to him, it proves this book is not new or necessary in its philosophical thinking.

https://reasonandmeaning.com/2017/08/...

(less)
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Taylor Ahlstrom
Feb 19, 2020Taylor Ahlstrom rated it really liked it
Daniel Levitin’s Successful Aging is a relatable and expertly written guide to the scientific, social, and emotional process of aging, buoyed by the latest research into what we can do to increase not just our lifespan, but our healthspan—those years when we are still living healthy, active lives, not plagued by chronic pain and disease or tubed up in a hospital bed. As a neurologist, the book is heavily scientific, but Levitin does a commendable job of making complicated neural behaviors make sense to the layman. In addition to the science, the book is filled with stories of people he knows and those he interviewed who have stayed active, sharp, and remained in their careers well into their nineties.

His point with these anecdotes is that we need to rethink aging and the elderly along with what we believe is possible after retirement. There is an undeniable stigma against the elderly in America that they are mostly useless and therefore oft forgotten. As to retirement, Levitin thinks we should get rid of it altogether. One of the main causes of cognitive decline in the elderly is not exercising those thinking muscles enough. As work also gives our lives meaning, there has been an increase in those who “unretire,” or rejoin the workforce after retirement. In addition to providing that meaning, work also keeps us active and social. Loneliness and inactivity are two significant causes of cognitive decline in the elderly. Loneliness is so serious a risk that Britain recently appointed a Minister of Loneliness just to address this problem in their increasingly-aged population.

Much of the book—in between all the science—is written from the personal perspective of Levitin, who is now sixty-two years old and is perhaps just beginning to feel many of the effects of aging that his book dives into in some detail. Whether it’s just forgetting why he walked into the kitchen, or that bum knee that will never be the same again, the reader feels a personal connection to the author and his work. Also, as a professional musician, many of his stories relate to music and his performance, which adds an extra touch of personality to a book written by a neuroscientist that had the potential to be both dry and overly technical. Luckily, his book is neither of those things.
One aspect of the book which deserves significant praise is the rigor with which Levitin investigates every possible claim or cure for aging. He informs the reader not only why certain medications work, but why others don’t, and is candid when modern medicine “simply doesn’t know why”—which is often the case when it comes to aging. The book contains over seventy-five pages of notes and resources, and the author claims to have reviewed around four thousand peer-reviewed papers to complete it. When a dietary or health claim mentions a paper or study with a low number of participants or one that was not peer-reviewed, he is quick to point that out.

While some may find the science in the book unnecessarily technical or overbearing, many may find it a helpful backdrop to understand the why behind the advice. Sure, there isn’t a lot of groundbreaking advice here when everyone knows they should eat more vegetables and get better sleep. But understanding how social interaction keeps our brains functioning at a higher level and why a walk in the woods does far more benefit than a walk on a treadmill may help more Americans embrace the suggestions he offers. He doesn’t shame or discount the medicinal benefits of many modern treatments, but he also notes their side effects and shortcomings, and it seems after every potential medication he mentions, the holistic answer is rather the better answer. You may be able to take a pill to feel happier, or you could talk to a friend and work on your coping mechanisms. The brain is an incredibly adaptable organ, and the more we train it, the more it can do for us.

While we may have figured out how certain drugs work in certain ways in the brain, there is still a lot we don’t know. At one point he refers to this as “looking for your keys under the streetlamp because it has the most light.” We are forced to experiment with the things we know the most about, because the other stuff just doesn’t make any sense yet. For every drug you put in your body, there are dozens or hundreds of interactions with every other system in your body, and each of those interactions are different for each and every person. Because of this, we can’t ever say one pill can cure this or that, but only that more people felt better than didn’t. In fact, for a treatment to gain FDA approval, it has to perform only 10 points better than a placebo—which is no treatment at all!

Ultimately, the point is that our bodies are miraculous things, and the only treatments we have found that work for everyone are the simplest ones: more love, more companionship, more meaning in life, more exercise—both mental and physical—and of course, eating more plants. These give you the best chance for extending your healthy years on earth. And most of the other medication that’s out there might help manage some of the aches and pains that inevitably come along the way.
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Roxanne
Dec 20, 2019Roxanne rated it it was amazing
I thought this was a heavy book about how to age well. It is pretty scientific but it has good information.
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Ruth Kamau
Feb 04, 2020Ruth Kamau rated it liked it
This book is long, filled with technical terms, and in the end... it does nothing to fulfill the promise given by the title.

It goes on and on about roles of hormones, what doesn’t work, experiments gone wrong, and then provides the most cliche advise about how to be happy in old age.

Coulda just started with that and saved us the repetitive ways of explaining Alzheimer’s and dementia.

All in all, some may appreciate this.
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Terri
Feb 03, 2020Terri rated it liked it
This book sounded interesting but it was way too detailed for me to enjoy. Felt more like a textbook. I’d recommend cliff notes for this one.
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Donna
Feb 25, 2021Donna rated it really liked it
Shelves: health, non-fiction
This is Non Fiction Science mostly about brain health. The author was heavy on the medical jargon and lingo that I guess Neuroscientists use, but the author did his own audio narration and he did a great job relaying the info in a way that didn't make me feel like I was completely in the weeds. For that, I recommend the audio to anyone one who wants to give this book a shot.

When I finished this, there were no boxes to check off. No list to gird your loins with before heading off to the health food store. Instead he uses a lot of studies to illustrate his points on health span.

Now some of these studies are old and they have been used quite prolifically in other health & science books. But what I liked was that he often gave us both sides of the coin. I appreciated that the most. He also pointed fingers but it such a nice way. Also, while this book didn't change my life, it definitely gave me food for thought. So 4 stars for that and the fact that if the author ever wanted to dip into another occupational field, he could easily narrate books. (less)
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Johnny Andrade
Nov 22, 2020Johnny Andrade rated it it was amazing
I really enjoyed this book and it gave me lots of useful information and strategies to implement into my own life as I age. Three out of his four main cornerstones he writes about for successful aging I have read a lot about for many years and have already made them top priorities in my life.

Those three areas are diet, exercise and sleep. These three cornerstones to healthy living and aging are neglected by most people more than ever now. More and more people continue to become more obese, more sedentary and more sleep deprived than ever before. It’s common daily ritual now for hundreds of millions of humans to overeat several times per day, get absolutely no exercise and then stay up late into the night sitting on a sofa, watching television, eating junk.

Humans need daily rigorous exercise and to sweat profusely and increase heart rate with physical activities. You need omega 3 fatty acids from fatty fish, nuts, or seeds that are critical for developing and maintaining healthy brains and hearts. Sedentarism destroys your entire being, mind, body, mood, everything. Sleep deprivation is almost just as detrimental to every aspect of health and aging.

The fourth area for successful aging he writes about is one that I have always had trouble with, being autistic, which is maintaining a healthy and active social life and social relationships. Many studies have shown that loneliness and social deprivation is more deleterious to overall health and aging than being a lifetime smoker. There have been plenty of centenarians who were lifelong smokers. I’m not aware of any antisocial, loner autistic individuals who made it to 100 years old. The average life expectancy for autistics is 36-40 years old, which I am only a few years away from now.

Your mind and body quickly deteriorate without meaningful social interaction and interpersonal relationships, regardless of physical exercise and mental exercise. When my grandparents and mother eventually have to go and leave me behind, it will quickly become a very cold dark empty world for me until I am able to catch back up to them.

Autistic men do not fair well in the social world of humans. As is common With autistic men, pretty much all my lasting interpersonal relationships are the ones I was born into: family, grandparents, parents. We do not fair well at developing or maintaining any kind of interpersonal relationships for very long if at all. Which leads to our small circle of relationships, fixed since birth, to die off one by one around us until we are all alone and quickly deteriorate in social world we are blind to.

Many people can’t accept the depressive realist “black pills” like these and prefer positive illusions and just world fallacies where if you just simply follow the right feel good empty platitudes that everything can and will work out rosy, fair, justly and happily in the end. The truth is that much of our destinies, potentials and possibilities are predetermined by our genes (plus environment). I don’t delude myself with positive illusions. I’m preparing myself for the futile, Sisyphian battle ahead, which is aging with autism. Which will mean, eventually, attempting to navigate a social world I cannot see or understand, all alone.

It is truly horrific predicament to be an autistic adult man. To be an autistic human is to be a social animal that is socially disabled. It is akin to being a schooling fish that cannot swim. It is also not always a very visible disability as well. And having no intellectual disabilities and being socially handicap people often assume you are just lazy, rude, mean, unmotivated etc. Nobody will blame or ridicule the disabled individual in a wheelchair for not being able to use the stairs. But most people will blame, dislike, discriminate the autistic individual who can’t properly function socially. (less)
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Dave Mills
Feb 03, 2020Dave Mills rated it did not like it
True confession: I really didn't finish this book. In fact, I only made it to page 67. Wanna know why? Of course you don't, but I'll tell you nevertheless.
Skip 400 pages of shit, go to page 401 (hardcopy edition) and read "APPENDIX REJUVENATING YOUR BRAIN." That'll give you an idea of just how bad this book is.
Alas, in my "declining," addled old age, I tend to fall for books that might give me the magic elixir, the location of the fountain of youth, the Philosopher's Stone, potions, diets, chemicals, brain games, and other gimmicks that (the books usually claim) will increase my longevity and improve my downhill years. None of them will, of course.
They're all crap, really.
Here's a better idea: read Barbara Ehrenreich's "Natural Causes." She's a great writer, funny, clever, bright, witty. And her chapter 10, "Successful Aging,"of nineteen pages is infinitely better than the 400 pages of Levitin's junk.
Enjoy these last years. Carpe diem! (less)
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Kristin
Feb 28, 2020Kristin rated it did not like it
I only got 54 pages in and screw this book. Far too technical and I can’t stand the tangents made in the book that are irrelevant. No one cares about you learning to drive clutch in San Fran when you’re discussing procedural memory. Had some interesting points that makes me wish this book just kept the interesting stuff and therefore shortened into a 150 page book. As another reviewer said, just flip to page 401 and read the appendix.
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Julie
Aug 23, 2020Julie rated it it was ok
I felt like the book mostly dealt with research on drugs to reduce effects of aging. I wanted to hear more about what I can do personally. There was some of that, and those were the parts I enjoyed. What I found most interesting is the effect moderate or even slow walking can have on the cognitive processes of the brain. In other words, keep moving.
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Yumiko Hansen
Jun 07, 2021Yumiko Hansen rated it really liked it
4 stars

I read this book with a great enthusiasm. I have read multiple books on aging and am thoughtful and intrigued to try to find a way to live the rest of my life healthily, meaningfully, and happily. My main interest is “Alzheimer’s or other forms of dementia.“
Dr. Levitin offers practical advice on how to age well, he also offers hope that one can lead a meaningful and productive life, even as one’s body is in the last laps of life.
The book is entertaining, a quick read, and quite informative about numerous important topics related to looking at aging in a positive light.

—— “The only thing you know for sure is the present tense.
That nowness becomes so vivid to me now, that in a perverse sort of way, I’m almost serene, I can celebrate life. Below my window, for example, the blossom is out in full. It’s a plum tree. It looks like apple blossom, but it’s white. And instead of saying, “Oh, that’s a nice blossom,” looking at it through the window when I’m writing, it is the whitest, frothiest, blossomiest blossom that there ever could be.
Things are both more trivial than they ever were, and more important than they ever were, and the difference between the trivial and the important doesn’t seem to matter—but the nowness of everything is absolutely wondrous.
And if people could see that—there’s no way of telling you, you have to experience it—the glory of it, if you like, the comfort of it, the reassurance. . . . Not that I’m interested in reassuring people, you know. The fact is that if you see the present tense, boy, do you see it, and boy, can you celebrate it!”

... Yes, in the end, in the battle to hang on to life, nature always wins.
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Valerie
Aug 22, 2020Valerie rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Your Brain On Age

Wonderful book loaded with health information younger eyes should read. I found answers why and how my husband and my own thinking are changing as we approach our sixth decade. The science, anatomical, chemical and time changes accumulated in life is explained with an energy to age with courage, love and laughter. Will keep for future reference!
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The Changing Mind: A Neuroscientist's Guide to Ageing Well : Levitin, Daniel: Amazon.com.au: Books

The Changing Mind: A Neuroscientist's Guide to Ageing Well : Levitin, Daniel: Amazon.com.au: Books










The best-selling neuroscientist and author of The Organized Mind explains what happens to our brains from womb to tomb.


We have long been encouraged to think of old age as synonymous with deterioration. Yet, recent studies show that our decision-making skills improve as we age and our happiness levels peak in our eighties. What really happens to our brains as we get older?


More of us are living into our eighties than ever before. In The Changing Mind, neuroscientist, psychologist and internationally-bestselling author Daniel Levitin invites us to dramatically shift our understanding of growing older, demonstrating its many cognitive benefits. He draws on cutting-edge research to challenge common and flawed beliefs, including assumptions around memory loss and the focus on lifespan instead of 'healthspan'.


Levitin reveals the evolving power of the human brain from infancy to late adulthood. Distilling the findings from over 4000 papers, he explains the importance of personality traits, lifestyle, memory and community on ageing, offering actionable tips that we can all start now, at any age.


Featuring compelling insights from individuals who have thrived far beyond the conventional age of retirement, this book offers realistic guidelines and practical cognitive enhancing tricks for everyone to follow during every decade of their life. This is a radical exploration of what we all can learn from those who age joyously


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Review
The secrets of ageing well ... Daniel Levitin is a distinguished American neuroscientist and this is a serious, evidence-based guide to what really works and why ― Sunday Times

A fact-filled and optimistic guide to ageing well ... Levitin is an invaluable kind of scientist ... The Changing Mind is replete with curious facts ... Optimism is a life-preserver. His book bubbles with it. Levitin makes a strong case for the consolations if not the joys of age -- John Sutherland ― The Times

Optimistic in tone ... Levitin loves to tell stories ... he's a good companion ― Evening Standard

Comprehensive and fascinating insight into the evolving human brain. This book could change your life ― Professor Stephen Westaby, author of 'Fragile Lives'

None of us can afford to ignore Daniel Levitin's The Changing Mind ... The good news is that it's not all downhill: according to Levitin our decision-making skills and happiness levels actually increase in later life ― New Statesman

The idea that your mind has to decline with age is false - and there is plenty we can do to keep it sharp ― Telegraph

Neuroscientist Levitin delves into the multiple-trace theory of memory, the ageing microbiome, fats and the brain, the impacts of neural implants, and the joys of non-retirement. A clear-eyed, insightful overview of the neurophysiological healthspan ― Nature

Delivers welcome news about the ageing brain: it is happier, quicker and often much healthier than you may imagine ― New Scientist

Daniel Levitin's refreshing perspective on ageing will change your opinion on this unique phase of life and challenge the 'slowing down' stereotype. Using a scientific and thoroughly engaging approach, Levitin convinces us that with medical advances alongside positive lifestyle changes described in this book, we can all look forward to older age as a fulfilling and exciting chapter in our lives ― Dr Rupy Aujla, author of The Doctor’s Kitchen

This is a book that can make things feel a whole lot brighter ― Big Issue

If you're planning to age, read this book. Wise, sensitive, and insightful, Levitin shares the tools that allow you to optimize the process ― David Eagleman, author of 'The Brain'

A wise, insightful, and beautifully-written book on how we can navigate the waters of time. Helpful for readers at any age. ― Daniel Gilbert, author of 'Stumbling on Happiness'

Predictions are perilous, but here's one I can make with certainty: Tomorrow you and I will be older than we are today. That's why you, I, and everyone we know needs this remarkable book. With a scientist's rigour and a storyteller's flair, Daniel Levitin offers a fresh approach to growing older. He debunks the idea that ageing inevitably brings infirmity and unhappiness and instead offers a trove of practical, evidence-based guidance for living longer and better. The Changing Mind is an essential book for the rest of your life. ― Daniel H. Pink, author of 'When' and 'Drive'

A compelling primer on our amazingly dynamic brains and the steps we can all take to harness that potential ― Dr Rahul Jandial, author of 'Life Lessons from a Brain Surgeon'

An uplifting exploration of the brain, and how it does not age as we often fear ― Camilla Cavendish, author of 'Extra Time'
Book Description
The best-selling neuroscientist and author of The Organized Mind explains what happens to our brains from womb to tomb.
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Successful Aging: A Neuroscientist Explores the Power and…

Daniel J. Levitin
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4.4 out of 5 stars

Top reviews from Australia


Joseph E. Feredoes

5.0 out of 5 stars Essential bookReviewed in Australia on 8 July 2020
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Very informative, easy to read despite the highly professional subject. This book gave me answers to many problems I couldn't understand. I recommend everybody over 40. Also, younger readers could learn a lot about problems caused by aging parents, grandparents. Tons of misconceptions cleared and explained. Although I am 74, my approach to fellow oldies has significantly changed.
Absolutely great book. Don 't miss it.


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Freya

5.0 out of 5 stars This is loads of information, and much to ponder & referenceReviewed in Australia on 5 November 2020
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I loved this interesting knowledge base and I find it heartening, encouraging & very informative as one ages !


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William Jordan
3.0 out of 5 stars A loose baggy monster, but an interesting oneReviewed in the United Kingdom on 6 March 2020
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This book lack focus but certainly does not lack interest.

The lack of focus is perhaps indicated most clearly by the fact that the author refers to his book as being called 'successful ageing' in his Introduction, but his UK publishers have decided to call it 'the changing mind'. Some of it's about the mind (more of it than perhaps you need if your primary interest is ageing), some of it's about ageing and not really about the mind at all (leaving 'end of life' instructions and so on figures in the end pages of the book).

It's also quite hard to focus the 'take aways' from the book. From the early, mind-oriented, part, it would seem that conscientiousness is the key to a successful life and to successful ageing (the book starts with discussion about 'how would you measure personality starting from a blank sheet of paper'). From the later part, you might think, drawing the longitudinal Harvard study of men, that 'all you need is love', which seems a bit different. And then there are all the discussions of behaviours that might promote successful ageing, including diet (fasting seems a good idea - but it's not clear what form this should take; drugs that mimic fasting may also work - a first trial just getting underway), exercise (the author thinks integrate this into daily life - it will be better for the brain - than going to the gym; and a little is better than none - manageable and short-term stress is good for us); an then there's sleep (but this is really a refresher course on the book 'why do we sleep'). There are also a lot of personal anecdotes. And an occasional reference to genetics.

It may be possible to draw all this together. The author twice quotes Freud's statement about the importance being able to work and being to love. But perhaps the more relevant quotation would be the one says 'where was id, there shall ego be' - but which I mean that perhaps the more 'conscientious' we are, the more our conscious takes control of our lives rather than our unconscious, and the more we have a secure environment to grow up in, the most this fosters our sense of being in control of our lives. And this sense of control then leads people who have it, to be able to eat well, exercise well, keep their sleeping well regulated - and extend that sense of control of their lives into their old age by not retiring (another helpful tip - though the 'unretired' examples in the book are academics, professionals and musicians - which is not a very representative sample of humanity)

Anyway, I enjoyed reading the book (and trying to make it all cohere), and would recommend it to others. But I would say that the author could perhaps have done a bit more of the work for the reader...
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Mr. P. James
3.0 out of 5 stars A bit long-winded!Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 March 2020
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I bought this following an interesting review in a national newspaper saying that people are at their happiest at the age of 82, that you can improve your memory and remain active as you get older, and with the author being a neuroscientist it seemed that it might have some trustworthy information. It does indeed have some interesting information and pointers for self-improvement, but you have to bear with it to find them. It is not an easy ready, as it is from a scientific point of view, and the author never writes one sentence when he can write fifty! There is an awful lot of waffle and labouring the same point over and over. The 528 page book would have benefited from some pruning and it all could have been said in 250 pages or less. If I'd known this I would have had a notepad beside me when I began reading it and made notes of the salient points or jotted down relevant page numbers to refer back to Now there are some facts that I want to recall, but I really cannot plough through 528 pages again to find them. The same author has some other attractive titles, but I wouldn't buy another one of his books after this. It is a classic case of "less is more"!

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J. Baldwin
5.0 out of 5 stars Wise, authoritative and entertainingReviewed in the United Kingdom on 10 March 2020
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This is a terrific book which is packed with information and advice about mitigating the adverse effects of growing old. Professor Levitin's book is, however, much more than a collection of helpful tips for the elderly. In The Changing Mind, he challenges much of the conventional wisdom about ageing and discusses in detail its scientific basis, covering a great deal of the available neuroscience and psychological research. Although the science is inevitably complex and technical, Levitin's writing is a pleasure to read: it is consistently wise, authoritative and entertaining. There are even some good jokes in the book. Anyone who wants to live well in old age would benefit from reading it.

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John Sheldon
3.0 out of 5 stars An important book but I hesitate to recommend it ...Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 18 June 2020
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The subject matter is very important for those of us of a "certain age" and much of the research described in the book is very interesting. The key messages are stimulating but somehow I had expected more insights.

On the downside, the book lacks a clear purpose and structure. It meanders around and often sinks into excessive detail. I managed to read it to the end, but only just. With a better focus and a lot of pruning, it would have been a great book.

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Sean W
3.0 out of 5 stars Heavy on detailReviewed in the United Kingdom on 11 March 2020
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Not what I was expecting, which may well be my fault as having heard the author talk on the radio I assumed the main focus of the book was on retirement.

I found myself skimming many pages trying to find nuggets of advice etc on retirement. As the book is all about health the author can rightly say this matters to retirees. But, it is so very heavy on detail you will need to be
extremely keen on health issues to get the most from the book which I found to be targeted more at academics. I suppose I read at most 50 of the 476 pages.

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The Dream of the Earth Audiobook | Thomas Berry | 1988

The Dream of the Earth Audiobook | Thomas Berry | Audible.com.au



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The Dream of the Earth
By: Thomas Berry
Narrated by: Thomas Berry
Length: 2 hrs and 52 mins
Abridged Audiobook
Release date: 13-11-2019
Language: English
Publisher: Phoenix Books
4.3 out of 5 stars4.3 (3 ratings)


Non-member price: $9.71or 1 Credit
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Publisher's Summary


Drawing upon the wisdom of thinkers from Buddha and Plato to Teilhard de Chardin and E. F. Schumacher, from ancient Chinese philosophy and Native American shamanism to contemporary astrophysics, Berry forges a balanced, deeply felt declaration of planetary independence from the sociological, psychological, and intellectual conditioning that threatens the death of nature, offering a path that will avert ecological catastrophe and move our traumatized planet toward health.

Berry builds his case on a comprehensive review of the history of ideas, and he points toward a transformation of consciousness that is needed, if mankind and the planet are to survive. The Dream of the Earth provides the insights, inspiration, and ethical guidance for us to move beyond exploitation and disengagement and begin a restorative, creative relationship with the natural world.
©1988 Sierra Club Books (P)1992, 2019 Audio Literature, Phoenix Books
PhilosophyEcologyShow More






What listeners say about The Dream of the EarthAverage Customer 
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Overall
4.5 out of 5 stars4.3 out of 5.0
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3.5 out of 5 stars3.7 out of 5.0
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4.5 out of 5 stars4.7 out of 5.0

Overall
5 out of 5 stars
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5 out of 5 stars
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5 out of 5 stars


C. Haubner
14-03-2021

Powerful book

This is a wonderful book. It’s dense and intense, but it provides invaluable insight to our current condition as humans. A must read.

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Essays discuss the Earth's evolution, our changing relationship with the planet, the ethics of ecology, and the future of the world

Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Sierra Club Books (1 September 1988)
Customer Reviews: 4.6 out of 5 stars    52 ratings

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5 star 79%

The Dream of the Earth
The Dream of the Earth
byThomas Berry

52 global ratings | 25 global reviews
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From other countries
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Mark Adams
5.0 out of 5 stars Great!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 February 2016
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Great!
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Anita M. Nicholson
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in Canada on 3 October 2017
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A true visionary. Berry is remarkable!
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stew
5.0 out of 5 stars Great thanks. Got here in good time too
Reviewed in Canada on 23 June 2017
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Great thanks. Got here in good time too.
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Redhawk
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in Canada on 9 December 2016
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love the writing!! a read for everyone.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly Recommend!
Reviewed in Canada on 16 August 2016
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Absolutely Fantastic!! Thomas Berry speaks with so much depth!! I am in awe!
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Amazon Customer
3.0 out of 5 stars The best message I got from this book was that all ...
Reviewed in the United States on 2 November 2015
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Almost done with this book and although it has some inspiring notes, I found it to be rather repetitious throughout.
It kind of goes in circles about how humans are damaging the earth and how we need to do something about it.

The best message I got from this book was that all the elements of our cultures and personalities come from nature. We basically create our consciousness from our perception of animals, plants, smells, etc....this is a powerful thought because the more species we lose each year limits and basically shrinks our consciousness. The less there is to perceive, the less our cultures can evolve.
12 people found this helpful
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Nancy Flinchbaugh
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful prose, a plea for the earth
Reviewed in the United States on 16 September 2012
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Thomas Berry writes beautiful prose, in this incredibly vibrant plea for our struggling planet. If you've never read Berry, this would be a good way to start. He will awaken your admiration for creation and call you out to enter into this, our Eco Age. I hope you will join the ever growing community of those who are working to build a better, sustainable future for the People of Earth. This, he says, is our "Great Work." It's amazing to me that this book, written almost 25 years ago now, explains the challenges of our reality. A Catholic priest, who dedicated his life to this work, lives on in his remarkable writing.
3 people found this helpful
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Bugs
5.0 out of 5 stars A Fine Guide To Earth/Universe Connectivity
Reviewed in the United States on 13 February 2004
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Thomas Berry has put together in this one book what a thousand other writers have attempted and that is: a complete format for human perception of reality that should and can pervade through all our earthly activities, esp. religion, politics and economy. Let Earth and it's biolgical processes teach and guide us to a rational, sustainable, regenerative, healthy existence.

There are many potent passages all through this work and I picked out one that I felt was inclusive of the gist of the book.

..."This universe itself, but especially the planet Earth, needs to be experienced as the primary healer, primary commercial establishment, and primary lawgiver for all that exists within this life community. The basic spirituality communicated by the natural world can also be considered as normative for the future ecological age."- Page 120


This is an excellent treatise on reverence for the creative life forces that sustain us and treat us daily to a plethora of interactive life processes and our need to acknowledge this gift by treating it with the awe and respect it deserves.

48 people found this helpful
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Annie Dragonfly
5.0 out of 5 stars The Epitome of Deep Ecology
Reviewed in the United States on 26 September 2009
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This is THE book on deep ecology. It is beautifully written, requiring slow thoughtful reading - I found myself chewing each sentence 22 times, wishing I could write out each thought and pin it on the wall to consider in every waking moment. In this masterpiece of environmentalism and spirituality, Berry tells how we got Earth into this mess, and how our collective thinking must change to save our one and only Home. It cannot be said any better than this. While I try to rotate other books so as not to hoard wisdom, this cherished book will stay in my library permanently and be read again and again.
7 people found this helpful
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Jim
5.0 out of 5 stars Berry knew we are Nature.
Reviewed in the United States on 15 September 2011
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Thomas Berry knew we had to work with Nature itself rather than dictating our needs to Nature. A new book, The Awakened Earth, teaches us how to form a partnership with Nature to heal environments out of balance. It does what Berry said we must do, listen to Nature, then co-create solutions with Nature to rebalance and heal stressed environments. Indigenous people as well as American Indians knew this and did listen as they saw they were part of Nature itself, not a dominator of Nature as many now behave. Berry's principles are realized in The Awakened Earth. (It too, is for sale on Amazon as well as its own website.)
One person found this helpful
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The Dream of the Earth by Thomas Berry

 4.20  ·   Rating details ·  302 ratings  ·  42 reviews

This landmark work, first published by Sierra Club Books in 1988, has established itself as a foundational volume in the ecological canon. In it, noted cultural historian Thomas Berry provides nothing less than a new intellectual-ethical framework for the human community by positing planetary well-being as the measure of all human activity.
Drawing on the wisdom of Western philosophy, Asian thought, and Native American traditions, as well as contemporary physics and evolutionary biology, Berry offers a new perspective that recasts our understanding of science, technology, politics, religion, ecology, and education. He shows us why it is important for us to respond to the Earth’s need for planetary renewal, and what we must do to break free of the “technological trance” that drives a misguided dream of progress. Only then, he suggests, can we foster mutually enhancing human-Earth relationships that can heal our traumatized global biosystem. (less)

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 Average rating4.20  ·  Rating details ·  302 ratings  ·  42 reviews
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Emily Crow
Apr 15, 2017Emily Crow rated it really liked it
Shelves: nonfiction, read-in-2017, nature-writing, modern-life

It took me forever to get through this relatively short book, due to both the dry, academic prose and the sheer number of interesting ideas per page. Although it is a challenging read--and, in some ways, a bit dated--it is definitely worth the attention of anyone with a serious interest in environmental philosophy.

The core of the message is simple: We absolutely have to find a new way of relating to the earth, or we will destroy it, and thus destroy ourselves. All of our current modes of being--in economics, religion, science, politics--are not only insufficient, but contributing to the problem.

Or as Barry puts it: "Our secular, rational, industrial society, with its amazing scientific insight and technological skills, has established the first radically anthropocentric society and has thereby broken the primary law of the universe, the law that every component member of the universe should be integral with every other member of the universe and that the primary norm of reality and of value is the universe community itself in its various forms of expression, especially as realized on the planet Earth."

I enjoyed how he broke down his argument into different segments, such as how science and commerce and our own historical world view (the latter going back to the Middle Ages in the beginnings of this pathology, which provided a new and interesting perspective for me), but the most convincing argument was, for me, the spiritual one:

"We should be clear about what happens when we destroy the living forms of this planet. The first consequence is that we destroy modes of divine presence. If we have a wonderful sense of the divine, it is because we live amid such awesome magnificence." Yes, this!!! A million times over!

I did find it interesting that, although the author was a Catholic priest of the Passionist order, his religious views are quite nonconformist and would probably upset many main stream Christians. He believes that the emphasis on personal salvation and the insistence that we live in a fallen world detract from the experience of our connection with natural world--the sort of nature mysticism of traditional Native American religions, for example. He shows how this view helped to lead to the industrial plundering of the earth (sorry about all the quotes in this review, but Berry just says things so much better):

"Just as the doctrine of divine transcendence took away the pervasive divine presence to the natural world, so the millennial vision of a blessed future left all present modes of existence in a degraded status. All things were in an unholy condition. Everything needed to be transformed. This meant that anything unused was to be used if the very purpose of its existence was to be realized. Nothing in its natural state was acceptable."

And:

"The Christian world is the world of the city. Its concerns are primarily supernatural. The rural world is the world of the pagan. The natural world is to be kept at a distance as a seductive mode of being."

Actually, I would be extremely interested to read a thoughtful, ecologically aware Christian response to these arguments, as my gut instinct says that Berry's view would be considered heretical, and yet I know that many Christians are concerned about the environment. I would hate for the Ann Coulters and Sarah Palins of this world to drown them out. And yet Coulter and Palin are obviously building upon a dynamic--and extremely destructive--cultural foundation when they so vociferously insist that the earth exists only for our consumption. I wonder what Berry would say about them if he were still alive today.

I copied down pages upon pages of quotes from this book--the author's insights were just that amazing. It's tempting to keep sharing more of them, but instead I'll recommend that everyone who loves the earth read this book. My one quibble with it (besides the stilted prose) was that I found it to be a complete downer (probably one of the reasons I could only read it in small doses). Writing in 1988, Berry seems to believe that we were on the cusp of a new ecological paradigm. If anything, the opposite is true. Every day I am bombarded with depressing news about more and more drilling, mining, fracking, and logging carried out on public lands. Entire mountain tops are being blown sky-high in Appalachia for coal production. The keystone XL pipeline has just been approved by one of the most aggressively exploitative presidents in history. Native rights are being trampled at Standing Rock and elsewhere. It is enough to make one weep, and I sometimes do. Unfortunately, some thirty years later, Berry's Dream of the Earth seems just that, a lovely dream that never came true. (less)

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Erik Akre
Mar 14, 2016Erik Akre rated it liked it
Recommends it for: visionary ecologists; shamanic personalities
Shelves: ecology, human-ecology
My first impressions of this book were that it is not particularly "well-written." I had a hard time gelling with Berry's writing style, and I never did quite get the hang of it. It had the feel of being second-rate. I shouldn't say that first off, but there it is.

That said, I must also say that its ideas are powerful and compelling. I will explain by listing the ways it inspired me, the things it inspired me to learn more about:
1. the sequence and detail of the galactic cosmology
2. the sequential phases of human development, from Paleolithic to ecological (into which we are currently transitioning)
3. the great classical cultures of the world and their achievements
4. the scientific-technological phase of human development itself, considering power, harms, helps, and ramifications
5. the possibilities of the new ecological age
6. the rediscovery of foundations for human values

The book provoked a lot of interest in the above, and there are many, many references to further reading in these and other areas. If for no other reason, these inspirations are worth the read. In the midst of everything else in my life, it took me years to explore these things further, but I have in my way, and I still do. I owe something to Berry for the motivation I still have.

In the end, Berry concludes that we need more visionary consciousness and less blind reliance on reason. This conclusion ties things together well. It is the "shamanic personalities" that must be the guides as we move forward to a new relationship with the earth. (less)
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Andrea McDowell
Feb 05, 2013Andrea McDowell rated it it was ok
Shelves: green, life-is-too-short
I have tried so hard to like Thomas Berry.

I give up. I can't do it. Dense, unreadable prose based on the sketchiest types of half-evidence, stitched together with such slender chains of reasoning that a good sneeze could rip it apart. Nice ideas. Lovely philosophy. A wonderful world would result if, indeed, there were any basis for his proposals or if they were implementable by animals with the sorts of brains human beings have. But they're not, and I can't waste one more second of my life believing that there is anything useful to be learned from a book that makes the argument that there were pre-partriarchal women-ruled societies in which the environment was treated well. Mr. Berry, you meant well, and I respect you as an ally; but to all his successors, I beg of you, please sully yourself with some form of actual evidence, and stop confusing "fact" with "someone else's opinion that you found in print." (less)
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Eddie Black
Jan 05, 2009Eddie Black rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: pagan, philosophy, environment
We need more voices like Thomas Berry.
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Sev
Nov 07, 2013Sev rated it really liked it
Shelves: library
It's strange reading a fervent environmental call to action almost thirty years after its publication, sitting in a world worse off than the one which inspired its writing. An important book. (less)
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Ingrid
Apr 05, 2018Ingrid rated it it was amazing
Very insightful ideas regarding the connections with our planet. I found Thomas Berry's explanations for the dream of the earth and the solutions to our current ecological crisis innovative and encouraging. ...more
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Elizabeth
Sep 26, 2009Elizabeth rated it really liked it
Recommends it for: psychologists and adult devt
now I own it


from the library computer:
Publishers Weekly Reviews
This first volume in a new series, the Sierra Club Nature and Natural Philosophy Library, explores human-earth relations and seeks a new, non-anthropocentric approach to the natural world. According to cultural historian Berry, our immediate danger is not nuclear war but industrial plundering; our entire society, he argues, is trapped in a closed cycle of production and consumption. Berry points out that our perception of the earth is the product of cultural conditioning, and that most of us fail to think of ourselves as a species but rather as national, ethnic, religious or economic groups. Describing education as ``a process of cultural coding somewhat parallel to genetic coding,'' he proposes a curriculum based on awareness of the earth. He discusses ``patriarchy'' as a new interpretation of Western historical development, naming four patriachies that have controlled Western history, becoming progressively destructive: the classical empires, the ecclesiastical establishment, the nation-state and the modern corporation. We must reject partial solutions and embrace profound changes toward a ``biocracy'' that will heal the earth, urges the author who defines problems and causes with eloquence. (October) Copyright 1988 Cahners Business Information.
(less)
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Cambridge Programme for Sustainability Leadership
Dec 22, 2010Cambridge Programme for Sustainability Leadership rated it it was amazing
Shelves: the-top-50-sustainability-books
One of Cambridge Sustainability's Top 50 Books for Sustainability, as voted for by our alumni network of over 3,000 senior leaders from around the world. To find out more, click here.

The Dream of the Earth is a collection of essays which all advance a deeply spiritual and ecological interpretation of the world, its current woes and potential solutions. Berry believes we understand and interpret the world and our role within it based on our 'story of the universe', our dream or world-view. The story is the source of a society's collective psyche and not only explains the past, but also guides our future. While other animals have their behaviour embedded in their DNA, we humans need stories to find our way and understand what to do.

The underlying theme of the book is that our vision, or dream, of progress has brought a lot of good, but is now sowing the seeds of its own destruction. This is because we have lost our connection to the planet, a connection that has existed since ancient times and today remains only with some indigenous communities. Our story has become corrupted, or empty of deep meaning. (less)
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Wendy Babiak
Sep 28, 2009Wendy Babiak rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: books-that-made-me-a-better-person

Thomas Berry, a monastic who chose to use his solitude to study everything from comparative religion and philosophy to agricultural production and particle physics, has synthesized his wide and deep knowledge in this volume with a thoughtfulness rare in this or any age. The book is a call to awaken to a new and more productive geopolitical paradigm involving a recognition of the rights of the earth and all its inhabitants. Reading it is like being blessed with a new set of eyes with which to see the world. (less)
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Jonathan Wichmann
Jun 16, 2012Jonathan Wichmann rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Jonathan by: Bill Plotkin
Wonderful to read -- he writes with the language of a philosopher, though I think it's clearer and more direct than most people think of as philosophy. I found it beautiful and inspiring. Probably my favorite part is that he reminds us every three pages that humans are closing down the basic life systems of the planet. Awful, but it's surprisingly nice to hear someone say it how it is.

His ideas can be challenging, but I think they're right on. (less)
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Joshua
Jun 13, 2009Joshua added it
Shelves: hippie, summer09
I would rate this as a better book that "The Great Work", if only because it is more prescient (written a decade earlier), as it contains all of the main ideas, developed sufficiently enough.

I am considering using Chpt 8, "The American College in the Ecological Age" (pp. 89-108) as a reading for a freshman seminar discussion. It is as timely now as it was 20 years ago.


...more
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David Weber
Feb 12, 2012David Weber rated it it was amazing
Berry's eyes, mind, and heart were wide open. He could see the connectivity of everything, he had the ability to convey the unity of all things eloquently, and thus he enabled us to know better the love of the Other in which all must fully live, move, and have our being.. (less)
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JeanAnn
Aug 28, 2020JeanAnn rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: morning-coffee

“We can understand this Peace of Earth, however, only if we understand that the earth is a single community composed of all its geological, biological, and human components. The Peace of Earth is Indivisible. In this context the nations have a referent outside themselves for resolving their difficulties. The earth fulfills this role of mediator in several ways. First, the earth is a single organic reality that must survive in its integrity if it is to support any nation on the earth. To save the earth is a necessity for every nation. No part of the earth in its essential functioning can be the exclusive possession or concern of any nation. The air cannot be nationalized or privatized; it must circulate everywhere on the planet to fulfill its life giving function anywhere on the planet. It must be available for the nonhuman as well as for the human lifeforms if it is to sustain human life. So it is with the waters on the earth. They must circulate throughout the planet if they are to benefit any of the lifeforms on the planet.” (less)

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Ann
Jul 16, 2017Ann rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: conservation
This collection of essays broadly addresses the ecological despair facing all the Earth, how humans are causing this despair and the ways in which it will impinge on human existence. Rather than offer specific analysis or solution, Berry presents some themes of underpinning philosophy arising from Christianity, Western culture and economics in particular that have lead to this state of despair and changes or new directions for creating a viable future. He connects the human past, in historical, cosmological, and genetic senses, as a starting point for this future. These essays are worth a consideration on all counts. (less)
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Walt
Aug 30, 2018Walt rated it really liked it
This is a very interesting set of essays, outlining the patterns of life in the world, demonstrating the problems associated with modern cosmology, and proposing a new cosmology. While some essays have become outdated as our understanding of evolution and anthropology changes, the majority have become even more relevant and important to the situation we find ourselves in. The need for a story which integrates us into the community of life on Earth has only grown since this was written. I would recommend this to anyone concerned with spiritual or ecological issues facing the world. (less)
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Emma
Sep 29, 2020Emma rated it liked it
"As Chief Seattle once said of us and our cities: 'When the last Red Man shall have perished, and the mystery of my tribe shall have become a myth among the White Men, these shores will swarm with the invisible dead of my tribe, and when your children's children think themselves alone in the field, the store, the shop, upon the highway, or in the silence of the pathless woods, they will not be alone.'" (less)
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Eileen
Dec 17, 2019Eileen rated it liked it
Shelves: non-fiction
© 1988 ***½. Early book on the subject of ecology and the place of humans in the biosphere. Explains well how a bioregion works as a unit and how all life is dependent on humans working together with the natural forces of the earth. Acknowledges the dignity and respect due to the planet as a whole, and to the awesome diversity of life present here and nowhere else for light-years around.
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Aidan Owen
Nov 16, 2017Aidan Owen rated it it was amazing
Shelves: mysticism, spirituality, 2017, contemplative-ecology
Extraordinary. If you haven't read this book, read it NOW. If you have, read it again. It changed the way I see myself as a part of the universe and not separate from it, and has helped me to articulate my own vocation. Absolutely essential reading. (less)

 
Joe Moreno
Jan 15, 2018Joe Moreno rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
A theological basis for environmentalism. Great book!
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Autumn
Apr 27, 2018Autumn rated it it was amazing
Shelves: favorite-books
This is one of the most powerful books I have ever read, shining light on humanity’s place in the cosmos and our role in manifesting a world in which all things thrive in communion and love.


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Joyce
Aug 13, 2018Joyce rated it it was amazing
A thoughtful view of where we are on planet Earth, how we got here and what we need to do in order to save our beautiful Mother.
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Martha
Jan 22, 2019Martha rated it liked it
Affirmed my view of the living universe. It was depressing that the warnings about species extinction and the destruction of our home were issued in the 80s! Have we passed a point of no return?
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Brian
Aug 18, 2019Brian rated it really liked it
Read this so long ago I've forgotten when, and the details. ...more
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S Holthaus
Feb 12, 2017S Holthaus rated it really liked it
Relevant for anyone interested in environmental issues
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Lauren
Dec 19, 2014Lauren marked it as abandoned
Fuck it. I've had this out from the library for probably months now and I'm not any closer to finishing it. It wasn't terrible, in fact many of his ideas were very inspiring, but also I just found it to be pretty samey compared to similar books I've read or skimmed through. Which reflects a thousand times worse on them than it does The Dream of the Earth, TDotE being very influential in its field and kind of the jump start for all the Green politics, philosophy, religion etc that you see today that spawned such similar books.

I feel pretty peeved at these successors, actually. Like, when Thomas Berry asked people to recycle I'm p sure he didn't mean that with regards to his own work. Say something new, you hacks. Or at least talk about the parts that haven't aged well in this book. Does the world really need another self-indulgent chapter about your grudge against technology? No. Really, no. Thomas Berry was a visionary and I realise the ideas and questions he poses have no simple answers, but you could at least try to answer them. Or bring new ideas to the table. I'd prefer an attempt at answers, frankly, because so many books of this kind are filled with too much hand-wringing over capitalism and the state of our environment and not much attention given to anything but the same vague, trotted out solutions. Sometimes I think these authors would have a better impact on the environment if they just didn't publish their books in the first place. Save all that paper and resources for a book that isn't pretending to give a shit. It'll be much less hypocritical that way.

So yeah, I'm regretful that I couldn't finish this. Maybe it would have been the same old echo chamber stuff anyway, but if you're going to read it at all it might as well come from the person who wrote it first and, in all likelihood, best.

Oh well. (less)
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Nicholas Brink
Nov 21, 2015Nicholas Brink rated it it was amazing
The Dream of the Earth has become very central to my own writing. Berry's belief that the avenue to become one with the Earth is through dreaming, waking visions and regaining our shamanic personality I believe is most directly gained through ecstatic trance for which I am a certified instructor and about what I have been writing. Berry makes it clear that where we go wrong in healing the Earth is our belief that we are superior to everything of the Earth and have dominion of the Earth. We forget that we are dependent upon all that is of the Earth and have much to learn from all life, all flora and fauna. All other life have powers that we do not have and in those ways are superior to us. When realizing this, how can we place ourselves superior to all other life and the culmination of evolution? We can't, we are no better than and need to experience ourselves as one with all other life on Earth. (less)
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Frank Aaskov
Jan 18, 2012Frank Aaskov rated it it was ok
I initially decided to read this book as it was on a list of most important environmental book out something. However I was really disappointed.

The author outlines where he believes there is a disconnect between current philosophical thought and environmentalism / green philosophy, which is an noble task. But he gets lost in loose rambling, vague criticisms, and his love of mysticism. Often he states that we should respect earth/plants/animals/etc for their mystic nature (??), and his causal relationships and explanations are difficult to follow. He furthermore puts great emphasis on theories that even at the time of writing (late 1980s) were disputed such as the population bomb.
Overall, I don't really get why this made any list. It might have made a wave in some parts of the environmental movement when published, but it has certainly not stood the test of time. (less)
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scherzo♫
Apr 22, 2013scherzo♫ rated it really liked it
Shelves: mundane-fic
p.30 "The ecological vision that we are proposing is the only contexte that is consistent with the evolutionary processes that brought the earth and all its living beings into that state of flourescence that existed prior to the industrial age. Because this earlier situation made serious demands upon the human for the benefits given, the industrial age was invented to avoid the return due for the benefits given. The burdens imposed upon the human in its natural setting, generally referred to as the human condition, established a situation unacceptable to an anthropocentric community with its deep psychic resentment against any such demands imposed upon it, hence the entire effort of the industrial society to transform the natural world into total subservience." (less)
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Kate
Jun 11, 2016Kate rated it liked it
Shelves: non-fiction, library-books
It was a redundant read for me. This book makes for a good introduction for those who are unaware of the why and how the human communities across the globe are screwed, but only vaguely. Too many references to other books and not enough direct quotations from said books to make the message of the book as a whole stronger. I wanted to know why those books were important, not just that they are deemed important by the author.
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===
  
“The Dream of the Earth” by Thomas Berry
written by springmagazine
Published on January 12, 2020
https://thespringmagazine.com/2020/01/12/the-dream-of-the-earth-by-thomas-berry/

When the Catholic priest Thomas Berry died in 2009, obituaries were not sure what to call him. “Cultural historian” was the preferred title. “Theologian” didn’t quite encompass his work, and he had preferred the term “geologian” instead. Born in Greensboro in 1914, Berry studied Asian languages and religions, Native American culture, founded the graduate program on religions at Fordham University, among other studies and work throughout his life — all in the search of a spirituality that combines religion and nature.

In “The Great Work,” Berry wrote about his profound spiritual experience at a meadow when he was 11 years old. The experience was the basis for his spiritual development and intellectual thought for the rest of his life. “Whatever preserves and enhances this meadow in the natural cycles of its transformations is good, what is opposed to this meadow or negates it is not good,” he wrote.

Berry’s writing is soft yet powerful. It flows, and is difficult to quote and pull from. You end up reading the whole book but not being able to describe what you just read, and not wanting to either, but instead just to let the writing settle. The writing flows gently like water or like a breeze, and you delight in his love of the word “numinous.” 

Here is an excerpt from “The Dream of the Earth,” by Thomas Berry, published in 1988.

We are returning to our native place after a long absence, meeting once again with our kin in the earth community. For too long we have been away somewhere, entranced with our industrial world of wires and wheels, concrete and steel, and our unending highways, where we race back and forth in continual frenzy.

The world of life, of spontaneity, the world of dawn and sunset and glittering stars in the dark night heavens, the world of wind and rain, of meadow flowers and flowing streams, of hickory and oak and maple and spruce and pineland forests, the world of desert sand and prairie grasses, and within all this the eagle and the hawk, the mockingbird and the chickadee, the deer and the wolf and the beer, the coyote, the raccoon, the whale and the seal, and the salmon returning upstream to spawn — all this, the wilderness world recently rediscovered with heightened emotional sensitivity, is an experience not far from that of Dante meeting Beatrice at the end of the Purgatorio, where she descends amid a cloud of blossoms. It was a long wait for Dante, so aware of his infidelities, yet struck anew and inwardly “pierced,” as when, hardly out of his childhood, he had first seen Beatrice. The “ancient flame” was lit again in the depths of his being. In that meeting, Dante is describing not only a personal experience, but the experience of the entire human community at the moment of reconciliation with the divine after the long period of alienation and human wandering away from the true center.

Something of this feeling of intimacy we now experience as we recover our presence within the earth community. This is something more than working out a viable economy, something more than ecology, more even than Deep Ecology, is able to express. This is a sense of presence, a realization that the earth community is a wilderness community that will not be bargained with; nor will it simply be studied or examined or made an object of any kind; nor will it be domesticated or trivialized as a setting for vacation indulgence, except under duress and by oppressions which it cannot escape. When this does take place in an abusive way, a vengeance awaits the human, for when the other living species are violated so extensively, the human itself is imperiled.

The Dream of the EarthIf the earth does grow inhospitable toward human presence, it is primarily because we have lost our sense of courtesy toward the earth and its inhabitants, our sense of gratitude, our willingness to recognize the sacred character of habitat, our capacity for the awesome, for the numinous quality of every earthly reality. We have even forgotten our primordial capacity for language at the elementary level of song and dance, wherein we share our existence with the animals and with all natural phenomena. Witness how the Pueblo Indians of the Rio Grande enter into the eagle dance, the buffalo dance, and the deer dance; how the Navajo become intimate with the larger community through their dry-paintings and their chantway ceremonies; how the peoples of the Northwest express their identity through their totem animals; how the Hopi enter into communication with desert rattlesnakes in their ritual dances. This mutual presence finds expression also in poetry and in story form, especially in the trickster stories of the Plains Indians in which Coyote performs his never-ending magic. Such modes of presence to the living world we still carry deep within ourselves, beyond all the suppressions and even the antagonism imposed by our cultural traditions.

Even within our own Western traditions at our greater moments of expression, we find this presence, as in Hildegard of Bingen, Francis of Assisi, and even in the diurnal and seasonal liturgies. The dawn and evening liturgies, especially, give expression to the natural phenomena in their numinous qualities. Also, in the bestiaries of the medieval period, we find a special mode of drawing the animal world into the world of human converse. In their symbolisms and especially in the moral qualities associated with the various animals, we find a mutual revelatory experience. These animal stories have a playfulness about them, something of a common language, a capacity to care for each other. Yet these movements toward intensive sharing with the natural world were constantly turned aside by a spiritual aversion, even by a sense that humans were inherently cut off from any true sharing of life. At best they were drawn into a human context in some subservient way, often in a derogatory way, as when we projected our own vicious qualities onto such animals such as the wolf, the rat, the snake, the worm, and the insects. We seldom entered their wilderness world with true empathy.

Thomas_Berry
Berry

The change has begun, however, in every phase of human activity, in all our professions and institutions. Greenpeace on the sea and Earth First! on the land are asserting our primary loyalties to the community of earth. The poetry of Gary Snyder communicates something of the “wild sacred” quality of the earth. In his music Paul Winter is responding to the cry of the wolf and the song of the whale. Roger Tory Peterson has brought us intimately into the world of the birds. Joy Adamson has entered into the world of the lions of Africa; Dian Fossey the social world of the gentle gorilla. John Lilly has been profoundly absorbed into the consciousness of the dolphin. Farley Mowat and Barry Lopez have come to an intimate understanding of the gray wolf of North America. Others have learned the dance language of the bees and the songs of the crickets.

What is fascinating about these intimate associations with various living forms of the earth is that we are establishing not only an acquaintance with the general life and emotions of the various species, but also an intimate rapport, even an affective relationship, with individual animals within their wilderness context. Personal names are given to individual whales. Indeed, individual wild animals are entering into history. This can be observed in the burial of Digit, the special gorilla friend of Dian Fossey’s. Fossey’s own death by human assault gives abundant evidence that if we are often imperiled in the wilderness context of the animals, we are also imperiled in the disturbed conditions of what we generally designate as civilized society.

Just now one of the significant historical roles of the primal people of the world is not simply to sustain their own traditions, but to call the entire civilized world back to a more authentic mode of being. Our only hope is in a renewal of those primordial experiences out of which the shaping of our more sublime human qualities could take place. While our own experiences can never again have the immediacy or the compelling quality that characterized this earlier period, we are experiencing a postcritical naiveté, a type of presence to the earth and all its inhabitants that includes, and also transcends, the scientific understanding that now is available to us from these long years of observation and reflection.

Fortunately we have in the native peoples of the North American continent what must surely be considered in the immediacy of its experience, in its emotional sensitivities, and in its modes of expressions, one of the most integral traditions of human intimacy with the earth, with the entire range of natural phenomena, and with the many living beings which constitute the life community. Even minimal contact with the native peoples of this continent is an exhilarating experience in itself, an experience that is heightened rather than diminished by the disintegrating period through which they themselves have passed. In their traditional mystique of the earth, they are emerging as one of our surest guides into a viable future.

Throughout their period of dissolution, when so many tribes have been extinguished, the surviving peoples have manifested what seems to be an indestructible psychic orientation toward the basic structure and functioning of the earth, despite all our efforts to impose on them our own aggressive attitude toward the natural world. In our postcritical naiveté we are now in a period when we become capable once again of experiencing the immediacy of life, the entrancing presence to the natural phenomena about us. It is quite interesting to realize that our scientific story of the universe is giving us a new appreciation for these earlier stories that come down to us through peoples who have continued their existence outside the constraints of our civilizations.

Presently we are returning to the primordial community of the universe, the earth, and all living beings. Each has its own voice, its role, its power over the whole. But, most important, each has its special symbolism. The excitement of life is in the numinous experience wherein we are given to each other in that larger celebration of existence in which all things attain their highest expression, for the universe, by definition, is a single gorgeous celebratory event.



The Dream of the Earth Quotes

The Dream of the Earth Quotes Showing 1-3 of 3

“Tell me a story, a story that will be my story as well as the story of everyone and everything about me, the story that brings us together in a valley community, a story that brings together the human community with every living being in the valley, a story that brings us together under the arc of the great blue sky in the day and the starry heavens at night, a story that will drench us with rain and dry us in the wind, a story told by humans to one another that will also be the story that the wood thrush sings in the thicket, the story that the river recites in its downward journey, the story that Storm King Mountain images forth in the fullness of its grandeur.”
― Thomas Berry, The Dream of the Earth
tags: community, language, myth, nature, story, wild4 likesLike

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“We must, however, reflect on what is happening. It is an urgent matter, especially for those of us who still live in a meaningful, even a numinous, earth community. We have not spoken. Nor even have we seen clearly what is happening. The issue goes far beyond economics, or commerce, or poetics, or an evening of pleasantries as we look out over a scenic view. Something is happening beyond all this. We are losing splendind and intimate modes of divine presence. We are, perhaps, losing ourselves.”
― Thomas Berry, The Dream of the Earth
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“For people, generally, their story of the universe and the human role in the universe is their primary source of intelligibility and value. ... The deepest crises experienced by any society are those moments of change when the story becomes inadequate for meeting the survival demands of a present situation.”
― Thomas Berry, The Dream of the Earth