spooky2 wrote on Jul 5th, 2008 at 7:57pm:Review of Jane Roberts / Robert F. Butts: A Seth Book The "Unknown" Reality Volume One
This book is a compilation of common ideas which were around in the 1970s. Nothing in it is new, original or of further interest. The presented ideas and concepts are just stated, but not discussed in depth. Simple, basic questions which are naturally arising are not answered. Everything is unspecific and unprecise, so no practical use can be gained from the presented concepts.
The basic concepts are:
(A) Everything consists of units of consciousness.
(B) There are many alternate/probable realities, for example many alternate biographies of a person; these alternate realities could be perceived when one opens up for this expanded view on reality (realities).
(C) Time is not linear as commonly perceived, it's direction is better described as going from the future to the past, than from the past to the future, or everything exists simultaneous.
These concepts are repeated endlessly slightly variated, with some snippets of popular contemporary science, sociology, philosophy and the usual esoteric speculations, all very superficious.
It is a book from a very talkative person who has nothing interesting to say. Very unintelligent.
Spooky
(P.S.: Period. End of session. Spooky has spoken.)
Hey Spooky,
I got into the Seth materials about 15 years ago, if not longer. When I first read it, even though I read it thoroughly, I got some of the concepts but hardly would say all.
Over the years I've found it necessary to reread Seth, which I am now doing with great attention. This rereading is necessary since my first reading because I've managed to read Michael Newton, Scott Rogo, Bruce Moen, Robert Monroe, Edgar Cayce, Robert Bruce, and a few others. Seth filled in the missing parts and bridged discoveries and observations between authors.
Now, after finishing Bruce Moen's four Voyages, and now working on his GuideBook, I'm tackling Tom Campbell's "My Big Toe." Guess what? Tom Campbell claims that he and a colleague who volunteered their time at the gestation of the Monroe Institute were the two who actually started research in audio frequency testing. It was these two who experimented with the two audio inputs, the early stages of Hemi-Sync. Voila! A truth revealed. I don't think I've read anywhere that Robert Monroe discovered Hemi-Sync, but that the institute discovered the research into this area. In Monroe's earliest book, Monroe never mentioned that it was he who used Hemi-Sync to get into an altered state, but that it happened to him one afternoon (or night) when he sort of fell through his sofa; he never used Hemi-Sync to get into that altered state. In a similar fashion, even Tom Campbell admits that he told a white lie when he gave the impression to readers that his altered consciousness experiences started when he volunteered research at the institute. In his first volume he discloses that at an early age he experienced an altered consciousness experience with "guides" who were literally assessing whether or not they should continue to use him as a student.
In a similar way I'm discovering that Bruce Moen did not learn altered consciousness through Gateway, but already had experiences prior, which were then solidified at Gateway. Bruce Moen's approach, that of using imagination and visualization, had been used and developed by others. Scott Rogo's work on how to go out of body summarizes the various techniques, one of which was visualization and imagination. Rogo referred to Charles Tart as being instrumental in applying visualization to aid in the development of altered consciousness, just as Bruce Moen referred to Charles Tart in similar fashion.
Just my thoughts and observations.
Ronny