Korpo
29th April 2008, 10:59 AM
This was just the right book at the right time. Many things in this book touched me deeply, or resonated with me, or sound just right. Kurt Leland has a very lucid and objective way of describing things, and this makes his explorations of the afterlife (he calls it "the AfterDeath Zone in Otherwhere") a great read.
So many things I have been wondering about for so long explained very well. His excellent observations explain a lot of seemingly inconsistent phenomena. I was again and again surprised by this book's contents. Every time I thought "Oh, I already read about that" it spins out into a new direction and it filled in many "blanks" for me.
Two parts of the book are especially worthy reads - his guided tour through the Christian afterlife (mostly), spanning most of the later chapters, and his quick tour through the purpose of human evolution in a simulated environment. Both are truly mind-expanding reads.
Gives Kurt's personal answers to many questions, such as:
* Where do we go when we die?
* Is there sin and a hell?
* What happens to "fundamentalist atheists"? ;)
* Does what we see in OBE and dreaming constitute truth?
* What is the purpose and nature of dreams?
* What role play symbols and personal/public "translation tables" in how our experiences unfold?
* What is the life purpose, how can you know you're pursuing it and what happens when you miss it?
* What are the entities you will encounter "over there"?
* What happens to the belief systems of cultures long gone?
* How do the entities in Otherwhere see human experience?
* Where do the entities that "run the afterlife" come from?
* How do entities from outside the human system see it?
* What is the purpose of emotions?
* How does the duality of good and evil relate to our animal origins?
Etc.
A truly worthwhile read. I found it inspiring and encouraging. :D
Oliver
So many things I have been wondering about for so long explained very well. His excellent observations explain a lot of seemingly inconsistent phenomena. I was again and again surprised by this book's contents. Every time I thought "Oh, I already read about that" it spins out into a new direction and it filled in many "blanks" for me.
Two parts of the book are especially worthy reads - his guided tour through the Christian afterlife (mostly), spanning most of the later chapters, and his quick tour through the purpose of human evolution in a simulated environment. Both are truly mind-expanding reads.
Gives Kurt's personal answers to many questions, such as:
* Where do we go when we die?
* Is there sin and a hell?
* What happens to "fundamentalist atheists"? ;)
* Does what we see in OBE and dreaming constitute truth?
* What is the purpose and nature of dreams?
* What role play symbols and personal/public "translation tables" in how our experiences unfold?
* What is the life purpose, how can you know you're pursuing it and what happens when you miss it?
* What are the entities you will encounter "over there"?
* What happens to the belief systems of cultures long gone?
* How do the entities in Otherwhere see human experience?
* Where do the entities that "run the afterlife" come from?
* How do entities from outside the human system see it?
* What is the purpose of emotions?
* How does the duality of good and evil relate to our animal origins?
Etc.
A truly worthwhile read. I found it inspiring and encouraging. :D
Oliver