Udvidet returret til d. 31. januar 2025

Bøger af Jack Call

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  • - Memories and Musings
    af Jack Call
    173,95 kr.

    A mild mannered philosopher becomes a disciple of the man Timothy Leary called "the mad monk of Millbrook," and things get very interesting very fast. Life as a follower of Art Kleps, the Chief Boo Hoo of the Neo-American Church could be entertaining, maddening, puzzling, or a combination of all three. Life is a dream, Art said. But what does that mean? And is it true? Jack Call, who plays Sancho Panza to Art Kleps's Don Quixote, tries to answer those questions, but only after telling the reader in entertaining and ironic detail what life was like as an active member of the Neo-American Church from 1972 to 1978, including the surprising story of what happened after Art had secured 180 acres of prime marijuana-growing land in Northern California, in order to establish a self-sustaining showcase of a psychedelic residence/amusement park called Mandalit. If you enjoyed Netflix's "Wild, Wild Country," or H.H. Price's Essays in the Philosophy of Religion, then you'll love Jack Call's picaresque and thoughtful Life in a Psychedelic Church.

  • - On the ultimate goal of living
    af Jack Call
    133,95 kr.

    Psychedelic experience and Christianity are guiding stars to the ultimate goal of living.

  • - On Immortal Selves, Psychedelics, and Christianity
    af Jack Call
    118,95 kr.

    If you are ever haunted by the thought of being sucked away into nothingness, you should read this book. It would be understandable for you to think that everything that can be said about the probability of an afterlife has already been said, but that doesnt matter. What matters is whether you remember the reasons why personal, subjective immortality makes sense and eternal death doesnt. Here you will find an extended inductive argument to that conclusion, based on the time-honored analogies between life and dream, death and sleep. The author takes an argument of David Humes and turns it on its head. That argument forms the core of a view the author describes as Taoistic, psychedelic Christianity. Taoistic in that Gods power is conceived as purely artistic and inspirational, and psychedelic in that the author acknowledges that taking LSD had a profound and benign influence on his life. On this view, the first-person perspective is given in experience. What kind of person you are is an ever-unfolding story that you strive to perfect.

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