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Books : Religion & Spirituality : New Age : Occult : Unexplained Mysteries
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Carl Sagan muses on the current state of scientific thought, which offers him marvellous opportunities to entertain us with his own childhood experiences, the newspaper morgues, UFO stories and the assorted flotsam and jetsam of pseudoscience. Along the way he debunks alien abduction, faith-healing and channelling, refutes the arguments that science destroys spirituality, and provides a "baloney detection kit" for thinking through political, social, religious and other issues.
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Put together by a radio show personality who worked closely with medium George Anderson, We Don't Die is well documented, well written and seemingly veracious, and is one of the most convincing accounts of communication with the deceased on the market. A gentle, religious man, Anderson was almost committed to a state mental hospital at age 16 because of his "visions", but by his twenties was helping spirits communicate with friends and relatives still residing on this plane of existence. The approximate 15 per cent of the time when he's not correct is attributed to mix-ups in human communication or ignorance on the part of the questioner. The information that living folks pass between themselves is often relayed or perceived inaccurately, so it seems logical that some perceptive error would occur in communications from the incarnate--particularly since a lot of these are conveyed through images, symbols and tactile impressions. Anderson's conversations are an engrossing read, not to be missed. --P. Randall Cohan
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Suspicion naturally arises when one reads a promo line on a back cover that says, "This is the most important book concerning the Great Pyramid written in the last 20 years". In this case, however, it may be fact. In writing The Giza Power Plant, mechanical engineer Christopher Dunn reverse-engineered the Great Pyramid at Giza to discover its use. His startling conclusions blow the heck out of traditional Eygptology's rather silly notions that it was built with copper tools by a society that lacked the wheel. While revisionist pyramid studies are rife with ridiculous theories that give the topic a bad name, The Giza Power Plant takes into account existing fact and artefact without having to rely on unprovable assertion to work. A must-read for truth seekers who aren't afraid to think outside the box and are willing to consider the idea that Western culture of the 21st century may not be the pinnacle of human evolution and achievement. --P Randall Cohan
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