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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Alternative belief systems
Allan Kardec's supreme handbook about the world of the spirits and
the movement of Spiritism is a valuable and insightful guide to
existences beyond our corporeal realm. Kardec begins this work by
delving into the historical significance of spirits, their
connection with God and the physical universe. How spirits are
situated in the world, and how they move unseen between the planes
of existence, is discussed. The second part concentrates on The
Spirit World in greater detail. The types of spirits and how they
are incarnated are detailed, with Kardec proposing that several
distinct planes of existence are extant, and that most individuals
proceed through life without knowing or seeing their influence. A
chapter is devoted to how spirits might intervene in our everyday,
corporeal world. Often these excursions have a purpose; the spirits
are on a mission to inform someone, or change something, that
harmony may be restored.
Rudolf Steiner's superb thesis provides deep insight into spiritual
science, and the history of mankind as viewed through the
philosophy of the anthroposophy movement he founded. An Outline of
Esoteric Science attempts to reconcile mankind's spiritual being
with the scientific exactitude which had emerged among scholars in
the 19th century. Steiner lays out the spiritual realms which are
invisible to us, attempting to use a defined precision similar to
that which had emerged in science. In the final section, this book
refers to the spiritual development and contemplation necessary for
individuals to see the spiritual realms and planes which comprise
existence and the universe. The means by which individuals may
train themselves introspectively to see are detailed by Steiner,
whose theosophical philosophy was, by the time of this book's
publication in 1909, well-developed.
This book was first published in fourteen years ago, but its
content is timeless. It is John Blanchard's major work, and
was
voted 'Best Christian Book' in the 2001 UK Christian Book
Awards, and immediately became a best-seller, described as
'a
brilliant defense of belief in God'.
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