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Pluriverse, the final work of the American poet and philosopher
Benjamin Paul Blood, was published posthumously in 1920. After an
experience of the anaesthetic nitrous oxide during a dental
operation, Blood came to the conclusion that his mind had been
opened, that he had undergone a mystical experience, and that he
had come to a realisation of the true nature of reality. This title
is the fullest exposition of Blood's esoteric Christian
philosophy-cum-theology, which, though deemed wildly eccentric by
commentators both during his lifetime and later in the twentieth
century, was nonetheless one of the most influential sources for
American mystical-empiricism. In particular, Blood's thought was a
major inspiration for William James, and can be seen to prefigure
the latter's concept of Sciousness directly.
Pluriverse, the final work of the American poet and philosopher
Benjamin Paul Blood, was published posthumously in 1920. After an
experience of the anaesthetic nitrous oxide during a dental
operation, Blood came to the conclusion that his mind had been
opened, that he had undergone a mystical experience, and that he
had come to a realisation of the true nature of reality. This title
is the fullest exposition of Blood's esoteric Christian
philosophy-cum-theology, which, though deemed wildly eccentric by
commentators both during his lifetime and later in the twentieth
century, was nonetheless one of the most influential sources for
American mystical-empiricism. In particular, Blood's thought was a
major inspiration for William James, and can be seen to prefigure
the latter's concept of Sciousness directly.
At a time when Capitalism is openly reproached as an exploitation
of Labor, back into which it should be resolved and integrated at
the expense of individual ambition, initiative and comprehensive
genius; when vulgar equality and fraternity are rated above
aesthetic excellence and distinction, as if man could live by bread
alone, this brief treatise is obviously issued as a protest against
what is deemed and exalted as the "ideal " of Socialism - but which
the author regards rather as an inconsequential dream that does not
realize its own meaning-and also as a defense of the Capitalist
class from objurgations born of prejudice and ignorant
inexperience.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
"He is in the light of the eye, and in the object that it shines
on. He is not a curiosity, a member of a species, or a thing to be
represented by any device. He is the One-the original-the all in
all." Benjamin Paul Blood's Optimism (1860) is a testament to the
idea that spiritual experience must precede religious knowledge.
Impassioned by his own mystical experiences, Blood spells out an
eternal nondual philosophy in a distinctly American voice that
helped shape the work of William James (Varieties of Religious
Experiences) and the 19th-century religious philosophers. In
Optimism, we find a timeless, practical guide to faith and
acceptance of whatever life delivers.
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