Posts Tagged ‘Deepak Chopra’

Deepak Chopra Introduces Nonduality … or Non-Dual Consciousness

January 6, 2012

This new article in the Huffington Post may be the first time Deepak Chopra has used the term “non-dual” in a high profile manner. Rather than the terms “nonduality” or “nondualism”, he speaks of “non-dual consciousness.” He realizes the term “non-dual” is non-friendly to most people, but that “consciousness” is familiar and vague enough to allow the reader to go to a comfortable and acceptable place “inside.”

This is why Chopra is a brilliant communicator to the general populace. He knows how to fuse the new and strange to the old and familiar. He knows how to lead people from the old to the new.

Rather than present the starkness/fullness of nonduality, about which nothing is granular, his teaching rests in what people can read about, learn about, feel, experience, get involved in, even worry about for gosh sakes, namely science, namely mental, physical, emotional, and spiritual well-being.

By presenting the unknowable through the rungs of the known, he leads people to an understanding of nonduality. Few may know the falling down of the ladder that brings them to that understanding. Yet Chopra does what he is called to do, what any of us are called to do, which is to talk about what we can’t help talking about, which is Truth (or whatever you want to call it). We each talk about Truth in our own silly way, whether through essays, poetry, art, science, dance, sculpture, raising a family, selling insurance, etc.

Perhaps Chopra sees 2012 as the year of non-dual consciousness for the spirituality mass populace. Longtime readers of the Nonduality Highlights have not only known about non-dual consciousness for quite a while, we’ve even had a nonduality community online and in person since 1998. But Chopra isn’t talking about community. He’s speaking to individuals.

I wrote on nonduality.com that 2011 would be the year nonduality hits the mainstream: “Nonduality is headed to the major mainstream. When? I’m writing this in late 2010. It could be any day, literally. It wouldn’t surprise me to see the major mainstreaming of nonduality in 2011. ”

Gimme a break. So I was off by like four days.

Here’s Chopra’s article:

A New Year, and Possibly a New World
Posted: 1/4/12 09:10 AM ET

by Deepak Chopra

React:
Amazing
Inspiring
Funny
Scary
Hot
Crazy
Important
Weird

Read more
Conscious , Consciousness , Dualism , Healthy-New-Year , Human Consciousness , Medical Materialism , Non-Dual Consciousness , Non-Dual Materialism , Paradigm Shift , States Of Consciousness , What Is Consciousness , Worldviews , Healthy Living News

Access above links at article home:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/deepak-chopra/consciousness_b_1179494.html

A New Year, and Possibly a New World

by Deepak Chopra

It’s fascinating, as time turns another small corner, to think of how worlds shift and collide. There is no evidence that a person as brilliant as Shakespeare understood that Copernicus, Kepler and Galileo had already revolutionized the human mind. The same thing may be happening now, and many brilliant people seem unaware of how our present-day world — meaning our conception of reality — may undergo a seismic shift.

I’m not thinking of fossil fuels and Arab uprisings, not even of the 99 percent as against the 1 percent. Upheavals in the outer world are secondary, in the long sweep of history, to inner revolutions. We may be on the verge of such a one. What makes me think so is a trickle of medical articles, now greatly expanding, that are proving troublesome to mainstream medicine. These articles sometimes deal with cancer, sometimes with antidepressants, sometimes with the dashed hopes for gene therapies that seem constantly out of reach.

What these articles have in common is that treating the body like a machine isn’t panning out. The next breakthrough in cancer or psychotherapy or genetically-related disorders may come from an entirely different angle than the workaday materialism that “of course” looks at our bodies as physical objects like any other. That “of course” is the mark of a settled worldview. God “of course” created the world in seven days and the soul “of course” was more important than the body, which was a temporary shell while the soul worked its way through this vale of tears.

When settled worldviews crumble, we have to reinvent the world. So far, there have been only three categories from which to construct reality from the ground up.

1. Dualism, which separates mind and body.

2. Non-dual materialism, which considers only physical things and excludes the spiritual, mystical and supernatural.

3. Non-dual consciousness, which traces reality back to mind and beyond mind to the very potential for mind.

Dualism no longer satisfies professional thinkers. Putting mind in one box and the body in another settles no questions about either. We are left with half a loaf, unable to say anything reliable about pure mind but also unable to connect the subtle way that the body responds to thoughts and feelings. Yet curiously, the average person is a flaming, if secret, dualist. We compartmentalize our lives in countless ways. God belongs on Sunday, the material world dominates the rest of the week. We treat our bodies sensibly, yet when a mortal illness threatens, it’s time to pray. This kind of compartmentalism is understandable, but in the long run it’s frustrating, as witness the countless people who feel anxious and empty in their search for higher meaning.

The same complaint could be aimed at non-dual materialism, but science, which is totally materialistic, has won a resounding victory on many fronts. Therefore, it’s an easy slide into believing that the scientific worldview must be correct. Non-dual materialism leaves no room for anything that cannot be turned into data. So it is incompatible with God, spirit, the soul and even the mind. The average person has bought into the notion, publicized constantly by the media, that the mind is the brain. After all, we can now watch the brain in real time as a person experiences love, faith, compassion and all other “higher” experiences that once belonged to the mind and the soul. But watching the brain at work is like watching an old tube radio light up when Beethoven is played. It would be naive to say that the radio composed Beethoven’s music. Yet just as naively non-dual materialists see no reason to look beyond the brain for an invisible thing labeled as mind.

This is the worldview that is crumbling while seeming to rise victoriously higher. Termites are silently chewing at the timbers. One notices this by being attuned to articles about the failures of the materialistic approach. Contrary to popular hopes, materialism cannot explain cancer or depression. It cannot tell you why talking to somebody can help your free-floating anxiety while tranquilizers may fail. Materialism sidesteps the mounting problem of side effects and the long-term damage to the brain from decades of taking psychotropic drugs. Materialism cannot explain what memory is, where it is stored on the cellular level, or why memories haunt us. There are many, many failures of this kind, and even in a field far removed from medicine like physics, peering into the void that gave rise to the physical universe has posed huge explanatory problems.

Which leaves the third worldview, non-dual consciousness, that is all but invisible on the scene. It has been invisible for a long time, certainly in the Judeo-Christian West, where only a handful of obscure names like Spinoza, Giordano Bruno, and Meister Eckhart flirted with the idea that all is one, and that “one” is consciousness. Today, some farseeing speculative thinkers in physics are coping with the possibility that we live in a conscious universe. A tiny handful of neuroscientists are grappling with the possibility that the mind controls the brain and not vice versa. It’s exciting fun to be part of this splinter group, especially if you relish the scorn of experts who inform you that “of course” you are completely off your rocker, a charlatan or a crypto religionist.

What the scorn masks is that “of course” will be thrown out the window if a new worldview takes hold. That’s what happened to the idea that “of course” God created the world according to Genesis. But the non-dual consciousness that was dominant 3,000 years ago in Vedic India cannot return as it once was formulated. The modern world isn’t about to throw science out the window. Instead, science must expand, so that we look at cancer, depression or the Big Bang and say, “Now I see.” (In particular, the mind-body connection with cancer needs exploring, as we will do in a later post.) A worldview succeeds when it explains more than the old one, when it opens people’s eyes and when it achieves practical results. In the next post, we’ll touch on how non-dual consciousness can do all those things.

To be continued

For more by Deepak Chopra, click here:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/deepak-chopra

http://deepakchopra.com

Lady Gaga Praises Deepak Chopra

May 11, 2010

Deepak Chopra interviews Stuart Hameroff

April 23, 2010

A conversation: consciousness and the connection to the universe

Excerpt from a long interview by Deepak Chopra with Stuart Hameroff:

DEEPAK: You know, it’s very interesting. I recently interviewed Hans Peter Duerr who was a colleague and student of Werner Heisenberg and actually they worked together for 20 years. The other day I asked him, “What is matter?” And he said “It doesn’t exist”. He said “there are happs”, happenings in consciousness, that are interpreted as matter. So I said, what really exists? And then he said, that the wrong question, it’s like asking (laughs), what’s the color of a circle? And you know, he confused me a lot, but now with what you’re saying — that moments of consciousness are a result of self-collapse. And these are discontinuities, but they happen so fast that they give us an experience of continuity.

STUART: Precisely. Actually, roughly forty times a second.

DEEPAK: All right, I see.

STUART: At least in our model they coincide with gamma synchrony EEG which is the best measure of consciousness. But it doesn’t have to be forty, and in fact the Dalai Lama selected some Tibetan monk meditators and sent them to Wisconsin, where Davidson’s Lab studied them during meditation. They found that their synchrony wasn’t at forty, but it was between 80 and 100 per second. So they were having more conscious moments per time than the rest of us in their meditative state and actually before they meditated, implying that chronic meditation actually changed the brain. So, I think that these “happses” as your colleague said or conscious moments or quanta of consciousness are pretty much like photons in the electromagnetic spectrum where you can have high energy, fast, high frequency photons like ultraviolet’s for example or slower, longer wavelengths like infrared. There is a spectrum of conscious events.

STUART: I think when we meditate or are in altered states, we shift to a higher frequency, which is also higher intensity, higher experience. Kind of like going from red to ultraviolet, something like that. When that happens, the outside world can slow down in perspective. So people in car accidents for example, when the car is spinning, report that the world slows down, because they have gone from say 40 to 80 conscious moments per second. The perception of the outside world appears slower. Great athletes say that when they’re playing well, the other team is in slow motion. Michael Jordan said that.

DEEPAK: Michael Jordan. Joe Namath once told me that when he was in a peak moment during the game, everything seemed to slow down and actually when he was scoring a touchdown, and there were literally thousands of people applauding, he saw everything in slow motion and total silence. There was no sound.

STUART: Fantastic. So, he might have gone from say 40 conscious moments per second to a 100 in that moment. So the outside slowed down or almost stopped even.

DEEPAK: And there was silence too. Because this raises the question. You said information is very fundamental in the universe. But were you implying that information is transcendent and non-local?

Read the entire interview.

Notes from Deepak Chopra’s Talk

April 24, 2009

I went with nondual guys James Traverse and Dustin LindenSmith and a couple other friends to see Deepak Chopra speak in Halifax, Nova Scotia, on April 22, 2009. There were about 1300 people attending.

The following are notes taken by James and me. There is some commentary, which is noted in italics.

Chopra’s main message is to find out the nature of consciousness as “I am.” He uses a variety of fascinating and popular teachings as vehicles to communicate that. As well, he is a polished speaker and very funny and engaging. The two hour talk, without breaks, flew by.

Learn more about Deepak Chopra’s work.

Learn about James Traverse and his work in nonduality .

Notes and Commentary from Deepak Chopra’s talk in Halifax, Nova Scotia, April 22, 2009

by Jerry Katz and James Traverse

Main message:

Finding out the nature of consciousness (or soul) solves our problems in the world. There is only one problem – not knowing one’s true nature.

“Stay grounded in our being right now,” Chopra said. This is the solution.

Chopra Center Halifax

He mentioned that Steven Joyce and Karen Whynot were local contacts for Chopra’s work.

Mind/Body

He said immune cells and thoughts were conscious beings, that the immune system is a circulating nervous system. The mind, then, is the body. Body is in mind, and mind is in soul (or spirit, or consciousness. We’re going to mostly use the term consciousness and also awareness).

Comment: Just as breathing is the intercourse of your respiration and your circulation; your nervous system and your immune system are complementary partners of the same system

Our identity IS consciousness. Body/mind is a projection of consciousness. If I am consciousness, it follows that the mind is in me.

Awareness (Consciousness) is the only thing that has an inside. The body/mind is an expression of awareness – it is aware; awareness is it in this form.

Structures and Processes

All objects, all things in existence are projections of consciousness. As such, they are processes. The body is like a river. “The real you cannot step into the same blood and bones twice.” 98% of our atoms are replaced every year.

Comment: It is extremely important to embrace this truth because then one can be clear that all there is – is function within Awareness.

And like everything else even this clarity is within Awareness and it is awareness in this form as it functions… this shift from the understanding of things as structures to the functioning of processes, and the shift in understanding from me being in the universe to all things being in me as Awareness, is the way of being that ‘works’… which means that it is a way of functioning that is in harmony with the process – the flow.

“Who the heck are you?” Chopra asks

He quotes Shakespeare, that we are made of the stuff of dreams.

Prospero:
Our revels now are ended. These our actors,
As I foretold you, were all spirits, and
Are melted into air, into thin air:
And like the baseless fabric of this vision,
The cloud-capp’d tow’rs, the gorgeous palaces,
The solemn temples, the great globe itself,
Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve,
And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,
Leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff
As dreams are made on;
and our little life
Is rounded with a sleep.
(The Tempest Act 4, scene 1, 148–158)

What is our identity?

He refers to Information Technology as a demonstration that nature of the world is not material. IT is based on the electron, the atom, which is mostly space. Only our nervous system gives us a sense of solidity and continuity, when the world is turning on and off at the speed of light and is therefore discontinuous. He used the example of the frames of a movie, each frame turning on and turning off before the next frame turns on.

What happens to electrical signals in the brain?

Electrical signals become known to us as sounds, sights, etc., however the sounds and sights cannot be found in the brain except as electrical signals. The experiences of the senses are found in consciousness. The whole world is found in consciousness.

What is consciousness? There is no evidence that consciousness is in the brain.

Consciousness/Awareness is what you are – it is its own knowing.

The real you is an interpreter and a choicemaker (controller)

He cited the work of Dr. Penfield of Montreal.

He gave the example of a man who was awake while his brain was being stimulated. Even though a certain stimulus to the brain caused the man’s arm to move, he was able to resist and even reverse the movement dictated by the stimulus. Hence, we are a choicemaker.

He next gave the example of a woman who, as the result of a stimulus to her brain, experienced herself enjoying ice cream with her family, even though, at the very same time, she knew she was in a hospital bed experiencing brain surgery. Hence, we are an interpreter.

The choicemaker and interpreter cannot be found in the brain or body.

He gave examples that Penfield was puzzled by the fact that the actions of the controller-choicemaker and interpreter were clearly evident yet he could not find the interpreter or choicemaker and neither has anybody else in all of the history of humanity… later he talked about the principle in science that the simplest explanation is usually the best explanation (the principle is called Occam’s razor)… in this light the best explanation for why the interpreter and choicemaker could not be found in the brain, etc., is that they are not there!

Using these examples from brain stimulation experiments, he says that the real you is an interpreter and a choicemaker who imagines and perceives and cannot be found in the body. We are not in the body.

“Where are you?” he asks. We are non-local, that is, no location in space or in time. The window to that knowledge is discontinuity, the “off,” the moment when thoughts and images are absent or off.

Comment: Awareness is prior to thinking (it is actually timeless and spaceless yet we use timebound language to describe its function).. thinking itself is not a problem yet the ‘wrong turning of the mind’ as acting from the id-entity generated out of the mental activity of thought, memory and experience is the Mistaken Identity that is the source of all conflict.

One way the off switch or discontinuity happens is when the mind is silent – then it is self-evident that the only thing that can be said to have continuity is Awareness (you do not lose your mind when it is silent… it simply rests in the filed of all possibilities/awareness/consciousness until it is called on again by some electrical signal… and when the mind is silent you have not lost consciousness.)

Discontinuity

The state of discontinuity is known by no qualities: no energy, no information, no space/time, no objects.

There are 5 characteristics of the discontinuity:

1. It is a field of infinite potential and possibility.

2. The field is correlated and connected with everything else in a relationship that is so intimate and immediate that even the speed is light is not a limiting factor. This may be called interconnected spontaneous Synchronicity

3. It proliferates with uncertainty – thus anything’s possible; the greater the uncertainty the greater the opportunity for creativity… the converse is also true as certainty negates creativity…

4. Since degree of creativity is related to degree of uncertainty, it is a storehouse of infinite creativity.

5. Observer effect: observing the universe from the place of discontinuity makes the universe exist. Therefore you are a co-creator…. you are of the image and likeness of your source – comment: you are a holographic representation of it which means that you have the same abilities to create that your source has… the differences are in degree – you are the same in kind… the full establishment in and as your true nature is to be source itself…

Comment: Another aspect of the function is that it is fractal like… Chopra mentioned that consciousness ‘turns back on itself’… this functioning process is described mathematically as fractals… examples are those kaleidoscopic movies you see that endlessly unfold out of itself – a simpler example is trees – another is your family tree … the process is simple as each iteration that manifests is re-introduced into the system that is now different by one as the process has unfolded and the interaction with this change generates a new outcome that is reinserted –endlessly.

Another term for discontinuity is consciousness or God, and you are part of it.

Meditation

In a guided meditation, he asks us to put attention on the heart and ask, “What do I want?” He says to follow that by silently repeating, “I am.”

Comment: This locating attention in the heart first is a highly significant part of the process as it is a means of getting the functioning order correct – which is heart using the head rather than the head attempting to control the heart, etc… and another appropriate name for our true nature is Love – the homeground of Love is the heart.

Karma, memory, and desire are the software of the soul, of consciousness. When you ask what you want you are using desire, memory, and becoming involved in karma. “I am,” he says, has no karma.

“I am” or some other mantra, when it meets thoughts, cancel each other out and you find yourself in the “off,” the discontinuity, the non-local, or consciousness. You experience the feeling of infinity and the sense of creativity. You surrender to the mystery of existence and intuition and creativity improve. You feel your presence, and that too is soul, consciousness, the discontinuity, or the non-local.

Comment: This is akin to Ramana Maharshi’s – Atma Vichara as the question ‘Who am I’… the answer is ‘experiential’ I am or amness – anything more is mind stuff.

He says, “You are not a space/time event, but that in which space/time happens.”

Is existence an accident?

No – it’s order as the order you see in your tremendously complex body/mind vehicle that makes it self-evident that it is intelligent – the action/process of this intelligence is what is called existence.

He had an insight in 2001, when he went to cremate his father and saw the records showing the cremation records of his ancestors going back hundreds, even thousands of years ago. The insight was that nothing is an accident, but that we create this existence through one field of consciousness interacting with itself “for ever and ever” (or beyond space/time, to be consistent with his previous teaching). In his cremation experience he even saw himself being cremated, thus he experienced a great sense of oneness and timelessness in which all these cremations were one.

By way of explanation using quantum theory, he said intent collapses possibility waves around an uncertain event. You have created “this.” You is me. That is, you and Deepak are not separate.

His books since 2001 are inspired by his experience of nonlocality brought on by the cremation event.

He asked a lady what she had to eat earlier; she responded ‘pod thai’… then he asked her ‘where was the memory of the pod thai before he asked her what she had eaten…

- it was in the field of all possibilities; if you dissect the woman’s brain or examine it with modern medical instruments you will not find the memory of pod thai…

Deepak’s asking the lady the question was the electrical signal that collapsed the wave from all possibilities to the certainty of the one thing that she had eaten which she reported as ‘pod thai’…

- in this way memory is in the filed of all possibilities… and since this is what we all are then each ‘individual’s’ memories are available to everyone else – this explains telepathy, esp, and even precognition etc. as in this field there is no time – only possibilities.

Secrets of Enlightenment

  • There are hidden dimensions to our existence.
  • The world exists in you. The window to that understanding is discontinuity.
  • There are four paths to unity: (1) Meditative – positive mind control; Raja Yoga; (2) Bhakti, or expressing and surrendering to love or God or the discontinuity; (3) Action or karma yoga; (4) Intellect or jnana yoga
  • All fulfillment comes from within. Happiness is the most important thing in life. The happiness formula involves re-setting the brain so that you see opportunity instead of seeing a problem, not being swayed by the conditions of life, and serving others. One question he asked was, ‘Have you ever heard of an unhappy person having a great relationship?’

    The greatest gift that you can give to others is to be happy… this is also true of health, freedom and peace of mind – in other words you get these priceless gifts when you live them for others – this is another powerful illustration of the fact that there is no you – there is only awareness/consciousness and its functioning…

  • Suffering is the result of not knowing the true reality (which is consciousness, soul, spirit, non-locality, the discontinuity, or who you really are).
  • Freedom comes from choiceless awareness. In other words, living from the place of consciousness or soul…be established in and as that because it’s Truth.
  • The world is a mirror of the self – it reflects consciousness; all that is seen are appearances in consciousness.
  • Evil is not our enemy. Evil is the personal and collective shadow. “If you’re standing in light, there’s a shadow.” No shadow if you’re standing in darkness.
  • You live in multi-dimensions: Deep sleep, Dreaming, Waking, Soul consciousness (the strong awareness that your true nature is consciousness), Cosmic consciousness (the actual experience of oneness, which he experienced at the cremation), God consciousness (you see God as everything), and Unity consciousness (“you are that.” You no longer see God as everything because “you are that.”) Unity Consciousness is the goal of life.
  • Death makes life possible. Death is the “off,” discontinuous with birth. Death and birth are opposites. Life is the flow of birth and death.
  • The universe thinks through you.
  • The only time is now, so do not worry about tomorrow.
  • You are truly free when you are not a person.
  • Consciousness becomes reality through karma, synchronicity, memory, desire, thought, intention.
  • The goal of life is unity consciousness.
  • Comment: this can be numbered in a variety of ways – see samkhya

    Points from his upcoming book

    Awareness is the key to transforming and reinventing the body. Awareness is the Agent and the Actor.

    Your body is a process (not an unchanging structure). There is only functioning.

    You can turn your genes off and on. Energy follows attention.

    You can change your relationship with time. There is no you and no time – there is only Awareness as infinite possibilities; what manifests is what awareness focuses on.

    Grace, love, spontaneity, and creativity are associated with resurrecting the soul.

    Comment: Resonance is another word for grace – it simply means connecting with intelligence beyond human comprehension – and since it is intelligent it acts in the manner that is of the greatest good… this is what is really behind Chopra’s request to take a vow of non-violence – it is really a vow to not violate natural order (there is no such thing as non-violence; there is only violence and that which is when violence is absolutely absent – although we understand what is generally meant by non-violence, violence does not have an opposite).

    Learn more about Deepak Chopra’s work here: deepakchopra.com/
    itakethevow.com/

    Learn about James Traverse and his work in nonduality.

    A review of The Third Jesus: The Christ We Cannot Ignore, by Deepak Chopra

    April 4, 2008

    Theme:

    In a video promoting this book, Deepak Chopra says, “I don’t know who I am,” implying that his viewpoint is from God-consciousness rather than egoic, person-centered consciousness.

    According to Chopra, the meaning of the New Testament is that Jesus and God are not separate, and is confessed biblically as “The Father and I are one.” This is the meaning of God-consciousness. Chopra says that anyone is entitled to that realization.

    The theme of this book is separation and how to achieve unity by knowing Jesus as God-consciousness. The theme is supported by scores of quotations from the New Testament and the Gospel of Thomas, along with Chopra’s explanations of them in terms of God-consciousness.

    Practice:

    Chopra claims that the feeling of separation from God means a mistake has been made in how we live and see ourselves. Chopra provides fifteen steps to God-consciousness in order to correct that mistake and bring us to unity or non-separation.

    The chapters on practice are excellent. Not surprisingly, Jesus is secondary and what is primary is Chopra’s universal teaching of God-consciousness or enlightenment. It could be said that this whole book is more about following Deepak Chopra rather than Jesus Christ. I have no problem with that, as Chopra is a proven and effective world teacher.

    Chopra exposes his Eastern roots when he urges the reader to start a satsang group. Satsang refers to a gathering of people devoted to the teaching of Truth or God-consciousness. Typically, satsang centers around a rarely found God-conscious or Self-realized sage/teacher. Chopra is calling for anyone at all to start satsang.

    Transformation:

    This inner journey is not casual. It is intense. Chopra writes, “Because he is so absolute, Jesus doesn’t offer a path of devotion that consists of daily prayer and piety to God. He wants total, unswerving devotion: You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.”

    Yet, realistically, people tend to unfold through practices of devotion, service, and contemplation. These are fine as long as they do not become an avoidance of inner transformation, Chopra notes.

    Transformation is an extreme turning, as this confession by Chopra reveals: “It’s impossible to quantify if you are on a spiritual path or how far along it you may be. But progress is always marked by transformation. The path isn’t about feeling better. It’s not about knowing who you are, or ending your suffering, or finding peace, or healing you deepest wounds. It’s about a transformation so profound that illusion is traded for reality. Jesus survives to this day as a force in the world because he embodied that truth completely.”

    Final notes:

    Our goal then, Chopra says, is not to imitate Jesus but to abide in him, to become one with him. We do that giving our life entirely to the process of turning separation into unity

    Social commentary regarding Christianity and gay rights, abortion, and women’s right, finish the book, but who is listening? The fundamentalist Christian has long discarded this book.

    The index is very good, with 20% of it devoted to scriptural references. The term “separation”, which is used a dozen or more times in the book and which arguably is the main theme, is not found anywhere in the index. In the future, Dr. Chopra might suggest specific terms for inclusion in the index or even become involved in selecting or getting to know the index writer.

    Review by Jerry Katz

    The Third Jesus: The Christ We Cannot Ignore, by Deepak Chopra.

    Follow

    Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

    Join 190 other followers