Peter Kingsley, PhD, is internationally recognized for his groundbreaking work on the origins of western spirituality, philosophy and culture. Through his writings, as well as lectures, he speaks straight to the heart and has helped to transform many people's understanding not only of the past -- but of who they are. The recipient of numerous academic awards, he holds honorary professorships or fellowships at universities in Canada, the United Kingdom and United States. Throughout his career he has worked together not only with Native American elders and western spiritual teachers but also with many of the most prominent figures in the fields of classics and anthropology, philosophy and religious studies, ancient civilizations and the history of both healing and science. The author of six books which together have exerted the profoundest and most far-reaching influence outside as well as inside academia, for years Peter Kingsley has lectured very widely -- speaking to professional scholars, psychologists and followers of different spiritual traditions, healers and medical practitioners as well as people who very simply are aware of the need to wake up to a reality greater than the one we are used to. For more information on his work visit www.peterkingsley.org
"In this remarkable study, Peter Kingsley engages with a question
Carl Jung describes as the most telling of one's life: 'Are you
related to something infinite or not?' Written in an 'ancient
style', 'the choiceless rhythm of the winds and rain', Catafalque
is an extraordinary achievement-demonstrating an impressively broad
cultural knowledge coupled with an impeccable attention to detail.
In its focus on Jung as a mystic and as a magician, it not only
confirms Spinoza's thesis that we feel and know we are eternal; it
will also provoke and charm the reader by turns." --Prof. Paul
Bishop, University of Glasgow, author of Carl Jung and On the
Blissful Islands with Nietzsche and Jung
"Here at last is the true Jung: the Jung whom those who dare to
call themselves Jungians have forgotten and betrayed, a Jung who
often is far too frightening to be understood. Nothing could be
less comforting than this Jung or less comfortable than this book
-- pointing as they do to the extraordinary failure of Western
civilization to return to its roots, pay respect to its ancestors,
listen to its dead. Deeply researched, challenging at every turn, I
couldn't put it down." --Maggy Anthony, author of Salome's Embrace
and Jung's Circle of Women
"Peter Kingsley writes with the force of a sorcerer, which is also
what he is writing about. He is an author of the impossible.
Perhaps some day I will know the place from which he expresses
himself. I have sought it my entire life." --Prof. Jeffrey Kripal,
Rice University, Houston, author of Secret Body and Super
Natural
"For all its scholarly precision, and artistic sophistication,
Catafalque is a dangerous book. But numinous truths are often
dangerous even to behold, much more to write about. And if you can
summon the courage to open your eyes where Peter's magic takes you,
you might get a glimpse of a long-lost part of our collective
soul." --Adyashanti
"In this compelling book Peter Kingsley brings together an
extraordinary set of credentials: a body of unequalled scholarship,
literary skills which are second to none, and a rare grasp of the
living nature of things that lies beyond the constructs of our
thought. In his unique regard both for the real or transcendent and
for the delicate and ephemeral, he is a servant of the Lord
indeed." --Frank Sinclair, President emeritus of the Gurdjieff
Foundation, New York, author of Without Benefit of Clergy and Of
the Life Aligned
"Peter Kingsley's new book is not biographical but historical, in
the truest sense of the word. It's not about an individual or
individuals but about the whole: about the impersonal and divine
energy that manifests itself, time after time, in human form to
allow a culture to be born or to grow. Jung, the alchemists, the
Gnostics, Empedocles, Parmenides emerge from history as links in a
golden chain through which wisdom, philosophy and science have been
given and kept alive in the West. But this book also tells a
different story -- a story of repeated manipulation and
exploitation, of devastation of the sacred, of catastrophic losses
caused by egotism and the indiscriminate use of 'rationality',
which is a story that started long ago in ancient Athens and now is
approaching its tragic conclusion. The lament over the death of
western culture isn't Jung's lament, or Kingsley's. It's the
howling of nature itself, reminding us of our sacred roots and of
our ultimate responsibility as human beings." --Prof. Laura Gemelli
Marciano, University of Zürich, author of Parmenide and Die
Vorsokratiker
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