THE TEACHINGS OF LI WANG PO.
London: Uma Press, 1947. First edition. 133 pages. More
London: Uma Press, 1947. First edition. 133 pages. More
London: Allen & Unwin, 1959. First edition. 224 pages. More
New York: Henry Holt, 1873. 182 pages. More
Pennsylvania State University Press, 1991. 299 pages. More
Princeton: Princeton Univ Press, 1992. xlvii, 559 pages. More
Delmar, NY: Caravan, 1986. First edition. 395 pages. More
Delmar, NY: Caravan, 1986. First edition. 395 pages. More
London: Longmans Green, 1893. First edition. The Gifford Lectures of 1892; 585 pages. More
New York: Allen Lane, 1993. First edition. More
New York: Horizan, 1960. Firsy U.S. More
Salt Lake City: University of Utah, 1972. First edition. Middle East Center, Research Monograph No. 3; 20 pages. More
Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1978. First printing. 108 pages. More
Berkeley: 2016. First printing. 111 pages. Seeking to reconcile the split between our inner child and our adult self, eminent philosopher and religious scholar Jacob Needleman evokes the ancient spiritual tradition of a deep dialogue between a guiding wisdom figure and a seeker. The elder offers an initiation to a...... More
New York: Tarcher / Penguin, 2007. First edition. 285 pages. In Why Can't We Be Good? Needleman identifies the core problem that therapists and social philosophers fail to see. He depicts the individual human as a being who knows what is good, yet who remains mysteriously helpless to innerly adopt..... More
30 minute interview on DVD; Part of the Thinking Allowed Series. Why do we fail to truly listen when there is so much wisdom available to us? Philosopher Jacob Needleman suggests that communication is dependent upon the ability to listen to the depths within oneself. Paradoxically, sometimes our thoughts take..... More
30 minute DVD interview; Part of the Thinking Allowed Series. The essential tension between our material and spiritual natures is often forgotten as we pursue contemporary concerns. Jacob Needleman, Ph.D., author of The Heart of Philosophy and The New Religions, points to Socrates as the ideal philosopher who, through his..... More
New York: Thames and Hudson, 2008. 110 pages. More
Robert Briggs Associates, 1986. 27 pages. More
Robert Briggs Associates, 1986. 27 pages. More
Cambridge: 1962. Complete in three issues; 149 pages. More
Albany: SUNY, 2014. 280 pages. I am calling this Fourth Way related though it has very little direct reference to Gurdjieff's ideas or students. However, the author has been a student of the Gurdjieff ideas and there are many correspondences in the ideas of the book and Gurdjieff's ideas. Such..... More
New York: Quantum Prose, 2016. Foreword by Goncalo Tavares; Translated by William Garvin; 178 pages. Following a similar tragectory of his more detailed From Modernity to Cosmodernity, The Hidden Third presents similar conclusions in short declarative states covering thirteen conceptual categories Levels of Reality, Reason, Meaning, The Quantum Poetic to..... More
Albany: SUNY, 2002. First edition. A volume in the series Western Esoteric Traditions; Translated by Karen-Claire Voss; 169 pages. In this manifesto for the twenty-first century, Basarab Nicolescu uses the unification of the scientific culture and the sacred as his axis to address the problem of fragmentation which plagues contemporary..... More
London: Faber & Faber, 1952. First UK edition. 136 pages. More
Leiden: Brill, 1982. First edition. 396 pages. More