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The Inner West

An Introduction to the Hidden Wisdom of the West

Jay Kinney

$49.99

Paperback

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English
Jeremy P Tarcher
17 June 2004
The founder of the influential Gnosis magazine collects essays by some of today's finest spiritual writers to explore the West's magical and esoteric traditions.

Rosicrucianism, Freemasonry, Gnosticism, The Knights Templar . . . Even before the success of The Da Vinci Code, many readers knew of these and other aspects of Western esoterica. But few understand their true meaning.

In The Inner West, more than twenty essays by seventeen leading authors shine a light on some of the most mysterious and closely held aspects of the Western tradition. Its authors bring to life the symbolist and occult philosophies that populate the history and beliefs of the Western way. These same philosophies-which include variants of Christian and Jewish mysticism, and the teachings of figures like Rudolf Steiner and G. I. Gurdjieff-can present a deep and different spiritual path for today's seekers.

Spiritual seekers have often looked to the East for inspiration and guidance. Yet increasing numbers of people are discovering that many helpful wisdom traditions have existed right here in the West. With the Kabbalah and Tarot cards more popular than ever, and alternative spirituality from Wicca to Sufism gaining a new audience, The Inner West is a timely book for this expanding audience
Edited by:  
Imprint:   Jeremy P Tarcher
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 23mm
Weight:   1g
ISBN:   9781585423392
ISBN 10:   1585423394
Pages:   352
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Jay Kinney is the publisher and editor-in-chief of Gnosis- A Journal of the Western Inner Traditions.

Reviews for The Inner West: An Introduction to the Hidden Wisdom of the West

As a debater, theologian Paul Ramsey would be a formidable opponent. He speaks for a position (essentially anti-abortion but pro-birth control) eloquently - but almost ex cathedra. The assurance of the dedicated Christian ethicist who values all human life as sacred is emphatic, at times disquieting, at times irritating. What he writes about is of major importance: do women have a right to abortion, even late in pregnancy? Are the rights of the individual and assurances of privacy always to take precedence over the rights of a spouse, of the fetus? Is there ever any justification for benign neglect of infants born with severe defects? Are living wills acceptable? For the most part Ramsey finds present laws and trends deplorable. We have, he says, foundered on concepts of ordinary/extraordinary ; we have adopted a stance of radical individualism ignoring the covenants of marriage and family. We hamper doctors by dictating what should be standard medical practice: never to prolong dying needlessly; always to intervene if medical indications are that the patient will benefit. We are willynilly headed toward voluntary or even involuntary euthanasia. These ideas provide some notion of the book's compass. Each chapter turns on specific issues, legislation, or trials: the Supreme Court's Bicentennial abortion decision, the Edelin case (the Massachusetts doctor accused of reckless manslaughter of a fetus), the Quinlan case, and so on. Ramsey examines the reasoning embodied in the decisions with a ruthlessness often verging on contempt for the lawyers judges, or fellow ethicists (execrable word) involved. What one misses in this dour indictment of Western mores and morals is a sense of humility and compassion. Nowhere does Ramsey indicate that parents of a defective child, for example, are scathingly treated by the professional community and public alike; that it is essential that people be educated in birth control, in caring rather than hoping for cures, in understanding death and mourning. One would have liked to have Ramsey point the way toward better actions rather than pronounce only fearful jeremiads. (Kirkus Reviews)


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