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John Cunningham Lilly (1915–2001)

Author of Center of the Cyclone: Looking into Inner Space

16+ Works 1,307 Members 14 Reviews 4 Favorited

About the Author

John C. Lilly, M.D., has studied and conducted research in the fields of biophysics, neurophysiology, electronics, and neuroanatomy.

Works by John Cunningham Lilly

Associated Works

Lazy Man's Guide to Death and Dying (1983) — Introduction — 8 copies

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

I only read about half of this because I find it is more interesting to have an LSD experience yerself rather than read about someone else's trip.
 
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fleshed | 3 other reviews | Jul 16, 2023 |
This is a pleasant bit of new age nonsense, like a sci-fi Carlos Castaneda. I particularly enjoyed the bit about the Earth Coincidence Control Office, which is pretty much straight out of Philip K. Dick.

What I didn't enjoy was the extremely poor work of Amy Demmon, credited as copy editor for this book. Her incompetence cannot be overstated. There are significant typos on almost every page, occasionally bad enough to confuse meaning. The book has two chapter fours. I once found a comma in the middle of a word. Maybe this is what copyediting on entheogenics looks like.

I hope Ronin Books didn't pay her for her services.
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3Oranges | Jun 24, 2023 |
The author explored the use of LSD to probe the human mind – specifically his own mind – in the 1950's and 1960s. The title indicates his belief that the human brain is essentially a very large, sophisticated computer that not only runs “programs”, but can somehow create its own programs (hence the “metaprogramming”). It is worth reading because of its originality, and because of the author's open-minded approach to subjective personal experience – an unusual topic for a scientist. Unfortunately, the writing is not very clear. It often reads like an outline for a status report of a research project. Since the author eventually wrote several more books on the same topic (e.g. The Center of the Cyclone: Looking into Inner Space), perhaps these later books are more readable account of the author's research.

Most chapters deal with the author's experience with LSD. However, one chapter discusses the author's interest in inter-species communication. The author studied human-dolphin communication and later wrote a few books on this research project (e.g. Lilly on Dolphins: Humans of the Sea). The chapter in this book is brief, but suggests ways that inter-species communication might be attempted. He suggests that a good strategy is to begin with mimicry of the other species behavior. The idea seems to be that this demonstrates an intention to communicate even when there is not yet a common language. And it has an advantage of being free of what he terms an “anthropocentric” bias. His later books on the subject of human-dolphin ought to be interesting, if they are written at least twice as good as this one.

Overall, the book is worth reading if you are interested in the philosophical or psychological or scientific study of the mind or consciousness. The author is writing from direct experience. The book is short. The drawback is that it could have been written better. Later books by the same author may be better.
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½
 
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dougb56586 | 2 other reviews | Sep 3, 2018 |
This is an important, influential and historic text. A landmark in research on the scientific and therapeutic uses of LSD. That doesn't make it fun to read. I don't doubt it's significance but beyond its opening remarks on the nature of human consciousness I got very little from it. It's just too dense — or I am. I got much more from listening to Robert Anton Wilson wax lyrical about this book than I did from the book itself.
 
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graffiti.living | 2 other reviews | Oct 22, 2017 |

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Works
16
Also by
1
Members
1,307
Popularity
#19,642
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
14
ISBNs
65
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7
Favorited
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