Robert Roth (4) (1950–)
Author of Transcendental Meditation: Revised and Updated Edition
For other authors named Robert Roth, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Image credit: Transcendental Meditation
Works by Robert Roth
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1950-10-10
Members
Reviews
I read bits of this years ago and was really confused by it for a long time because it doesn't talk about TM at all really, just talks about how beneficial it is over and over, without saying what it is, and discourages you from trying it on your own.
Instead it says you need to go to a guru and spend months (and dollars) with them so they can get to know you and tell you exactly what mantra suits you, because if you chant using a mantra that hasn't been tailor made to your specific body show more thetan or whatever the hell, anyway if it's not specific to you then it is downright dangerous apparently. It can make you depressed and stuff. Well this all perplexed me so much and I wondered who on earth would publish a book like this until I found out recently that TM is actually a cult and this is just a bit of recruiting material for them and now it all makes perfect sense.
TL;DR My creative potential is still folded, one star. show less
Instead it says you need to go to a guru and spend months (and dollars) with them so they can get to know you and tell you exactly what mantra suits you, because if you chant using a mantra that hasn't been tailor made to your specific body show more thetan or whatever the hell, anyway if it's not specific to you then it is downright dangerous apparently. It can make you depressed and stuff. Well this all perplexed me so much and I wondered who on earth would publish a book like this until I found out recently that TM is actually a cult and this is just a bit of recruiting material for them and now it all makes perfect sense.
TL;DR My creative potential is still folded, one star. show less
This book is more than it looks like. The Reason to vote mentioned in this book is the existence of "the newest and fasted growing party in America, the natural law party". The National Natural Law Party has ceased to exist for almost a decade now, yet this book is still relevant. In some ways more so. Roth does a great job showing what value third parties have had, and continue to have, even in our first past the poll system. Most of the larges changes in the history of our nations politics show more have been ideas first brought to the for-front by third parties. He shows how difficult it is to get your ideas out as a third party when most of the time is spent simply trying to retain ballot status. It also shows in great detail, with hindsight, WHY the Natural Law Party no longer exists. Even though Roth explains the value of a third party as a third party in his early chapters, in his later chapters he shows the high ideals of the party and their truly deep thickheaded idea that they will become a major party, likely replacing one of the two old parties if they can't get a proportional representation past. This lofty goal is likely what caused them to fold. If you keep telling your supporters that you soon will be the mainstream, and some of their ideas now are, but you are stuck perpetually ending in 4th or lower position in the polls, your going to loose support. Now 14 years after this book was realized, only Michigan still has the NLP on the ballot. A book worth reading, some ideas worth considering, including at least the presentation of some I will include in my campaign for U.S. Senate. I recommend the read. show less
Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Members
- 68
- Popularity
- #253,410
- Rating
- 2.0
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 22
- Languages
- 3


