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A Perfumed Scorpion: A Way to the Way
 
 
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A Perfumed Scorpion: A Way to the Way [Paperback]

Idries Shah (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 2001
Whoever might perfume a scorpion
Will not thereby escape its sting.
--Sufi master Bahaudin Naqshband

Using the powerful approach of classical teachers, Shah has crafted a contemporary teaching tool that blends a fast-paced look at today's world with the timeless teachings of the Sufis. The book brings into sharp focus the conditioned behavior and self-deception that are common in Western minds.

Far more than a literary tool for breaking loose old mental habits, it is a blueprint for a process of self-development that precludes self-deceit. Truly a book among books, A Perfumed Scorpion is treasured the world over for its clarity of wisdom and its forcefulness of insight.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"... an invigorating and abrasive book, like jumping into icy water - hard to do, but you're glad you have done it." -- Books and Bookmen, May 1979 --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

About the Author

As the urgency of our global situation becomes apparent, more and more readers are turning to the books of Idries Shah (1924-1996) as a way to train new capacities and new ways of thinking. Shah has been described as "the most significant worker adapting classical spiritual thought to the modern world."

Shah was educated in both the East and West, by private tutors and through wide-ranging travel and personal encounters - the series of journeys which characterize Sufi education and development. In keeping with Sufi tradition, his life was essentially one of service. His knowledge and interests appeared limitless, and his activities and accomplishments took place in many different countries and in numerous fields of endeavor.

Shah was Director of Studies of the Institute for Cultural Research, an educational organization sponsoring interdisciplinary and crosscultural studies of human thought; a founding member of the Club of Rome; a Governor of the Royal Humane Society and the Royal Hospital and Home for Incurables; and the founder of publishing house Octagon Press.

Shah's landmark book, "The Sufis", invited readers to approach Sufi ideas and test them out. The evident and common sense made it clear that here was a sane, authoritative voice in the wilderness of the gobbledegookish mysticism of the sixties. The lively, contemporary books on traditional psychologies, literature, philosophy and Sufi thought that followed established a broad historical and cultural context for Sufi thought and action. These have so far sold over 15 million copies in 12 languages worldwide and have been awarded many prizes. They have been reviewed by The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Times, The Tribune, The Telegraph, and numerous other international journals and newspapers.

University and college courses throughout the world are employing Shah's books, or works based on them, in a wide variety of disciplines including sociology, psychology and literature.

In 1969, Idries Shah was awarded the Dictionary of International Biography's Certificate of Merit for Distinguished Service to Human Thought. Other honors included a Two Thousand Men of Achievement award (1971), Six First Prizes awarded by the UNESCO International Book Year (1972), and the International Who's Who in Poetry's Gold Medal for Poetry (1975).

According to his obituary in the London Daily Telegraph "it is impossible to assess his influence, and his legacy is incalculable".

He was, it is said, the Sufi Teacher of the Age.

"The most interesting books in the English language." Saturday Review

"A major psychological and cultural event of our time." Psychology Today

"One is immediately forced to use one's mind in a new way." New York Times

The instrumental function of Shah's work is now well established among people from all walks of life. Stockbrokers, scientists, lawyers, managers, writers, physicians, and diplomats have found Shah's literature for human development "extraordinary".

"It presents a blueprint of the human mental structure." Robert Ornstein, Ph.D.

"Extremely useful in teaching students about management and computers." Thomas Malone, MIT

"Idries Shah provides the unique perspective that allows us to assess real motivations and social biases in a more accurate light." E. Neilsen, Attorney at Law --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 193 pages
  • Publisher: Octagon Press, Limited (January 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0863040802
  • ISBN-13: 978-0863040801
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.4 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.9 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #435,115 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What is a perfumed scorpion?, June 18, 2002
By 
Roger L. Schultz "Seeker" (Loveland, CO United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Perfumed Scorpion: A Way to the Way (Paperback)
While this book makes abundant use of materials by Sufis of the past, it also contains many illustrations from contemporary Western sources. In fact, it introduced me, as if for the first time, to the very Western milieu within which I had lived all along but had not "seen."

Do not be fooled by the copywrite date. This book cannot be pinned down that way.

For those who want classic Sufi, technical formulas, here they are: Ghazzali's Ten Duties; The Eleven Rules of the Naqshbandiyya; and The Five Subtleties (Lataif-i-Khamsa).

I began by assuming that I was reading a conventional exposition, but somewhere in the middle of the chapter, I began to experience the sensation of bewilderment. I paged back to find my way out only to get further lost. It seemed that a line of reasoning began, but the author took no tangents. The line didn't take unexpected turns. It disappeared altogether. The grammar was odd; not really wrong, but peculiar. Words had the right denotations but reversed conotations. Just when I was about to give up in despair, Shah let the cat out of the bag and admitted what he had been doing. "It will not have escaped your notice," I read, "that I have been moving from one illustration to another without necessarily linking the two; that we have alternated arguments with tales and imagery; that stress has been placed on allegory and imagery within a sequential narrative which is not, however, expressed in historical, personality or logical terms for very long."

This brand of Sufism may or may not be associated with religion. Often Shah expresses it in totally secular terms. I find it illuninating scientific conundrums, anthropological questions--even business decisions!

This book may be less than 200 pages long, but budget more time for it than you would expect. I found I must study it as one might study a thing, not as one would read about a thing. "This involves," he says, "a method which is not entirely uninteresting and is certainly selective of materials." Can you tell me what that means?

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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A uniquely valuable perspective on personal growth, January 29, 1998
By 
HSchuss542@aol.com (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
" All that glitters is not gold. ", the saying has it. Yet, as Idries Shah writes here, citing the Persian poet and Sufi, " Counterfeit gold, as Rumi said, is made only because there is such a thing as real gold for people to try to imitate. " Besides Rumi, Shah quotes frequently, and approvingly, from such other classical writers as Ghazzali and Saadi, among many others, but the understanding of the Sufi tradition he presents here is one largely divorced from the Middle Eastern and even from the Islamic historical and cultural contexts,as well as from such popular images as the turbanned fakir or the whirling dervish,with which it has commonly been associated.In so doing, Shah provides a perspective on " Sufi education ", and on " spiritual " development, generally, which I believe will be essentially new to the majority of readers. In A Perfumed Scorpion, perhaps the most straightforward exposition possible of his distinctive and multifaceted point of view, Shah invites those interested in the possibilities of the full realization of the human potential not merely to stand observing from the shore, but to approach the contemporary " Sufi work ... in the only way in which ancient and still valid experience has shown it to be approachable: by means of the methods which the higher knowledge itself indicates to be effective. " A Perfumed Scorpion should be of interest to those dissatisfied with contemporary psychology, with traditional religious practice, or with the more trendy and facile " New Age " philosophies of our day.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Truth Seeks You, February 21, 2002
By 
Caroline Harkins (Elora, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
A Perfumed Scorpion consists of unusually straightforward statements of what the Sufi path is all about. It can't be described in just so many words because the path consists of knowledge coming from experience that can only be achieved as one develops the capacity for it. The attitudes and abilities needed to approach and pursue Sufi learning are described. And Shah always makes it understood that a teacher is needed. You can't really do it alone.

This is pithy material and not for the faint hearted. For instance, Shah quotes a Sufi teacher saying, "If you want to be owned by a tyrant, accept someone who only imagines he is a pupil." What's going on, here? Is this a put-down or is Shah passing on a helpful and practical observation? He goes on to describe the type of teacher who "feels a need to teach". Then he adds another saying, "Patience is the food of understanding."

He Says, "Sufi knowledge is the knowledge of something beyond customary human perceptions, yet reached through the very world whose characteristics often stand in the way of such perceptions. This could well be a summary of the theory and practice of the Sufis." He quotes from John Donne's sermons, "I neglect God and his angels for the noise of a fly, for the rattling of a coach, for the whining of a door." He interprets this, not as melancholy irony but, surprisingly, as a hint that such distractions can be used, "in this prison of dimensions, to get beyond these dimensions." He says, "Truth seeks you totally. Make sure that you really seek it."

This book is a mind-blower. And even if you are not of a mind to take up the Sufi path - the Tarika - to understand the gentleness and power of what is involved can be seen as a real gift.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THERE is a succession of experiences which together constitute the educational and developmental ripening of the learner, according to the Sufis. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
commanding self, secondary things, emotional stimulus
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Idries Shah, Jalaluddin Rumi, Central Asia, Middle Ages, New York, Tales of the Dervishes, Mulla Nasrudin, The Teaching Story, Daily Mail, Revelation of the Veiled
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