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This Is It: The Nature of Oneness
 
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This Is It: The Nature of Oneness [Paperback]

Jan Kersschot (Author), Tony Parsons (Foreword)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 28, 2006
"Everything you need to know, you know already." That's the message Jan Kerschott brings seekers who have been desperately trying to "find themselves," but still have not achieved a sense of well-being. In fact, the desperate struggle to reach enlightenment can actually be counterproductive, increasing feelings of alienation. Through conversations with some of today's foremost spiritual guides, including Eckhart Tolle (author of "The Power of Now"), Douglas Harding (author of the acclaimed "On Having No Head"), Nathan Gill, Chuck Hillig, Wayne Liquorman, and others, this inspirational study offers reassurance that everything is exactly how it is supposed to be...and teaches us to accept that truth.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Paul Watkins (July 28, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1842930931
  • ISBN-13: 978-1842930939
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.1 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,449,860 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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69 of 82 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars OK as far as it goes, November 10, 2004
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This review is from: This Is It: The Nature of Oneness (Paperback)
This is on the radical fringe of the neo-advaita scene. Absolute take-no-prisoners "everything-is-total-illusion-and-that's-just-fine-there's-absolutely-nothing-to-be-done-about-it".

For a book about non-dualism, it has a strangely two-pronged flavor.

First, it is making the general and expected points: No need to do anything, you are already enlightened (except that you don't exist and enlightenment is meaningless to begin with), etc.

Second, it has a definite under-edge of Non-Dual community infighting. At times, it has a strangely catty, insider tone. I feel it is written not so much for the general person just trying to figure things out, but for a specific narrow sub-readership of people who are very experienced shoppers in the spiritual supermarket, even or especially people who've been around the non-dual track a few times. These are the people that the author wants to reach, and get them to 'stop seeking'.
Though of course, even 'stop seeking' is "doing" something, or having a kind of program, and therefore unacceptable. Except that of course EVERYTHING is acceptable because it is all illusory anyway.

I say that this author (and his interviewees) are on the far edge of current non-dual thought in that other stars like Byron Katie still offer a kind of goal (cessation of mental suffering) and a sort of problem-solving method (4 questions) to advance that program. Or for example Gangaji is supposedly pure advaita but she subtly asserts the reality of various distinctions, such as guru v. seeker; a more lovely Satsang space v. a less-lovely one; a community of friends pursuing the goal or teachings together (as though that would help it along); etc.

But the authors of "This Is It" are uncompromising and will have none-of-the-above. EVERYTHING is equally fake (or real, but in any case meaningless) and there's absolutely NOTHING to be done about it... except the reader is still left with the feeling that s/he as a regular gal/guy hasn't quite 'got it' (but no, no, there's NOTHING to GET, dumbkoff!) and ... you still don't really understand (that there's NOTHING to UNDERSTAND, you dork!) ... that's the flavor of it.

Interesting in a way.

However, this tough-man macho version of neo-advaita makes constant use of analogies like "All the sand castles on a beach appear separate but since they are actually all made of sand there's no difference among them and they are all the same thing - namely, sand". Or similar images of water, characters in a movie on the screen all being made of the light projected from the booth, etc.

This reductionist argument is logically erroneous, in that identity of material is not absolute identity. Different individual sand castles represent different information vectors and have different entropic coding potential. They differ absolutely, at the level of information structure. Admittedly these differences in entropic coding potential are non-physical in some sense, and hard to quantify without a context, but they are real, though subtle. It is an odd and unexpectedly materialistic argument - the assertion that material identity equals absolute identity. Anyway, the only actual identity these authors can accept is equal emptiness or equally distributed 'Light' or 'Unicity'.

Of course the authors would say that comments such as mine above are just the mind (small egoic mind) trying to FIGURE IT OUT, which is completely IMPOSSIBLE anyway. And there's nothing to figure out.

However, suffering does seem to remain, no matter what. They are explicit on this point - suffering is fine, it is just more flickers on the screen. But while I'm not a Buddhist, I do accept the practical Buddhist goal of an end of suffering.

These guys have zero interest in that, because 'goal' implies 'time' which of course is utter illusion, furthermore they don't want to make quality judgements over experience. To them seeking an end to suffering (personal or universal) is merely a cat chasing his tail.

So it is truly a completely empty and meaningless teaching, a "difference which makes no difference". For all I know, it may be the simple truth. But "I" (??) suspect otherwise, because this random theory of meaningless "arising" of phenomena and experience does not account for the consistency of physical and psychological effects experienced by human beings.

But the authors would say that my small mind (which doesn't exist) is just playing stupid small-mind games. Which is ok, it's all fine as it is.
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good interview with Eckhart Tolle in this book, September 16, 2005
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Michael Ashe (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: This Is It: The Nature of Oneness (Paperback)
I gave this book 5 stars mainly for the Eckhart Tolle interview it contains. It's an interview that really demystifies him. I highly recommend it if you are a fan of Tolle yet feel he is somehow above you or better than you.

Many of the other interviews are good as well.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing and practical, September 5, 2005
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This review is from: This Is It: The Nature of Oneness (Paperback)
The book, This Is It, by Jan Kerschott, is unerringly explicit in addressing the core of true non-dualism. It does so in both a general, sweeping fashion, in relation to a basic, overall consideration of religion and spirituality, and in a precise, deliberate manner clarifying the misleading (and divinely perfect) dualistic teachings that present themselves as non-dualistic. Why is this important? Because it is so easy to believe in a path to what is. I was heavily into an understanding that was couched in non-dualistic notions, but upon looking more closely was, actually steeped in duality. Such directives as the need to meditate more, be silent more, be more honest, more passionate, more, more, more have been seen to only push away freedom. Kerschott's book spoke to a deep place in awareness and exposed in nakedness the contradictions so visible when seen with clarity. This book is not for everyone. Anyone who wants to progress and develop into what already is will not enjoy this. But if you are open to seeing that there is nothing but the truth, then freedom already is.
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