Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Get the Cliff Notes, September 2, 2003
There are good ideas, interesting asides, and new philosophical propositions to spare in Money and the Secret of Life. The basic premise--that money is a technology invented, not to accumulate wealth, but to realize human potential--is certainly worth our attention. Needleman is best describing money as the great tool of capitalism and capitalism as a great metaphysical system. The problem with Money and the Meaning of Life is that Jacob Needleman set out to write an inquiry into the spiritual potential of money, then sketched out a history of Western religious thought, and ended up writing a first person narrative full of punch lines thinly disguised as surprise philosophical discoveries. Mixing Max Weber, Guradjieff, Maimonodes, King Solomon, and an anonymous businessman (who really DOES know the meaning of life) could have been a rollercoaster ride full of unexpected connections and insights; what it actually ends up being is long-winded, self-conscious, and pretentious. In terms of the capitalist object, a good product, but, word for word, not exactly a terrific value.
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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
When Is Money Not Money?, August 21, 2000
I have been on a never-ending search for a higher-paying, more satisfying job/career my entire life believing totally that this would be the answer to many of my life's challenges and problems. Further, I believed that all of these challenges and problems were for the most part being driven by external factors. After reading this book, I appreciate that my search surely was and is about more than making money. The structure of the book is somewhat like a quilt pieced together of various subject matter, ideas and reflections about money. I had to make an effort to stay with the flow when I couldn't see where it was going. Perhaps this was a strategy the author choose to use and the one that kept me reading to the end. It's not a book I was able to rush through because as I read the truth of what he was saying presented me with quite an accurate and painful reflection of my own behavior and beliefs about money. I could only read a little bit of the truth at a time because as I recall hearing once, the truth will set you free but first it's going to just about kill you. I had to let it kill me a little bit at a time. An excellent companion piece to this book and one that Needleman cites is by Lewis Hyde entitled, "The Gift."
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A deeply spiritual and provocative look at life and money., October 2, 1996
By A Customer
Could there be a subject more charged with the drama of
human life? Each of us lives in some private, personal
struggle with money that to a great extent dictates the
course of our dreams, our search for meaning, and our
compromises with deep Self. If you read nothing else about
money, give yourself the great treat of opening the pages of
this book. You may finally begin to comprehend why, if you
have ever attempted to make money conscious, make it work for
you rather than against you, take it into the domain of
spirit, you have not succeeded. Not succeeded in finding
deep or lasting satisfaction with it: as it squeezes you this
way, frightens you that way, appears, disappears, plays with
your hidden shame, seduces you to give up your heart's
desire for more of it, etc. Beginning to understand why,
you may also begin to have compassion for yourself in the
midst of this journey, this search for The Way, in and
through money. Needleman is fluent, wise, humble, and
provocative as he lays out the foundation of a timely and
really comprehensible thesis about the power of the most
ubiquitous of elements fueling our lives and fantasies,
money.
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