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Carlos Castaneda | A Wisdom Archive on Carlos Castaneda |  | Carlos Castaneda A selection of articles related to Carlos Castaneda |  |
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Carlos Castaneda, Carlos Castaneda - Biography, Carlos Castaneda - Brief Description of Books, Carlos Castaneda - Castaneda's account of Toltec knowledge, Carlos Castaneda - Interpretation and criticism the Castaneda controversy, Carlos Castaneda - Notable works, Carlos Castaneda - Related authors, Carlos Castaneda - Significant characters In Castaneda's works
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| ARTICLES RELATED TO Carlos Castaneda |  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - Dream - Psychodynamic interpretation of dreamsBoth Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung identify dreams as an interaction between the unconscious and the conscious. They also assert together that unconscious is the dominant force of the dream, and in dreams it conveys its own mental activity to the perceptive faculty.
Freud, however, felt that there was an active censorship against the unconscious even during sleep; in his seminal work The Interpretation of Dreams, he explains and argues for his theory in detail.
The critical difference between Freudian and Jungian theories ...
See also:Dream, Dream - Neurology of dreams, Dream - Supernatural interpretation of dreams, Dream - Psychodynamic interpretation of dreams, Dream - Lucid dreaming, Dream - Dreams and reoccurrence of feelings, Dream - Books on Dreams Read more here: » Dream: Encyclopedia II - Dream - Psychodynamic interpretation of dreams |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - Hunting - Trophy huntingIn the 1800s southern and central European hunters often pursued game only for a trophy, usually the head or pelt of an animal, to be displayed as a sign of prowess. The rest of the animal was often wasted. In contrast, in relatively scarcely populated northern Europe, hunting has remained the tradition of the common people, and still serves a purpose as a means of acquiring meat, although the standard of living does not require it; Eating game is generally considered a healthier and more ethical alternative to the exploitation of farmed ani ...
See also:Hunting, Hunting - History, Hunting - Ancient roots, Hunting - Hunting in pastoral and agricultural societies, Hunting - Modern sport hunting, Hunting - National hunting traditions, Hunting - Shikar India, Hunting - Safari, Hunting - United Kingdom, Hunting - United States, Hunting - Wildlife management, Hunting - A Variety of Hunting methods, Hunting - Trophy hunting, Hunting - Economics of hunting, Hunting - Depictions in popular culture Read more here: » Hunting: Encyclopedia II - Hunting - Trophy hunting |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - Ward Churchill - Background
Ward Churchill - Early life and education.
Churchill was born and grew up in a blue-collar family in Elmwood, Illinois. His parents, Maralyn and Jack Churchill, divorced while Ward was still a toddler. In March 1950, his mother married Henry Carlton Debo, an employee of Caterpillar in downstate Peoria, as a result of which Churchill has two half-brothers, Tom and Danny, and a half-sister, Terry. When he enrolled in Elmwood High School, Churchill went by the name Ward Debo, taking his stepfather's surname, but when he graduated in 1965, he was listed in his year ...
See also:Ward Churchill, Ward Churchill - Background, Ward Churchill - Early life and education, Ward Churchill - Writing, Ward Churchill - Activism, Ward Churchill - Artwork, Ward Churchill - 9/11 essay controversy, Ward Churchill - The essay, Ward Churchill - Imbroglio, Ward Churchill - A new McCarthyism?, Ward Churchill - Allegations against Churchill, Ward Churchill - Questioned ethnicity, Ward Churchill - Research misconduct, Ward Churchill - The Governor calls it treason, Ward Churchill - Works, Ward Churchill - Books, Ward Churchill - Audio and video Read more here: » Ward Churchill: Encyclopedia II - Ward Churchill - Background |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - Hunting - Economics of huntingA variety of industries benefit from hunting, and support hunting on economic grounds, beyond the ecological arguments of hunter-gathering and pastoral use of marginal habitats.
In Tanzania it is estimated that safari hunter spends 50-100 times that of the average eco-tourist and at a lower environmental impact. The average photo tourist demands luxury accommodations and at a higher number of visitors to make the endeavor financially viable. In contrast the average safari hunter travels on foot, staying in tented camps and in vastly s ...
See also:Hunting, Hunting - History, Hunting - Ancient roots, Hunting - Hunting in pastoral and agricultural societies, Hunting - Modern sport hunting, Hunting - National hunting traditions, Hunting - Shikar India, Hunting - Safari, Hunting - United Kingdom, Hunting - United States, Hunting - Wildlife management, Hunting - A Variety of Hunting methods, Hunting - Trophy hunting, Hunting - Economics of hunting, Hunting - Depictions in popular culture Read more here: » Hunting: Encyclopedia II - Hunting - Economics of hunting |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - Dream art - Works intended to resemble dreams but not directly based on them
Dream art - Novels.
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll (1865)
The Nightmare has Triplets trilogy by James Branch Cabell
Smirt: An Urbane Nightmare (1934)
Smith: A Sylvan Interlude (1934)
Smire: An Acceptance in the Third Person (1937)
Dream art - Drama.
A Dream Play (19 ...
See also:Dream art, Dream art - History, Dream art - Notable works directly based on dreams, Dream art - Visual art, Dream art - Literature, Dream art - Film, Dream art - Comics, Dream art - Works intended to resemble dreams but not directly based on them, Dream art - Novels, Dream art - Drama, Dream art - Film, Dream art - Comics Read more here: » Dream art: Encyclopedia II - Dream art - Works intended to resemble dreams but not directly based on them |
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| | |  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - Creativity - Social attitudes to creativity'Creatitivity' is much praised in principle, but much derided in practice. Those in logical and ordered organisations may praise it but be reluctant to set a creative individual 'loose' in their ordered system. Business is increasingly claiming that professional "creatives" do not have a monopoly on the concept of creativity, and that problem solving in general may require a flexible mind. Employers may value lawyers, accountants, people in sales, and others more highly if such people can use a "creative" approach to their work, albeit withi ...
See also:Creativity, Creativity - Scope, Creativity - Dimensions of creativity, Creativity - Types of creativity and creatives, Creativity - Measuring creativity, Creativity - Social attitudes to creativity, Creativity - Fostering creativity, Creativity - Periods and Personalities Read more here: » Creativity: Encyclopedia II - Creativity - Social attitudes to creativity |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - Western interpretations of Taoism - Academic interpretationsBy "academic" is here meant, works which would be normal to cite as authorities in referreed journal articles and books from university presses.
Graham, A.C., Disputers of the Tao: Philosophical Argument in Ancient China (Open Court 1993). ISBN 0812690877
Jordan, David K., Gods, Ghosts, and Ancestors: The Folk Religion of a Taiwanese Village (Berkeley:University of California Press, 1972).
Kaltenmark, Max, Lao Tzu and Taoism (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1969 [original French 1965]).
Kohn, ...
See also:Western interpretations of Taoism, Western interpretations of Taoism - Academic interpretations, Western interpretations of Taoism - Popular interpretations, Western interpretations of Taoism - Links Read more here: » Western interpretations of Taoism: Encyclopedia II - Western interpretations of Taoism - Academic interpretations |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - Lucid dreaming - History of lucid dreaming researchEven though it has only come to the attention of the general public in the last few decades, lucid dreaming is not a modern discovery. It is in the fifth century that we have the earliest written testimony of a lucid dream — in a letter written by St. Augustine of Hippo in 415 A.D. And even as early as the eighth century, the Tibetan Buddhists were practising a form of yoga supposed to maintain full waking consciousness while in the dream state.
An early recorded lucid dreamer was the philosopher and physician Sir Thomas Browne (160 ...
See also:Lucid dreaming, Lucid dreaming - Achieving and recognizing lucid dreams, Lucid dreaming - Ability, Lucid dreaming - Common techniques, Lucid dreaming - Other phenomena associated with lucid dreaming, Lucid dreaming - Things to do while lucid dreaming, Lucid dreaming - History of lucid dreaming research, Lucid dreaming - Popular culture, Lucid dreaming - Books Read more here: » Lucid dreaming: Encyclopedia II - Lucid dreaming - History of lucid dreaming research |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - New Age - QuotationsIn Experiential Spirituality and Contemporary Gnosis Diane Brandon writes:
"And this emphasis on spirituality and consciousness reflects an acknowledgment that we are, in essence, spiritual beings - and beings of pure energy, as consciousness is a form of energy - even though we are "in the body."
Deepak Chopra:
"...our bodies are contained within our consciousness, not our consciousness contained within our bodies."
Michael Sharp:
"As above in consciou ...
See also:New Age, New Age - Definitions, New Age - History, New Age - Beliefs, New Age - Quotations, New Age - Lifestyle, New Age - Underlying assumptions, New Age - Language, New Age - Critiques of the New Age, New Age - Medicine, New Age - Music, New Age - New Age communities Read more here: » New Age: Encyclopedia II - New Age - Quotations |
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| |  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - Creativity - Fostering creativitySome see the conventional system of schooling as "stifling" of creativity and attempt (particularly in the pre-school/kindergarten and early school years) to provide a creativity-friendly, rich, imagination-fostering environment for young children. Compare Waldorf School.
A growing number of pop psychologists are making money off the idea that one can learn to become more "creative". Several different researchers have proposed several different approaches to prop up this idea, ranging from psychological-cognitive, such as:
Synectics
Purdue Creative Thinking Program
l ...
See also:Creativity, Creativity - Scope, Creativity - Dimensions of creativity, Creativity - Types of creativity and creatives, Creativity - Measuring creativity, Creativity - Social attitudes to creativity, Creativity - Fostering creativity, Creativity - Periods and Personalities Read more here: » Creativity: Encyclopedia II - Creativity - Fostering creativity |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - New Age - Critiques of the New AgeMajor critiques of the New Age have emerged from rational philosophical and scientific views that seek to understand the nature of New Age notions. These often highlight the discrepancies between New Age's seemingly irreconcilable mix of occultism and acceptance of the laws of physics. Rather more extreme views have emerged from evangelical Christians who reject all forms of occultism; from skeptics suspicious of paranormal claims and woolly beliefs in general; and from New Agers themselves. Some, including neo-pagans, who are frequently lab ...
See also:New Age, New Age - Definitions, New Age - History, New Age - Beliefs, New Age - Lifestyle, New Age - Underlying assumptions, New Age - Language, New Age - Critiques of the New Age, New Age - Medicine, New Age - Music, New Age - New Age communities Read more here: » New Age: Encyclopedia II - New Age - Critiques of the New Age |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - New Age - MedicineMany people with a New Age perspective also adopt complementary and alternative medicine. Some rely on New Age related treatments exclusively, while others use them in combination with conventional medicine. This is completly compatible with New age belief in the unity of mind body spirit and the emphasis on things natural. Some techniques worthy of mention are herbal medicine, Ayurveda, acupuncture, homeopathy, iridology, auras and the ...
See also:New Age, New Age - Definitions, New Age - History, New Age - Beliefs, New Age - Lifestyle, New Age - Underlying assumptions, New Age - Language, New Age - Critiques of the New Age, New Age - Medicine, New Age - Music, New Age - New Age communities Read more here: » New Age: Encyclopedia II - New Age - Medicine |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - New Age - MusicSee a longer description at the New Age music article
Although more rock than new age in genre the 1967 successful musical Hair with its opening song "Aquarius" and the memorable line "This is the dawning of the age of Aquarius" brought the New Age concept to the attention of a huge world wide audience. The first actual mention of the term was by American rock and roll band The Velvet Underground in their not-s ...
See also:New Age, New Age - Definitions, New Age - History, New Age - Beliefs, New Age - Lifestyle, New Age - Underlying assumptions, New Age - Language, New Age - Critiques of the New Age, New Age - Medicine, New Age - Music, New Age - New Age communities Read more here: » New Age: Encyclopedia II - New Age - Music |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - Yaqui - Lifestyle of the YaquiIn the past, the Yaqui subsisted on agriculture, growing corn, beans and squash (like many of the natives of the region). They also made cotton products.
The Yaqui have always been skillful warriors.
Don Juan Matus, the mystic teacher appearing in a series of books by Carlos Castaneda, was described as Yaqui Indian. However, critics have raised the question of whether Juan Matus was a real person or a fictional character, and any connection between actual Yaqui religious practices and those written ab ...
See also:Yaqui, Yaqui - Lifestyle of the Yaqui, Yaqui - History of the Yaqui, Yaqui - Yaqui in the United States Read more here: » Yaqui: Encyclopedia II - Yaqui - Lifestyle of the Yaqui |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - New Age - Underlying assumptionsJudging by its name, the New Age movement ought to involve millenarian claims, perhaps of a glorious future age which is about to begin. As such it could theoretically be traced back to the time of Zoroaster, or to biblical apocalypticism. While such expectations are encountered often enough—e.g., the dawning of the Age of Aquarius, pole shifts and paradigm shifts, the imminent end of the Mayan calendar—the predominant themes of the New Age are mystical rather than apocalyptic. Hence the widespread interest within this subculture in the ...
See also:New Age, New Age - Definitions, New Age - History, New Age - Beliefs, New Age - Lifestyle, New Age - Underlying assumptions, New Age - Language, New Age - Critiques of the New Age, New Age - Medicine, New Age - Music, New Age - New Age communities Read more here: » New Age: Encyclopedia II - New Age - Underlying assumptions |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - New Age - LanguageMany adherents of belief systems characterised as New Age rely heavily on the use of metaphors to describe experiences deemed to be beyond the empirical. Consciously or unconsciously, New Agers tend to redefine vocabulary borrowed from various belief systems, which can cause some confusion as well as increase opposition from skeptics and the traditional religions. In particular, the adoption of terms from the language of science such as "energy", "energy fields", and various terms borrowed from quantum physics and psychology but not then app ...
See also:New Age, New Age - Definitions, New Age - History, New Age - Beliefs, New Age - Lifestyle, New Age - Underlying assumptions, New Age - Language, New Age - Critiques of the New Age, New Age - Medicine, New Age - Music, New Age - New Age communities Read more here: » New Age: Encyclopedia II - New Age - Language |
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|  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - New Age - BeliefsThe following are some common — though by no means universal — beliefs found among New Agers:
All humanity—indeed all life, everything in the universe—is spiritually interconnected, participating in the same energy. “God” is one name for this energy.
Spiritual beings (e.g. angels, ascended masters, elementals, ghosts, and/or space aliens) exist, and will guide us, if we open ourselves to their guidance.
The human mind has deep levels and vast powers, which are capable even of overriding physical rea ...
See also:New Age, New Age - Definitions, New Age - History, New Age - Beliefs, New Age - Lifestyle, New Age - Underlying assumptions, New Age - Language, New Age - Critiques of the New Age, New Age - Medicine, New Age - Music, New Age - New Age communities Read more here: » New Age: Encyclopedia II - New Age - Beliefs |
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| |  |  |  | Carlos Castaneda: Encyclopedia II - Dragon Rouge - Opposing viewsDragon Rouge is frequently depicted as a sect or a satanic organization by the tabloid press. The order states that they are hostile towards Monotheism, but not an atheistic nor a satanic organization, but a magical order.
The tabloid press and christian spokespersons have on several occasions called the sacrifice of individual drops of human blood in Dragon Rouge magic unacceptable.
Dragon Rouge appeared frequently in the Swedish media during the mid and late nineties. Dragon Rouge has occasionally been criticised by other occ ...
See also:Dragon Rouge, Dragon Rouge - Dragon Rouge, Dragon Rouge - The order, Dragon Rouge - Culture, Dragon Rouge - Philosophy, Dragon Rouge - Psychology, Dragon Rouge - Initiatory magic, Dragon Rouge - The initiatoric Draconian magic, Dragon Rouge - Opposing views Read more here: » Dragon Rouge: Encyclopedia II - Dragon Rouge - Opposing views |
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