Separate Reality
Carlos Castaneda  
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Publisher:Pocket Books
Genre:Religion & Spirituality
Pages:263
ASIN:0671606573
ISBN:9780671606572
Dewey:299.7
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Release:1982-06-01
Dimensions:0.80 x 6.70 x 4.10 in
Date Added:2009-11-26
Price:$4.95
Rating:5.0 (1 votes)
Summary: Carlos Castaneda, actually wrote a whole series of book on this one "journey" he had to learn about the secrets of peyote and to become a Man of Knowledge, as he phrases it in "A Seperate Reality".

The table of contents are quite simply:
* Introduction
* The Preliminaries of 'Seeing'
* The Task of 'Seeing'
* Epilogue

Some direct quotes from the book:

"We were talking about my interest in knowledge; but, as usual, we were on two different tracks. I was referring to academic knowledge that transcends experience, while he was talking about direct knowledge of the world." p.10

Carlos Castaneda was a graduate student in anthropology at UCLA gathering information on various medicinal herbs used by the Indians in Sonora, Mexico, when he met the old Yaqui Indian on which these books are based. More quotes from the introduction:

"Don Juan's method of teaching required an extraordinary effort on the part of the apprentice. In fact, the degree of participation and involvement needed was so strenuous that by the end of 1965 I had to withdraw from the apprenticeship. I can say now, with the perspective of five years that have elapsed, that at the time Don Juan's teachings had begun to pose a serious threat to my 'idea of the world'. I had begun to lose the certainty, which all of us have, that the reality of everyday life is something we can take for granted." p.13

"Apparently in this system of knowledge there was the possibility of making a semantic difference between 'seeing' and 'looking' as two distinct manners of perceiving. 'Looking' referred to the ordinary way in which we are accustomed to perceive the world, while 'seeing' entailed a very complex process by virtue of which a man of knowledge allegedly perceived the 'essence' of the things of the world." p.14

I find it difficult to stop quoting and I could go on forever this stuff is so relevant to what we now understand as the subject of sensemaking!

He talks about and defines concepts such as "sensible interpretation", "units of meaning" and "practitioner" (in modern terms a knowledge worker).