Paperback : HK$122.00
In describing the effects of mescaline, Aldous Huxley's "The Doors of Perception" literally opened a door. Watts walked through it with this classic account of the levels of insight consciousness-changing drugs can facilitate "when accompanied with sustained philosophical reflection by a person who is in search, not of kicks, but of understanding." Watts and peers including foreword authors Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert (then Harvard professors) anticipated physicists recognizing the individual's "inseparability from the rest of the world," the work of New Age thinkers who combine scientific findings and spiritual experiences, and federally funded clinical trials utilizing psilocybin to treat a variety of conditions. More than an artifact, "The Joyous Cosmology" is both a riveting memoir of Watts' personal experiments and a profound meditation on our perennial questions about the nature of existence and the existence of the sacred.
In describing the effects of mescaline, Aldous Huxley's "The Doors of Perception" literally opened a door. Watts walked through it with this classic account of the levels of insight consciousness-changing drugs can facilitate "when accompanied with sustained philosophical reflection by a person who is in search, not of kicks, but of understanding." Watts and peers including foreword authors Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert (then Harvard professors) anticipated physicists recognizing the individual's "inseparability from the rest of the world," the work of New Age thinkers who combine scientific findings and spiritual experiences, and federally funded clinical trials utilizing psilocybin to treat a variety of conditions. More than an artifact, "The Joyous Cosmology" is both a riveting memoir of Watts' personal experiments and a profound meditation on our perennial questions about the nature of existence and the existence of the sacred.
Spiritual philosopher Alan Watts, student of Buddhism, Anglican minister, chaplain at Northwestern University, and author of more than twenty books, died in 1973.
“Alan Watts describes with startling clarity and poetic beauty his
drug-induced experiences.”
— Contemporary Psychology
“The Joyous Cosmology is a carrier wave of information and insight,
which has lost none of its subtlety, suppleness, or zest.”
— from the new introduction by Daniel Pinchbeck, author of Breaking
Open the Head
“A stirring introduction to one of mankind’s newest
self-examinations.”
— Newsweek
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |