

The Invisible Landscape
Author: Terence McKenna
Narrator: Michael Toms, Fabrice Florin
Unabridged: 51 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: New Dimensions Foundation
Published: 05/18/1977
Categories: Nonfiction, Body, Mind, & Spirit
Author: Terence McKenna
Narrator: Michael Toms, Fabrice Florin
Unabridged: 51 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: New Dimensions Foundation
Published: 05/18/1977
Categories: Nonfiction, Body, Mind, & Spirit
Terence McKenna (1946-2000) was a philosopher, psychonaut, researcher, teacher, lecturer and writer on many subjects, such as human consciousness, language, psychedelic drugs, the evolution of civilizations, the origin and end of the universe, alchemy, and extraterrestrial beings. He authored or coauthored several books, including The Invisible Landscape, The Archaic Revival, True Hallucinations, and Sacred Mushroom Seeker.
The Invisible landscape by Terence and Dennis McKenna is a very original and unusual book. From a daring shamanistic experiment with hallucinogenic compounds they arrived at insights about a holographic temporal wave (called "time wave zero") based on a fractal of cycles which they could derive from......more
Should never have read this book. First 3 chapters were fine, last 10 were convoluted. What parts I understood I tended to disagree with. See my previous comments.......more
I am a huge fan of Terence McKenna and his theories, from the Stoned Ape to TimeWave Zero. However, I didn't enjoy this book as much as I enjoyed 'Food of the Gods' or 'The Archaic Revival'. I was already very familiar with his ideas concerning the I Ching and the mapping of novelty over historical......more
This work covers a lot of ground, from organic chemistry to neurophysiology to shamanic traditions, which is both its strength and weakness. There's plenty you can learn about here in a general sense, but McKenna is simply too spaced out to convince with his speculations. The point of the book is to......more
Well, shit. This was pretty good at first, but eventually, they lost me. Really liked the chapters on shamans, and I’d highly recommend the chapters “organismic thought” and especially “towards a holographic theory of mind,” but it was downhill from there for me. The La Chorrera chapters were somewh......more