A Nobel Prize nominee, Laszlo bridges the divide between science and spirituality, heralding the inter-connectedness of all aspects of the future. The book includes significant contributions from Jane Goodall, Ed Mitchell, Stanislav Grof, Ralph Abraham, Christian de Quincey and more great thinkers of our time.
Generally recognized as the founder of systems philosophy and general evolution theory, founder of the Club of Budapest, and author or editor of 70 books translated into 20 languages, Laszlo has been nominated twice for the Nobel Peace Prize and for the Templeton Prize. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including the 2001 Goi Award (the Japan Peace Prize) and the 2005 Mandir of Peace Prize. And, he is the editor of World Futures: The Journal of General Evolution, and past president of the International Society for the Systems Sciences.
For decades Laszlo's work has taken him to the cutting edge of science and consciousness. In "Science and the Reenchantment of the Cosmos", he discloses the ramifications of non-localized consciousness and how the physical world and spiritual experience are two aspects of the same reality. Laszlo wrote, "What scientists are now finding at the outermost frontiers of every field is overturning all the basic premises concerning the nature of matter and reality. The universe is not a world of separate things and events but is a cosmos that is connected, coherent, and bears a profound resemblance to the visions held in the earliest spiritual traditions in which the physical world and spiritual experience were both aspects of the same reality and man and the universe were one."
Speaking in universities and at conferences across America
'"/>
Contact: Simon Warwick-Smith
sws@vom.com
707-939-9212
The Club of Budapest
20-Apr-2006