Biocentrism: How Life and Consciousness Are the Keys to Understanding the True Nature of the Universe
Biocentrism: How Life and Consciousness Are the Keys to Understanding the True Nature of the Universe book cover

Biocentrism: How Life and Consciousness Are the Keys to Understanding the True Nature of the Universe

Hardcover – April 14, 2009

Price
$32.11
Format
Hardcover
Pages
224
Publisher
BenBella Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1933771694
Dimensions
6.5 x 1 x 9.5 inches
Weight
14.4 ounces

Description

"What makes this book both interesting and worth the effort of reading it; is the unique perspective Lanza brings to the subject matter as a physician....From the way he chooses to present his arguments, it's clear he has a solid grasp of esoteric disciplines like quantum theory, special relativity and particle physics. And what makes his presentation more compelling than other efforts I've encountered is his ability and willingness to weave personal experience into the thoughts and ideas presented. His style is conversational and warm which tends to pull you along through the exposition gently. And his sense of wonder and befuddlement at shop worn enigmas like the double slit experiment, Bell's theorem, non-locality and Schrödinger's cat is as infectious as it is delightful...I very much like what Lanza has to say in Biocentrism." --Midwest Book Review Praise for Robert Lanza's essay "A New Theory of the Universe," on which Biocentrism is based: "Like A Brief History of Time, it is indeed stimulating and brings biology into the whole.... The book will appeal to an audience of many different disciplines because it is a new way of looking at the old problem of our existence. Most importantly, it makes you think." ―E. Donnall Thomas, 1990 Nobel Prize winner in Physiology and Medicine "It is genuinely an exciting piece of work.... The idea that consciousness creates reality has quantum support ... and also coheres with some of the things biology and neuroscience are telling us about the structures of our being. Just as we now know that the sun doesn't really move but we do (we are the active agents), so [it is] suggesting that we are the entities that give meaning to the particular configuration of all possible outcomes we call reality." ―Ronald Green, director of Dartmouth College's Ethics Institute "Robert Lanza, a world-renowned scientist who has spanned many fields from drug delivery to stem cells to preventing animal extinction, and clearly one of the most brilliant minds of our times, has done it again. `A New Theory of the Universe' takes into account all the knowledge we have gained over the last few centuries ... placing in perspective our biologic limitations that have impeded our understanding of greater truths surrounding our existence and the universe around us. This new theory is certain to revolutionize our concepts of the laws of nature for centuries to come." ―Anthony Atala, internationally recognized scientist and director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine Robert Lanza “Robert Lanza was taken under the wing of scientific giants such as psychologist B.F. Skinner, immunologist Jonas Salk, and heart transplant pioneer Christiaan Barnard. His mentors described him as a ‘genius,’ a ‘renegade thinker,’ even likening him to Einstein himself.” — US News & World Report cover story Robert Lanza has been exploring the frontiers of science for more than four decades, and is considered one of the leading scientists in the world. He is currently Chief Scientific Officer at Advanced Cell Technology, and Adjunct Professor at Wake Forest University School of Medicine. He has several hundred publications and inventions, and 20 scientific books, among them, Principles of Tissue Engineering , which is recognized as the definitive reference in the field. Others include One World: The Health & Survival of the Human Species in the 21st Century (with a foreword by President Jimmy Carter), and the Handbook of Stem Cells and Essentials of Stem Cell Biology , which are considered the definitive references in stem cell research. Dr. Lanza received his B.A. and M.D. degrees from the University of Pennsylvania, where he was both a University Scholar and Benjamin Franklin Scholar. He was also a Fulbright Scholar, and was part of the team that cloned the world’s first human embryo, as well as the first to clone an endangered species, to demonstrate that nuclear transfer could reverse the aging process, and to generate stem cells using a method that does not require the destruction of human embryos. Dr. Lanza was awarded the 2005 Rave Award for Medicine by Wired magazine, and received the 2006 “All Star” Award for Biotechnology by Mass High Tech. Dr. Lanza and his research have been featured in almost every media outlet in the world, including all the major television networks, CNN, Time, Newsweek, People magazine, as well as the front pages of the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, and USA Today , among others. Lanza has worked with some of the greatest thinkers of our time, including Nobel Laureates Gerald Edelman and Rodney Porter. Lanza worked closely with B.F. Skinner at Harvard University. Lanza and Skinner (the “Father of Modern Behaviorism”) published a number of scientific papers together. He has also worked with Jonas Salk (discoverer of the polio vaccine) and heart transplant pioneer Christiaan Barnard. Bob Berman “this is a fascinating guy” —David Letterman “fasten your seatbelts and hold on tight” — Astronomy magazine Bob Berman is the most widely read astronomer in the world. Author of more than one thousand published articles, in publications such as Discover and Astronomy magazine, where he is a monthly columnist, he is also astronomy editor of The Old Farmer’s Almanac and the author of four books. He is adjunct professor of astronomy at Marymount College, and writes and produces a weekly show on Northeast Public Radio, aired during NPR’s Weekend Edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Robert Lanza is one of the most respected scientists in the world—a
  • US News & World Report
  • cover story called him a “genius” and a “renegade thinker,” even likening him to Einstein. Lanza has teamed with Bob Berman, the most widely read astronomer in the world, to produce
  • Biocentrism
  • , a revolutionary new view of the universe. Every now and then a simple yet radical idea shakes the very foundations of knowledge. The startling discovery that the world was not flat challenged and ultimately changed the way people perceived themselves and their relationship with the world. For most humans of the 15th century, the notion of Earth as ball of rock was nonsense. The whole of Western, natural philosophy is undergoing a sea change again, increasingly being forced upon us by the experimental findings of quantum theory, and at the same time, towards doubt and uncertainty in the physical explanations of the universe’s genesis and structure.
  • Biocentrism
  • completes this shift in worldview, turning the planet upside down again with the revolutionary view that life creates the universe instead of the other way around. In this paradigm, life is not an accidental byproduct of the laws of physics.
  • Biocentrism
  • takes the reader on a seemingly improbable but ultimately inescapable journey through a foreign universe—our own—from the viewpoints of an acclaimed biologist and a leading astronomer. Switching perspective from physics to biology unlocks the cages in which Western science has unwittingly managed to confine itself.
  • Biocentrism
  • will shatter the reader’s ideas of life—time and space, and even death. At the same time it will release us from the dull worldview of life being merely the activity of an admixture of carbon and a few other elements; it suggests the exhilarating possibility that life is fundamentally immortal. The 21st century is predicted to be the Century of Biology, a shift from the previous century dominated by physics. It seems fitting, then, to begin the century by turning the universe outside-in and unifying the foundations of science with a simple idea discovered by one of the leading life-scientists of our age.
  • Biocentrism
  • awakens in readers a new sense of possibility, and is full of so many shocking new perspectives that the reader will never see reality the same way again.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Say Hello to Solipsism

Reviewed By Stephen J. Hage [email protected]

In this book, Lanza deals with some of the ideas presented by Samuel Avery in Transcendence of the Western Mind.

His central thesis is "life creates the universe instead of the other way around." And, while he doesn't use the word what his thesis supports is solipsism.

What makes this book both interesting and worth the effort of reading it; is the unique perspective Lanza brings to the subject matter as a physician. Physicians are, by definition, intellectual chimeras because the discipline of medicine is an amalgam of hard science, healing, philosophy, metaphysics and ethics. Each physician must decide what to take and use from that intellectual palette and the decisions they make, in that regard, to a large extent define who they are, how they practice and what kind(s) of relationships they cultivate with patients and colleagues. I know this because I worked with physicians for most of my adult life in hospitals.

From the way he chooses to present his arguments, it's clear he has a solid grasp of esoteric disciplines like quantum theory, special relativity and particle physics. And what makes his presentation more compelling than other efforts I've encountered is his ability and willingness to weave personal experience into the thoughts and ideas presented.

His style is conversational and warm which tends to pull you along through the exposition gently. And his sense of wonder and befuddlement at shop worn enigmas like the double slit experiment, Bell's theorem, non-locality and Schrödinger's cat is as infectious as it is delightful.

He reveals his bent toward solipsism in this passage where he talks about his friend Barbara in the chapter on consciousness:

"Every morning, she opens her front door to bring in the Boston Globe or to work in her garden. She opens her back porch door to a lawn dotted with whirly-gigs, squeaking as they go round and round in the breeze. She thinks the world churns along whether she happens to open the door or not.

It does not affect her in the least that the kitchen disappears when she's in the bathroom. That the garden and whirly-gigs evaporate when she's sleeping. That the shop and all its tools don't exist while she's at the grocery store."

What he says about Barbara is true and, because it's true, he leads the reader directly to the precipice of the abyss of solipsism.

Like it or not, solipsism is an epistemological nightmare. Its premise is that everyone creates reality, on-the-fly. Everything we see, touch, hear, smell or feel happens only in our head and not "out there" in the real world. That's the reason solipsism is referred to as an abyss because the next logical and inescapable question is whose reality is it? Is it yours or mine or someone else's?

The way out of that quagmire is to understand that solipsism obtains for perceptual consciousness only. And, to truly appreciate what that means I recommend you also read Transcendence of the Western Mind.

I very much like what Lanza has to say in Biocentrism. My only reservation is his failure to deal with the implications of how firmly his thesis embraces solipsism.
11 people found this helpful
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Life in the Vast Lane

Lanza follows up implications in the quantum enigma of consciousness debate with some compelling ideas of the "Of course. Why didn't I think of that?" variety. The critically fine margins for conditions favoring life in the universe are their own argument for the creative role of consciousness in bringing form and substance to what is otherwise wave function potential. Lanza has an impressive scientific background, but his book is highly accessible to the average reader, generally free of impenetrable scientific jargon and made relevant to the common world of feelings and sentiment. His quotes from Emerson and Thoreau to illustrate points of biocentric theory are revelatory and startling in their aptness in explaining aspects of current quantum thought. I found Biocentrism to be a rich and hopeful book permeated with the consoling perception of an intimately personal universe that is not "out there" and to be feared, but within ourselves and tailored to our needs.
8 people found this helpful
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Was Obi-Wan right?

As a mathematically challenged non-scientist, quantum mechanics will always be a mystery to me. But at least the book, Biocentrism, has put even my limited intellect right smack in the middle of everything. Why, heck, I might even be integral to the Grand Unified Theory of the Universe. If I don't look out at the cosmos, it isn't there! Don't worry; I'll be sure to glance upward every night just so the stars don't blink out. Biocentrism, as expected, provides almost no answers, but the new questions it asks are . . . fascinating.
7 people found this helpful
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I'm not there.

A thoroughly engaging, thought provoking, and quite readable work by two great scientific minds. The idea of Universe as an entity brought into being simply by our own observation of it is, to this reader, irrefutable, and underscores the concept behind Occam's Razor: The simplest explanation is usually the correct one.
7 people found this helpful
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Essays with a scientific bend

To call this book a science book is a bit of a stretch. However, it does contain some good summaries of pertinent quantum mechanics experiments. It also does a good job of reviewing how much physics/science does not know, although I think the authors could have emphasized more that the purpose of science is to explain the laws of world we live in, not to explain how it got that way. (See what Newton said about the nature of gravity!) The book contains a lot of personal information, opinions and some wishful thinking that are scattered through the text. I enjoyed reading it but I do not think that it made the case for Biocentrism, other than suggesting some intriguing possibilities.
6 people found this helpful
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Owen Barfield has more to offer

Readers of Owen Barfield's SAVING THE APPEARANCES will be reminded of its opening pages. Barfield has much more to offer those who are interested in the correlative relationship between consciousness and nature. Lanza argues that science shows there was never a time when an external, dumb, physical universe existed, or that life sprang from it at a later date; any universe that could have preceded consciousness only existed in a state of probability waves. His arguments usefully challenge our habits of thought, but he's probably afflicted by what Barfield calls a residue of unresolved positivism (shown, e.g., in his use of "brain" and "mind" as interchangeables). I think the best use of this book could be to prepare readers for the challenge of reading SAVING THE APPEARANCES. There, Barfield deals with implications that Lanza doesn't seem to be aware of, e.g. with regard to the "prehistory" of the earth. Barfield explores language as a way to search into the evolution of consciousness in this book and other writings. Dale Nelson's essay "The Troubled Legacy of Owen Barfield," published in TOUCHSTONE magazine, is an introduction to the late British thinker. See Lanza's essay "Biocentrism" in Discover magazine May 2009, and Tim Folger's article about John Wheeler (anthropic principle) in Discover for June 2002, for introductions to ideas basic to the present book.
5 people found this helpful
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Cure for the Grim Reaper?

`By striving to see through the veil of our ordinary perceptions, we can come closer to understanding our profound relationship to all created things'. So says acclaimed physician and life researcher Robert Lanza. In his book, Biocentrism, he has perhaps brought the reader a step or two closer to that kind of understanding. Lanza shows that theoretical physicists, who dominate the grand search for a unified theory of life, may well be overreaching in the wrong direction. Biocentrism makes a compelling case that the consciousness that each of us as humans takes for granted is creating its own reality. While concepts like the quantum wave-particle duality and the Schrodinger's Cat paradox play a part in Lanza's presentation, the elements of his own personal story that are woven through this book help very much to make it accessible and deeply engaging. Lanza sees the ultimate mystery of consciousness as the essence of Biocentrism. Our physical bodies inevitably die away but, perhaps in the form of pure consciousness, we as conscious entities merely move on to a new reality. Lanza's message is heartfelt and life affirming, and also grounded convincingly in science...at least that which is knowable. Scared of the grim reaper? Biocentrism may be the right antidote.
4 people found this helpful
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A Disappointing Universe-Whodunit

Like a disappointing whodunit, Lanza asks all the right questions, then hints at directions that mix real science with mysticism to come up with ..... Nothing!!!
As a lengthy 'article' that one might read in the Sunday paper, Biocentrism is an enjoyable read, right up to where you realise that the author doesn't really offer anything new. As a matter of fact, I think if you substituted the word 'God' for the word 'Biocentrism' throughout the book you would have simply another 'God of the gaps' type book.
Nothing new here .... Move along.
3 people found this helpful
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A Good Read

This is a good read for the layperson. It stretched the capacity of my brain to comprehend some of the concepts, but overall I felt a much greater understanding of this fascinating theory. The book has inspired me to continue to read more on the theory and to seek the opinion of other scientists who have contemplated the subject.
3 people found this helpful
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I don't understand how anyone thinks this book is good.

My daughter got me this book and it's companion "Beyond Biocentrism" for Father's day. I feel bad, but this is a wretched book. After a hundred pages I gave up trying to find the point. All I found was a book of loaded language, invalid metaphors, critical thinking fallacies and misrepresentations of scientific theories. You'd be better off reading almost anything else.
1 people found this helpful