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Knowledge Build - Recommended Reading –

8 June 2008 4 Comments

Today’s Jewel——————————————————————————

“Our high respect for a well read person is praise enough for literature” ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Peace Fam…

About a few years back, to keep track of all the books I’d hear about, I created word file called “Knowledge Build” – a list of all the great reading that I have yet to digest. In similar fashion, this section of Today’s Transcendence will serve as an online book club, where I share with you guys all the literature I’ve traveled through (relevant to our purpose here, of course), and let you know the perspective I maintain .

For right now, all you’ll see is a collection with links to find out more, but don’t worry, I’ll be elaborating on all of these as time proceeds, letting you know what I’ve extracted from it.

Building our Knowledge through ReadingAll of these texts are highly recommended though. A few came from a lecture I did last year called The Advancement of Learning: a presentation based on the major works of Sir Francis Bacon, and also, the necessity to expand our mental mechanics through transforming our view of education and the learning process. In essence, knowledge is not just about getting a degree or learning some skill, but for the elevation and improvement of our life experience.

Here are a few of the scrolls I’ll be deciphering soon:

The Alchemist, by Paulo Coelho
Ancient Future, by Wany Chandler,
The Laws of Thinking, by Bishop E. Bernard Jordan
The Elements of Style, by William Strunk
The Richest Man in Babylon, by George S. Clason
Thinking & Destiny, by Harold Percival
The Science of Being Great, by Wallace D. Wattles
The Prophet, by Kahlil Gibran
The Power of Concentration, by Thermon Q. Dumont,
Self-Discipline in 10 Days: How to Go from Thinking to Doing, by Theodore Bryant
The Science of Mind, by Ernest Holmes
and The Dragon Slayer with a Heavy Heart, by Marcia Powers
(among many others)

Trust me, all of these are deep, and worth the time to sit down and send through your cognition, so there’s really no need to wait for me to drop the science on them. However, on the same token, if you’d like to save your time with a simplified, but thorough overview, Knowledge Build will serve that purpose as well.

Keep in mind that I do plan to get metaphysical in the analysis
, so if you were to read any of the books in the Knowledge Build collection before that, we’d already be at a plateau to construct from, and the community can exchange ideas from there.

If there are any suggestions for material, be sure let me know. As I’ve said plenty of times before, this is all catered to the family. What books (or subjects) interest you? What’s been on your mind that you have yet to digest?

Peace Family,

+B

Do The Knowledge!—————————————————————————
Have any books lying around that you’ve been meaning to get into (or finish)? Go ahead and tackle some of its pages now!
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