Simply A Course in Miracles
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Allowah Lani
This title uses virtual voice narration
Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
Many people pick up the Course only to put it down because the language is challenging or off-putting.
Some are also confused because there are now so many teachers of ACIM, and many different
interpretations as to what it means. If anything, this book does not seek to interpret the Course,
but rather to simply present some of its most well-known teachings, reminding the reader that
the interpretation is up to them.
That said, this book does not shy away from pointing the reader to ways of seeing the Course
that are fairly well-established in the ACIM world, or which have been helpful to the author. After all,
what is helpful for one will probably be helpful for someone else. And in any case, everyone will
find their own way in regard to ACIM, and the truth is that no secondary source is a substitute for
engaging with the Course itself.
One of the biggest issues in the ACIM world is the experience to which the Course points.
On one level, this is interesting and even funny, as the text itself cautions not to get delayed by
theological debates. Yet there are those who say that ACIM is pointing to a non-dual reality,
similar to Advaita Vedanta, and there are those who adamantly oppose this view, saying
that nowhere in the Course do we find even a mention of "non-duality" (let alone Advaita).
As you might guess, this book does not give a hard-and-fast answer to this debate, but rather
presents it as something to keep in mind, suggesting that the Course might best be read in a
more metaphorical or symbolic way than literal.
This book is divided into 3 parts: The first part is the author's introduction to ACIM; the second part is a presentation of past thinkers and ideas that in some way foreshadowed the Course (Freud, Plotinus, Plato, Nietzsche, etc.); and the third part of the book is simply a presentation of key quotes and passages in the Course, some of the most well-known and discussed.
Allowah Lani has been a student of ACIM for 10 years, and a lifelong student of philosophy and religion.
He has 10 published books to date, including an earlier book (I Am Love) on which this book is based. Allowah has also been a student of Indian spirituality for the past 25 years, keenly interested especially in the non-dual teachings of Hinduism.
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