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Rating:  Summary: Expanding Knowledge Review: This book is one of many products created by the genius of G. Patrick Flanagan for the betterment of the human race, the expansion of our awareness. It is laid out in a context of terse sayings for easy grasp and memory banking, begins by referring to the myriad approaches to total knowledge we've held onto through language and philosophy and scientific analysis and exploration throughout the ages. After one reading the mind has increased in its capacity to understand and intuit real knowledge. Patrick takes the reader step by step to his final conclusions via scientifically supported objective reasoning including photographs and diagrams. He transmits his own intelligence via the choice of language and ideas he focuses on--it warrents many readings or keeping for reference!
Rating:  Summary: Expanding Knowledge Review: This book is one of many products created by the genius of G. Patrick Flanagan for the betterment of the human race, the expansion of our awareness. It is laid out in a context of terse sayings for easy grasp and memory banking, begins by referring to the myriad approaches to total knowledge we've held onto through language and philosophy and scientific analysis and exploration throughout the ages. After one reading the mind has increased in its capacity to understand and intuit real knowledge. Patrick takes the reader step by step to his final conclusions via scientifically supported objective reasoning including photographs and diagrams. He transmits his own intelligence via the choice of language and ideas he focuses on--it warrents many readings or keeping for reference!
Rating:  Summary: Intellectually bankrupt Review: This book was originally published in 1973. If the incredible effects it reports were true then Flanagan would now be internationally famous, we'd all have thrown away our fridges and replaced them with pyramids, and shares in razor-blade companies would be at rock-bottom.I wuld further point out that Flanagan's final chapter is largely lifted, word for word without acknowledgment, from Carl Krafft's "The Ether and its Vortices" (1955).
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