1hysics y, NY: Biblio- 57-272 models biology. _)f mind he Un- dchology 1k which ,condary ienomena y rather 7~tes that observe _y of the -)rance of intuition ~, and he n suggests the dis- R.A.W. A Death NY: State ,liographic 47 figs; Isciousness emerging -)sychology, ,The Na- le presents )usness re- ,inspersonal standing of herapy and itled "New ion." The and the fu- Ordinary ,ulder, CO. fibliographic the Warrior, basis of this ern times of ption of this and fearless possibility of tradition, on -ditation. The :) an utterly dinary world beyond our ews to which Meditation I)reconceptions continual re- been clung to s these partial -d by scicacc. _c far more in teady progress .q1e insights of on the beliefs have narrowed tion in the or- nd ineffability. Parapsychology Abs(racts International Appr(oved4evoReleaa&aQW/R&li5ii,GLAbf'LDP96-QgolfiQRQGQ7&ligtlGO"i&*on, seeing them clearly as such, then we can discover a fresh perception of this world purified of preconception and narrow belief. We may, them, perceive ordinary magic -- a world which is vast and unconditioned, yet full of power, value, and natural order. - DA 02034. Hunt, Stoker. Ouija.- The Most Dangerous Game. New York: Barnes & Noble, 1985. 156p. I fig; Index: 153- 156; 31 refs This is an overview of information about the ouija board. Hunt reports that in a recent survey he conducted, 3011o use the ouija board to communicate with the dead, the same percentage to communicate with the living, and the remainder to develop psychic ability or as a means of guidance. He gives some case histories illustrating that using the ouija board can be both helpful and dangerous. Well-known cases discussed are Jane Robert's Seth and the Toronto "Philip" group experiment. He discusses auto- matisms as the inducers of psychosis and as a cure. An in- terview with Barbara Honegger is the subject of one chap- tcr. The last chapter is entitled "How to Get the Best Results from Your Ouija Experiments:' - R.A.W. 02035. Jackson, Edgar N. The Role of Faith in the Process of Healing. Minneapolis, MN: Winston Press, 1981. 203p. Bibliographic notes by chapter: 197-201; Biblio- graphy: 195-196 The emphasis here is on the role faith plays in heal- ing and that we are personally responsible for our state of health. There are several chapters on faith. Jackson examines the nature of faith, unconscious factors in faith, conscious processes in faith, and super-conscious expressions of faith. There is a chapter on innate faith and one on faith that is achieved. Most relevant to parapsychology is Chapter 10, "Mystical Illumination and the Super-healthy Person *" Here he discusses the level of faith that employs "the higher levels of consciousness for its purposes." He classifies the phenomena related to the superconsciousness in three categories: the psychological, the psychic, and the parapsychic. It closes with a section on the cultivation of revealed truth. The final chapters deal with cultivation of a life-affirming attitude. - R.A.W. response precognition (pi marily C.E.M. Hansel). The last is a guide to education possibilities concerned with the forecasting mind: wor shops, seminars, discussion guides; a sample college court field trip possibilities-, and tests. - R.A.W. 02036. Katz, Richard. Boiling Energy: Community Heal- ing Among the Kalahari Kung. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1982. 329p. Bibliography: 317-323; Glos- sary: 314-316; 2 figs; 19 illus; Index: 324-329 . Katz reports on his field investigation of the ritual healing dance of the IKung. The rituals are described. in detail, and he shows how they are perceived at the ex- periential level through interviews with participants; he traces the role of healing in the healers' lives and in the community as a whole, and he presents a sociological ana- lysis of how the form and function of healing are shaped by the character of the IKung social order. The book grew out of a request from the IKung to "tell our story of healing to your people." The talks of four !Kung healers are the heart of the book. Of special interest are four chapters, "At a Healing Dance," "Educa- tion for Healing;' "Career of the Hcaler," and "Psycho- logical and Spiritual Growth." Biographies arc give of some important Mung healers. - R.A.W. 02038. Sheikh, Ances A., Ed. International Review Mental Imagery. Volume 1. New York: Human Scienc Press, 1984. 220p. Chap. Bibliography; 2 figs; Author Indc 203-215; Subject Index: 217-220; 6 tables Volume I of the International Review of Mew Imagery is primarily an anthology of literature review Such topics as mental imagery in problem solving and tir estimation, imagination, and hypnosis are covered. T chapter on hypnagogic imagery touches on the possibili of a relationship between psi and hypnagogic image; There are chapters on right hemispheric processing ai imagery in psychosomatic illness. A chapter that might useful to parapsychologists is one entitled "Bizarreness E fects in Mental Imagery." Each chapter has a lengthy bi liography. - R.A.W. 02037. Loye, David. The Sphinx and the Rainbow: Brain, Mind and Future Vision. Foreword by Willis Har- man. Boulder, CO: Shambhala/New Science Library, 1983. 236p. Bibliographic notes by chapter: 205 215; Bibliography: 216-225; Index: 227-236; 15 figs; 1 questionnaire; I table Loye attempts to synthesize neurophysiology, pgychol- ogy, parapsychology, and theoretical physics at a popular level in order to show how all parts of the brain can 45 Unclean Spirits: Possession ar 02039-WaIkkE, D.P. 2000/08/15: CIA-RDP96-00792ROO0701070005-8 02040. Wilber, Ken. Eye to Eye: The Quest for th, New Paradigm. Garden City, NY: Anchor Press/Doublc day, 1983. 326p. Bibliography: 311-317; 15 figs; Index: 319-32( In the Preface Wilber says 'This is a book about aj overall or 'comprehensive' knowledge quest -- not with ~ view toward any sort of finality in knowledge, but wit! a view toward some sort of balance in the quest itseh It is about empirical science, philosophy, psychology, aw transcendental religion; about sensory knowledge, symboli, knowledge, and spiritual knowledge; and about how them might all fit together. It discusses what a "comprehensive paradigm might eventually took like, and -- just as impor tant or perhaps more important -- it attempts to expos, and unravel some of the major obstacles to the emergenc, of such a paradigm." Nine of the 10 chapters wer, originally published (in the same or variant format) in th, Journal of Altered States of Consciousness (1), Journa Of Transpersonal Psychology (3), and ReVision (5). Th chapter titles are Eye to Eye; The Problem of Proof; / Mandalic Map of Consciousness; Development, Meditation - OExorrism-In-France and England in the Late Sixteen. -and Early Seventeenth Centuries. Philadelphia, PA: Ut of- Pennsylvania __4SLULy_ -Press, 15RI-7116p. !!ibliograph N_ 1Q1U,_-b_ychapter: 89-11i~ am Case histories of possession in France and England the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century a presented. Sources drawn on consist of contemporary pu lished accounts, which are mostly eyewitnesses, or compil( from the evidence of eyewitnesses. The printed accounts cases were sometimes supplemented by manuscript sourc, and, when the possession involved accusations of witc! craft, legal records of the witch's trial. For the (thei theory of possession and exorcism he relied on the debatc arising out of the cases and on authorities cited in thes, ranging from the Bible, its commentators, and the Churc Fathers, to fifteenth- and sixteenth-century treatises c magic and witchcraft. This book is of interest to parapsychologists becaus claims of psi phenomena were associated with possessio, the ability to speak and understand languages not know to the patient; clairvoyance; and bodily strendth exceedin, the person's normal capacity. - DT/R.A.W. including precogn tion. He takes a holographic approach to precognition. I also attempts to show how to develop forecasting abilit There are 4 appendices. The first offers suggestions f improving individual and group forecasting. The sccot presents some of the tenets of the new psychophysi( The third is a to critics of