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        <title><![CDATA[Conscious Business - New Consciousness Review]]></title>
        <description><![CDATA[An online community for readers and authors interested in spiritual growth, enlightened living, metaphysics and the body-mind-spirit genre, with book and film reviews, video trailers and reviews, author interviews and discussion groups.]]></description>
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                <title><![CDATA[Worldshift 2012: ]]></title>
                                <link>http://www.ncreview.com/conscious-business/worldshift-2012</link>
                <description><![CDATA[
                                    <img src="http://www.ncreview.com/images/stories/jreviews/tn/tn_577_list_WORLDSHIFT2012_1260386464.jpg"  border="0"  alt="Worldshift 2012"  title="Worldshift 2012"  align="left"  style="width: 100px; height: 149px"  />                                Author Ervin Laszlo has certainly made great contributions to the fields of systems philosophy, conscious evolution, and socio-political evolution. With 69 books to his name, 400 articles, and a long list of appointments, honors, and luminary associates, his credibility seems beyond question. In 1993 he formed a who’s-who think tank called Club of Budapest to “center attention on the evolution of human values and consciousness as the crucial factors in changing course…in the direction of humanism, ethics, and global sustainability."

In Worldshift 2012 Laszlo makes the case once again that it is only by changing our consciousness will we turn planetary breakdown into sustainable breakthrough, and the author this time points our focus for this shift toward business and politics. I’m completely on board with his evolutionary vision, but disappointed in this slim volume (less than 100 pages) subtitled, “Making Green Business, New Politics and Higher Consciousness Work Together.” Part One summarizes of the state of the world, ecologically, politically and socially, Part two addresses objectives, and Part Three is a telling of the “new consciousness myth.” In other words, Laszlo uses a familiar change model format: where are we now, what do we want, how do we reframe our experience (get there from here), and how it will be when we have the change we desire (imagining what we want as if it has already occurred).

In this sense then, this is subconsciously a useful book. But the content doesn’t deliver anything particularly new or captivating. Certainly, Worldshift reminds us of the mounting statistics about ecological and social breakdown, which is always a wake-up call, and the thought experiment “reporting” by two young people from the year 2032 commenting on the new planetary ethics and consciousness is somewhat intriguing—and a story that needs to be told. Still, most of the “solutions” or actions offered in Worldshift are little more than well-worn gestures painted with broad brushstrokes, and sprinkled with quotes from notables. 

To be honest, the forewords by Deepak Chopra and Mikhail Gorbachev are more compelling for this reviewer than what follows. Perhaps being in the business of reading multitudes of new consciousness books I have become saturated with new consciousness ideas; perhaps the concepts presented here have been written about so much more comprehensively and compellingly (by Laszlo himself, among many others) that I have high expectations: perhaps this isn’t one of Laszlo’s better efforts. 


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                <category><![CDATA[Conscious Business]]></category>
                <pubDate>Mon, 02 Nov 2009 15:57:21 -0800</pubDate>
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