Stealing fire How Silicon Valley, the Navy SEALS, and maverick scientists are revolutionizing the way we live and work

Steven Kotler, 1967-

Book - 2017

The author Steven Kotler and high-performance expert Jamie Wheal spent four years investigating how Silicon Valley executives, the Navy SEALS, and maverick scientists are harnessing rare and controversial states of consciousness to solve critical challenges and outperform the competition.--

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154.4/Kotler
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2nd Floor 154.4/Kotler Due Dec 26, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Dey St., an imprint of William Morrow [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Steven Kotler, 1967- (author)
Other Authors
Jamie Wheal (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
ix, 293 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-276) and index.
ISBN
9780062429650
  • Introduction
  • The Never-Ending Story
  • Accidental Prometheans
  • Part 1. The Case for Ecstasis
  • Chapter 1. What Is This Fire?
  • The Switch
  • The High Cost of Ninja Assassins
  • Google Goes Fishing
  • Hacking Ecstasis
  • The Mind Gym
  • The Altered States Economy
  • Chapter 2. Why It Matters
  • The Ambassador of Ecstasis
  • Selflessness
  • Timelessness
  • Effortlessness
  • Richness
  • Wicked Solutions to Wicked Problems
  • Chapter 3. Why We Missed It
  • Beyond the Pale
  • The Pale of the Church
  • The Pale of the Body
  • The Pale of the State
  • Pipers, Cults, and Commies
  • Part 2. The Four Forces of Ecstasis
  • Chapter 4. Psychology
  • Translating Transformation
  • The Bell Tolles for Thee
  • Mad Men
  • Taking the Kink Out of Kinky
  • Good for What Ails You
  • Altered States to Altered Traits
  • Chapter 5. Neurobiology
  • Outside the Jar
  • I Can't Feel My Face
  • The Al Shrink
  • Precognition Is Here (But You Knew That Already)
  • The Birth of Neurotheology
  • OS to UI
  • Chapter 6. Pharmacology
  • Everybody Must Get Stoned
  • The Johnny Appleseed of Psychedelics
  • This Is Your Brain on Drugs
  • The Hyperspace Lexicon
  • The Molecules of Desire
  • Chapter 7. Technology
  • Dean's Dark Secret
  • Things That Go Boom in the Night
  • The Digital Shaman
  • Enlightenment Engineering
  • The Flow Dojo
  • Part 3. The Road to Eleusis
  • Chapter 8. Catch a Fire
  • The Sandbox of the Future
  • When the Levee Breaks
  • Disrupting the Brahmins
  • High Times on Main Street
  • Nothing New Under the Sun
  • Chapter 9. Burning Down the House
  • The Atomic Donkey
  • He Who Controls the Switch
  • Spooks to Kooks
  • Soma, Delicious Soma!
  • Ecstasy Wants to Be Free
  • Chapter 10. Hedonic Engineering
  • "Known Issues" of STER
  • Selflessness: It's Not About You
  • Timelessness: It's Not About Now
  • Effortlessness: Don't Be a Bliss Junkie
  • Richness: Don't Dive Too Deep
  • The Ecstasis Equation
  • Hedonic Calendaring
  • There Is a Crack in Everything
  • Conclusion
  • Row Your Boat or Fly Your Boat?
  • An Afterthought
  • Acknowledgments
  • A Quick Note on Inside Baseball
  • Notes
  • Index
  • About the Authors
Review by Library Journal Review

Kotler (cofounder & director of research, Flow Genome Project; The Rise of Superman) and Wheal, an expert on peak performance and leadership, have written a book on altered mental states and the effects thereof. Their introductory premise comes from a party organized by Alcibiades, an ancient Greek general and politician who provided his guests a mind-altering drink that terrified them at first then altered their consciousness. The authors relate to the uses of controlled substances, such as alcohol, marijuana, LSD, and legal practices such as meditation, yoga, or sexual activity to obtain these states of mind. Activities that provide highs, such as mountain climbing, Navy SEAL achievements, and some Silicon Valley practices, are used as examples of behaviors that can substantially add to our lives and productivity. The state of "ecstasis," the abilities of the brain to extend consciousness to new areas, is the goal here, and several methods are explored to achieve or sustain it. The authors provide a great deal of substantive documentation to support their premises. -VERDICT This well-written, well-documented, and significant work is also controversial. Yet, all readers can find value in its contents. [See Prepub Alert, 8/26/16.]-Littleton -Maxwell, Robins Sch. of Business, Univ. of Richmond © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Two researchers survey the various ways that human beings alter their consciousness to improve performance.Kotler (The Rise of Superman: Decoding the Science of Ultimate Human Performance, 2014, etc.) and Wheal are co-founders of an organization called the Flow Genome Project, which studies how people get into the peak performance mindset most people know as "the zone." Here, they present case studies from their day jobs, and the patchwork nature of the construction fails to lend it much weight. They also muddy the concept by comparing the attainment of "non-ordinary" states to the Eleusinian Mysteries, a 2,000-year-old ritual that found men communing with gods. The term they use for this mindset is the Greek word ecstasis, defined here as "stepping beyond oneself." After tabulating the $3 trillion to $4 trillion circulating in the "Altered States Economy," they turn to the "communal vocational ecstasy" at Google. In subsequent chapters the authors turn up interesting characters ranging from Navy SEALs to mad scientists like Alexander Shulgin and John Lilly as well as the occasional extreme athlete. Unfortunately, a great deal of the book is couched in Silicon Valley's self-propelling mass delusions. We find the authors encouraging readers to explore "repurposing our egos from our operating system (OS) to a user interface (UI)." Elsewhere, a venture capitalist in the Valley drops wisdom like, "we've noticed that learning to kitesurf has a lot of parallels with the challenges of entrepreneurship," and Elon Musk sings the praises of Burning Man. Unsurprisingly, the book ends with the story of Oracle CEO Larry Ellison's America's Cup victory in 2013. Ultimately, the book is fine as a sampler for people interested in tuning up their consciousness, but readers will find a deeper dive into biohacking in Kara Platoni's We Have the Technology (2015) and a more authentic story in Ayelet Waldman's microdosing memoir A Really Good Day (2017). A jargon-heavy, superficial primer on altered states tuned to a specific audience. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.