Boomeritis: A Novel That Will Set You Free

Ken Wilber

Language: English

Published: Jun 7, 2011

Description:

Ken
Wilber's latest book is a daring departure from his previous writings—a highly
original work of fiction that combines brilliant scholarship with
tongue-in-cheek storytelling to present the integral approach to human
development that he expounded in more conventional terms in his recent
A
Theory of Everything.

The
story of a naïve young grad student in computer science and his quest for
meaning in a fragmented world provides the setting in which Wilber contrasts
the alienated "flatland" of scientific materialism with the integral
vision, which embraces body, mind, soul, and spirit in self, culture, and
nature. The book especially targets one of the most stubborn obstacles to
realizing the integral vision: a disease of egocentrism and narcissism that
Wilber calls "boomeritis" because it seems to plague the baby-boomer
generation most of all.

Through
a series of sparkling seminar-lectures skillfully interwoven with the hero's
misadventures in the realms of sex, drugs, and popular culture, all of the
major tenets of extreme postmodernism are criticized—and
exemplified—including the author's having a bad case of boomeritis himself.
Parody, intellectual slapstick, and a mind-twisting surprise ending unite to
produce a highly entertaining summary of the work of cutting-edge theorists in
human development from around the world.

**

From Publishers Weekly

Wilber (A Brief History of Everything) shifts (sort of) from philosophy to fiction in this story about a young MIT grad student's journey to self-discovery, which is finally little more than a thinly veiled attempt to outline and promote a theory of consciousness. Dubbed Ken Wilber, just like his creator, the novel's protagonist finds answers in his search for identity when he attends a series of consciousness lectures at an institute called the Integral Center. There, Wilber is exposed to an eight-level theory of consciousness and buys into the lecturer's premise that baby-boomers made the first step into higher awareness before they got "stuck" in their own narcissism and self-absorption, leaving it to subsequent generations to take things to the next level. Wilber makes a halfhearted effort to inject some plot elements as he tracks his friends' romances and their reaction to the theory, but most of this book is a lengthy rant about the shortcomings of boomers, padded with analysis of various thinkers, political movements and the effect of computers on modern thought. Wilber (the author) has some interesting ideas but, philosophical issues aside, this isn't much of a novel, and Wilber's failure to develop a coherent narrative, some semblance of a plot or interesting characters will deter many readers.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Wilber here introduces concepts discussed in his Integral Psychology in the form of a highly entertaining postmodernist novel. Wilber's central character, also named Ken Wilber, is a student at MIT who is energized by his belief that within 30 years artificial intelligence (AI) will have so progressed that humans can upload their consciousness and move from carbon-based to silicon-based life forms. One day he stumbles into an integral psychology seminar and comes to realize that what humans do with these next 30 carbon-based years will greatly affect the AI of the future. The entire seminar is presented within the framework of the novel, along with lunchtime synthesis and analysis presented by Ken and his friends (representatives of Gen X and Y), with Ken's sexual fantasies intruding at regular intervals. Integral psychology is based on levels of consciousness, along with the belief that Gen X and Y will be the first to enter the second tier of consciousness. The boomers came close but then got bogged down in egocentrism and ethnocentrism. Unfortunately, as Ken and his friends are discovering, boomers are ruling the world and trying to perpetuate their flawed philosophies. Boomeritis is destined to be a cult classic and is recommended for all libraries. Debbie Bogenshutz, Cincinnati State & Technical Coll. Lib.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.