Big Mother: The Technological Body of Evil
By (Author) Jasun Horsley
Aeon Books Ltd
Aeon Books Ltd
7th February 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Artificial intelligence
Psychology: states of consciousness
306.46
Paperback
314
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
A bold examination of artificial intelligence, consciousness, technology, and the human urge to return to the womb.
and then disappear into it.
in which the modern human being is increasingly lost inside, and points the way back to our original soul natures.
Praise forPrisoner of Infinityby Jasun Horsley (Aeon, 2018 -9781911597056):
Jasun Horsley is making a habit of writing books everyone should read. Prisoner of Infinity is an engrossing expedition into the murky frontiers of alien abductions, space exploration, New Age spirituality, cult worship, psi phenomena, near- death-experiences, channeling the dead... oh, and childhood trauma. Somehow Horsley emerges from his own close encounters with such terrors and seductions sufficiently intact to write an extraordinarily coherent and grounded guidebook for others who may be wandering along these frontiers or about to embark into them. You have to read this book to feel its power and to fully understand the depth of its voice, its call, and its challenge to every other soul in evaluating these alternate reality phenomena. Horsley takes readers on a personal journey they should not miss. I highly recommend this book.
Gregory Desilet, author of Cult of the Kill: Traditional Metaphysics of Rhetoric, Truth, and Violence in a Postmodern World
Prisoner of Infinity is easily the most important study extant of social/mythological engineering/UFOs/Striebers continuum. No stranger to trauma, driven by relentless yet empathetic intelligence, Horsley strips out the massive, annoying nonsense thats tainted these subjects since the heady days of Adamski, Bowerts Operation Mind Control, the late Jim Keiths more lucid material and Cannons The Controllers. An incredible and literally mind-blowing exploration.'
William Grabowski, contributing editor of Library Journal, and author of Black Light: Perspectives on Mysterious Phenomena
Possibly the most complex problem in the social sciences is what may be called the micro-macro transition phase accounting theoretically for that mechanism by which individual psyches are made receptive to external waves, or outside suggestions, and turned into instruments for fashioning so-called history. Jasun Horsleys Prisoner of Infinity is an erudite and trenchant testimony, which, by taking Whitley Striebers intriguing literary output as its point of departure, delves obstinately into the darker recesses of psychic spaces torn asunder by (child) abuse with a view to reveal the ulterior purposes of these practices. As the investigation proceeds, it unmasks the aesthetic cover-ups that have been created in pop iconography in order to smuggle a sinister contraband into conventional reality. A book such as this, which weaves seamlessly literary criticism, autobiographical reminiscence, a reinterpretation of pop counter-culture, and a personal mapping of esotericisms strange maze, represents indeed an important advance in unlocking the mysteries of the micro-macro transition phase.
Guido Giacomo Preparata, author of The Ideology of Tyranny and Conjuring Hitler
Praise forVice of Kingsby Jasun Horsley (Aeon, 2019 -9781911597049):
Anything Jasun Horsley writes compels me to an uncanny degree; the stakes feel enormous. He exemplifies a mind grappling to the very edge of itself and to the edge of collective human experience simultaneously. Language, in his hands, seems pressured into use as spacecraft into unknown territory.
Jonathan Lethem, author of The Fortress of Solitude
The Vice of Kings is a brave journey into a familys heart of darkness by an intrepid prose artist. It is not just the painful and bizarre family affairs he uncovers, but the sexual crimes that the British aristocracy normalized as their peculiar privilege going back generations. It also happens to be meticulously researched and beautifully written.
James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency and the World Made By Hand series
Jasun Horsleyis the author of several books, including the loose 'cultural engineering' trilogySeen and Not Seen,Prisoner of InfinityandThe Vice of Kings. He hosts a regular podcast, The Liminalist, at his website, Auticulture.He currently writes and keeps chickens in Galicia, Spain.