Review of “Many lives, Many masters” by Dr Brian Weiss

mai 16, 2018


Review of “Many lives, Many masters” 

by Dr Brian Weiss




Psychotherapist Dr. Brian Weiss wrote Many Lives, Many Masters: The True Story of a Prominent Psychiatrist, His Young Patient, and the Past-Life Therapy That Changed Both Their Lives in 1988. The book documents the doctor’s journey from disbelief to belief in regards to messages from the supernatural world and reincarnation. Widely read, the book launched Weiss’s career as a sought-after speaker and a leading author on past-life therapy.
Themes include spiritual conversion, connection with the dead, and the importance of universal religious teachings such as charity, faith, and love.
The first person narrative introduces Weiss as a classically trained, scientific doctor. Trained at Columbia University and Yale Medical School and having graduated with several honors, he admits to being the last person open to channeling, reincarnation, and parapsychology. He is married with two children, and has taught conservative psychotherapeutic techniques at the University of Pittsburgh.
Weiss was Chief of Psychiatry at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami Beach, Florida, when he encountered Catherine. Catherine was a twenty-seven-year-old woman with major anxiety issues. She also suffered from depression and a wide array of phobias. Mutual friends encouraged her to make an appointment with Weiss. He describes her as a very attractive blonde; she worked as a lab technician at the same hospital that Weiss practiced at.
Weiss treated her with conventional therapy. He suggested anti-anxiety medication but Catherine refused, afraid of what chemical intervention could do to her body. So they choose hypnosis for a treatment.
In the first pages of MLMM, when Dr Weiss describes their first session, he jumps quickly to the conclusion of incarnation and presenting what the patient seeing as antique and from another era. For his question "Go back to the time from which your symptoms arise." He directly interprets her answer as weird and unusual «I see white steps leading up to a building, a big white building with pillars, open in front. There are no doorways. I'm wearing a long dress ... a sack made of rough material. My hair is braided, long blond hair."
The answer that Catherine gave to the doctor has no indication of time or place, and being under hypnosis, is by definition the induction of a state of consciousness in which a person apparently loses the power of voluntary action and is highly responsive to suggestion or direction. I’m not dispraising the doctor experience with Catherine, nor declaring it untrue. But for a well-known Psychotherapist, who spent his life in academic approaches and empirical conclusion, a skeptic who became a believer in seconds, make me wonder and question the assumptions of MLMM.

In My opinion MLMM, should be taking as a spiritual message, encouraging charity, faith, and love, and not a literal experience, that present incarnation as a truth. May be it does exist or maybe not, but MLMM is not the book to prove it.





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