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Recommended Educational Materials
Harmonia’s curated library of the most transformative books, films, and resources for the study and practice of integral harmony. Organized by the dimensions they serve—from metaphysical foundations to practical blueprints. This is a living document.
I — Metaphysical & Philosophical Foundations
Core Sacred Texts
The ancient roots of Harmonist ontology. These are not “influences” — they are the source material for the metaphysical positions the system articulates.
- The Upanishads (especially Bṛhadāraṇyaka, Chāndogya, Māṇḍūkya) — The metaphysical bedrock: Brahman, Ātman, Qualified Non-Dualism, the identity of the individual soul with the Absolute. Harmonism’s entire ontological architecture — Void, Cosmos, the 8th chakra as Ātman-Brahman union — is Upanishadic.
- Bhagavad Gita (Yogananda’s commentary recommended) — Duty, action, and spiritual realization through dialogue. Harmonism affirms its teaching of nishkama karma (selfless action aligned with Dharma) and the three yogas (jnana, bhakti, karma) as complementary paths — the same triad reflected in Peace, Love, and Will.
- Yoga Sutras of Patanjali — The foundational text on mental discipline and the eight limbs of yoga; essential for Presence, energy cultivation, and the stilling of consciousness.
- The Holy Science (Swami Sri Yukteswar) — The doctrinal companion to Yogananda’s Autobiography of a Yogi (Section VII). Presents Kriya Yoga’s structural cosmology — the yuga cycles, the inner astronomy of the spinal centers — and articulates the convergence of Vedic and Christian/biblical doctrine through a single contemplative empiricism. Foundational doctrinal text for the Kriya lineage within the Indian cartography.
- Dhammapada — Buddha’s distilled teachings on ethics, mind, and liberation in 423 verses. The sharpest expression of the principle that suffering arises from disharmony with what is. Key structural contributions to Harmonism: the mind-first principle (vv. 1–2), appamāda as heedfulness (ch. 2), the inseparability of concentration and wisdom (v. 372), and the demand that virtue be lived rather than professed (vv. 19–20). Translation recommended: Ānandajoti Bhikkhu (scholarly, with Pāli) or Gil Fronsdal (accessible, precise).
- Tao Te Ching (Lao Tzu; Stephen Mitchell translation recommended) — Flow, balance, and alignment with natural law (Logos, the inherent harmonic intelligence of the cosmos). Wu wei (non-forced action) is the Taoist expression of what Harmonism calls living from Presence rather than constructing it.
- Hatha Yoga Pradipika — Classical text on asana, pranayama, and the energy channels (nadis); the physical-energetic substrate of the Presence sub-wheel.
- Vijñāna Bhairava Tantra — 112 meditation techniques attributed to Shiva; the most comprehensive classical catalogue of Presence practices. Each technique is a doorway into the center of the Wheel of Presence.
- Ashtavakra Gita — Radical non-dual teaching on the already-liberated nature of consciousness; the most direct textual expression of Harmonist position that Presence is the natural state, not an attainment.
The Integral Lineage
Harmonism converges with the Gebser–Aurobindo–Wilber line at the level of integral ambition — from epistemological map to ontological blueprint. These are the closest contemporary witnesses to its civilizational thesis.
- The Ever-Present Origin (Jean Gebser) — The structures of consciousness: archaic → magic → mythic → mental → integral. Articulates why an integral synthesis is possible now — the emergence of the integral structure of consciousness that can hold multiple dimensions simultaneously. Gebser’s articulation is the closest contemporary statement of the historical-evolutionary backdrop Harmonism affirms on its own ground.
- The Life Divine (Sri Aurobindo) — The most elaborate modern articulation convergent with Harmonism on the integration of matter and spirit. Evolutionary consciousness, the integration of matter and spirit, the descent of the supramental into embodied life. Aurobindo’s “integral yoga” names the move from transcendence-only spirituality to spirituality that transforms life itself — what Harmonism articulates as Applied Harmonism.
- A Brief History of Everything (Ken Wilber) — Accessible introduction to integral philosophy; contextualizes spiritual practice within evolutionary development. Harmonism converges with Wilber’s AQAL move but goes further — from epistemological cartography to ontological blueprint, from describing perspectives to prescribing alignment.
Western Philosophy
- The Republic (Plato) — Justice, the soul, the ideal society. The tripartite soul (reason, spirit, appetite) maps directly onto Harmonism’s three centers of consciousness (Peace, Love, Will). Informs systemic thinking within the Architecture of Harmony.
- Meditations (Marcus Aurelius) — Stoic wisdom on virtue, acceptance, and inner resilience. The practical philosophy of equanimity under all conditions — alignment with Logos expressed through Roman discipline.
- The Enneads (Plotinus) — The philosophical bridge between Greek rationalism and mystical non-dualism. Plotinus’s “the One” emanating into Nous (intellect) and Psyche (soul) prefigures Harmonism’s Void → Cosmos → Human Being ontological cascade. The closest Western philosophy comes to the Upanishadic framework.
Hermetic & Esoteric Tradition
Harmonism claims four synthesis streams — Vedic, Taoist, Hermetic, Shamanic. The Hermetic stream grounds the microcosm-macrocosm principle that the Wheel-Architecture fractal isomorphism enacts.
- Corpus Hermeticum — The foundational Hermetic texts. “As above, so below” is not a slogan but the ontological principle that individual alignment (Wheel) and civilizational alignment (Architecture) are fractal expressions of the same cosmic order.
- The Kybalion — Popular introduction to Hermetic principles (with appropriate caveats about its modern, likely New Thought provenance). The seven Hermetic principles — Mentalism, Correspondence, Vibration, Polarity, Rhythm, Cause and Effect, Gender — offer useful pedagogical scaffolding.
- The Secret Teachings of All Ages (Manly P. Hall) — The most comprehensive single-volume survey of the world’s esoteric traditions. Encyclopedic rather than deep, but unmatched for breadth. Useful reference for cross-traditional validation of Harmonist positions.
Traditionalist School
The philosophical diagnosis of modernity that runs beneath the Architecture of Harmony’s civilizational critique.
- The Crisis of the Modern World (René Guénon) — Why modern civilization is in disharmony: the inversion of sacred and profane, the reign of quantity over quality, the loss of intellectual intuition. Harmonism’s epistemological gradient (from empiricism to Knowledge by Identity) recovers what Guénon argued modernity destroyed.
- The Reign of Quantity and the Signs of the Times (René Guénon) — The deeper companion to Crisis. Analyzes how the quantitative reduction of reality — measuring everything, knowing nothing — produces the civilizational pathologies the Architecture of Harmony seeks to correct.
II — The Shamanic-Energetic Lineage
Harmonism’s direct experiential lineage — the transmission that shaped its understanding of the energy body, the chakra system, and the Luminous Energy Field.
Alberto Villoldo — Primary Lineage
Alberto Villoldo’s work is the single most formative influence on Harmonism’s understanding of consciousness, energy, and healing. The 8-chakra system, the Luminous Energy Field, the Four Insights, the shamanic practices of the Laika lineage — these are not one tradition among many but the experiential backbone through which Harmonism’s metaphysics became lived reality.
- Shaman, Healer, Sage — The foundational text. Introduces the Luminous Energy Field, the 8-chakra system, and the energy medicine practices of the Q’ero Laika tradition. Harmonism’s treatment of the Ātman as the 8th chakra, the distinction between Ātman and Jīvātman, and the understanding of the chakras as organs of the soul all trace directly to this work.
- The Four Insights: Wisdom, Power, and Grace of the Earthkeepers — The wisdom teachings of the Laika distilled into four core insights and their associated practices. Perception, embodiment, the way of the hero, the way of the luminous warrior, the way of the seer, the way of the sage. Harmonism’s emphasis on direct experience over doctrine, and on the practitioner’s progressive refinement of perception, draws heavily from this transmission.
- The Four Winds: A Shaman’s Initiation — Villoldo’s journey through the four archetypal planes of consciousness; the narrative foundation for understanding energy medicine as a living path rather than a technique.
- Yoga, Power, Spirit — Bridges the yogic and shamanic traditions; shows how asana, breath, and meditation serve the same energetic transformation as shamanic rites.
- Illumination — The healing power of light and consciousness; integrates shamanic and scientific perspectives on spiritual transformation.
- The Heart of the Shaman — The mature synthesis; simplifies the teaching for direct application.
Carlos Castaneda & the Toltec-Yaqui Transmission
The Harmonism.md contains a treatment of the Toltec tradition — the assemblage point, the three centers (head/heart/belly mapping directly onto Peace/Love/Will), Don Juan’s concept of “will” as a force extending from the navel (Manipura), and impeccability as Presence by another name. Castaneda is the primary Western transmission of this lineage.
- The Teachings of Don Juan through The Fire from Within — The core sequence. Start with The Teachings, but the philosophically essential texts for Harmonism are Tales of Power (will, the tonal and nagual), The Second Ring of Power (energy body), and The Fire from Within (the assemblage point, the Eagle’s emanations — the closest Toltec equivalent to Harmonism’s Energy Field ontology).
- The Four Agreements (Don Miguel Ruiz) — The accessible distillation. Four principles for authentic living that bridge indigenous consciousness with modern applicability. Entry point, not depth.
Other Shamanic & Indigenous Wisdom
- The Way of the Shaman (Michael Harner) — Core shamanism made accessible; foundational for understanding the shamanic worldview cross-culturally.
- Black Elk Speaks — Lakota holy man’s vision of the sacred hoop, the six grandfathers, and the unity of all life. One of the most direct indigenous expressions of what Harmonism calls harmony.
- Of Water and the Spirit (Malidoma Patrice Somé) — Ritual, magic, and initiation in the life of an African Dagara shaman. Expands the shamanic lens beyond the Andean and Mesoamerican traditions.
III — Political Philosophy & Civilizational Vision
Texts that inform the Architecture of Harmony — the civilizational blueprint.
- The Dharma Manifesto (Sri Dharma Pravartaka Acharya) — The single most directly relevant political-philosophical text for the Architecture. Argues that Dharma (Natural Law) should be the ordering principle of civilization — the exact center of the Architecture. Comprehensive in scope: governance, education, culture, economics, ecology, family, spirituality. Harmonism diverges from its polemical framing and nationalist political orientation but draws deeply on its foundational ontology.
- Sanatana Dharma: The Eternal Natural Way (Sri Dharma Pravartaka Acharya) — Companion to The Dharma Manifesto; systematic exposition of Sanatana Dharma as universal metaphysical framework. Integration pending.
- Muqaddimah (Ibn Khaldun) — The first systematic theory of civilizational rise and decline, written by a 14th-century North African polymath. Introduces asabiyyah (group cohesion) as the force that builds and sustains civilizations — directly relevant to the Community pillar of the Architecture. Philosophically essential and personally resonant given Harmonism’s cross-civilizational aspirations.
- The Art of War (Sun Tzu) — Strategic thinking distilled; applicable to any domain requiring precision, timing, and awareness. Relevant to Governance and Leadership within the Architecture.
- The Prince (Niccolò Machiavelli) — Realpolitik stripped of illusion. Not a moral guide but an indispensable education in how power actually operates — necessary reading for anyone who intends to build institutions that serve Dharma rather than merely aspire to it.
- The Network State (Balaji Srinivasan) — The thesis that new sovereign communities can be built digitally before physically. Directly relevant to Harmonia’s phasing: digital infrastructure → community → land → sovereignty. The most contemporary articulation of how civilizational alternatives might actually emerge.
IV — Sovereignty, Sound Money & Financial Dharma
The financial dimension of aligned living. Bitcoin is the monetary backbone of Harmonia — treasury reserve, sovereignty instrument, international financial base. These texts ground the philosophical and strategic case.
- The Bitcoin Standard (Saifedean Ammous) — The foundational text on sound money, time preference, and why Bitcoin is the hardest monetary technology ever created. Reframes economics through the lens of scarcity, energy, and civilization — connecting monetary integrity to civilizational health in a way that directly serves Harmonism thesis: Bitcoin preserves value; Integral Harmony gives it purpose.
- The Sovereign Individual (James Dale Davidson & William Rees-Mogg) — Prophetic analysis (written 1997) of how digital technology would dissolve the nation-state’s monopoly on identity, money, and governance. Anticipates Bitcoin, remote work, and network states. Essential context for Harmonia’s sovereignty strategy.
- Small Is Beautiful: Economics as if People Mattered (E.F. Schumacher) — The philosophical case for human-scale economics and right livelihood. Schumacher’s “Buddhist economics” — production for sufficiency rather than maximization, work as participation rather than alienated labor, scale subordinated to human dignity — is the closest Western economics has come to Dharma-aligned financial practice. A necessary counterweight to the accumulation logic that Bitcoin sovereignty makes it possible to exit.
- The Richest Man in Babylon (George S. Clason) — Financial wisdom in parable form. The simplest and most durable expression of sound money principles: pay yourself first, make your gold work for you, guard against loss.
V — Health, Nutrition & the Body
Nutrition & Conscious Eating
- Conscious Eating (Gabriel Cousens) — Comprehensive exploration of how food choices affect consciousness, health, and spiritual evolution. Foundational for nutrition as practice, not mere fuel.
- Spiritual Nutrition (Gabriel Cousens) — Integrates ancient nutritional wisdom with modern nutrition science; connects dietary choices to energy, consciousness, and service.
- Nutrition and Physical Degeneration (Weston A. Price) — The empirical demonstration that traditional diets produce physical vitality and modern processed diets produce degeneration. Price traveled to 14 isolated traditional cultures and documented what happens when they adopt Western food. The scientific bedrock for Harmonism’s nutrition philosophy.
- Deep Nutrition (Catherine Shanahan) — Modern synthesis of ancestral nutrition science; the four pillars of traditional cooking that sustain health across generations. Bridges Price’s empirical work with contemporary biochemistry.
- Nourishing Traditions (Sally Fallon) — Practical companion to Price’s research; traditional food preparation (fermentation, bone broths, raw dairy) as living nutritional practice.
- Rainbow Green Live Food Cuisine (Gabriel Cousens) — Practical guide to plant-based nutrition with spiritual intention.
- The Yoga of Nutrition (Omraam Mikhaël Aïvanhov) — Eating as a spiritual practice and meditation; aligns nutrition with energy cultivation.
- Healing with Whole Foods (Paul Pitchford) — Chinese medicine and nutritional wisdom for prevention and healing.
Longevity, Bioelectricity & the Living Body
- Outlive: The Science and Art of Longevity (Peter Attia) — The most rigorous contemporary framework for healthspan extension. Addresses the four horsemen (heart disease, cancer, metabolic disease, neurodegeneration) with clinical precision. The modern science complement to Harmonism’s health architecture.
- Earthing (Clinton Ober) — The science of grounding: how direct contact with the Earth’s electrical field reduces inflammation, improves sleep, and normalizes cortisol. Bridges Nature and Health — the body-Earth electrical connection as literal alignment with the living Cosmos.
- The Invisible Rainbow (Arthur Firstenberg) — History of electricity and its effects on life. A heterodox but important thesis on how electromagnetic fields affect biological systems — relevant to Harmonism’s treatment of the Energy Field as a dimension of health.
- The Body Electric (Robert O. Becker) — Pioneering research on bioelectricity, regeneration, and the body’s electrical systems. Scientific grounding for the energy body’s physical substrate.
- The Biology of Belief (Bruce Lipton) — Epigenetics and the power of consciousness to influence gene expression; the scientific case for Harmonist position that consciousness shapes matter.
Breath & Energy Work
- Breatheology (Stig Severinsen) — The science and practice of conscious breathing. Belongs under Presence (Breath/Pranayama pillar).
VI — Taoist Arts & Internal Practice
The Taoist stream of Harmonism — energy cultivation, internal alchemy, and the refinement of Jing → Qi → Shen.
- Awakening Healing Energy Through the Tao (Mantak Chia) — The microcosmic orbit: foundational practice for circulating chi through the body’s energy channels. Entry point to Chia’s system.
- Iron Shirt Chi Kung (Mantak Chia) — Rooting, structural alignment, and the condensation of chi into the organs and bones. The physical-energetic foundation.
- The Multi-Orgasmic Man / Taoist Secrets of Love (Mantak Chia) — Sexual energy cultivation and transmutation. Sacred sexuality as energy practice, not recreation.
- The Tao of Health, Sex, and Longevity (Daniel Reid) — Comprehensive guide to Taoist lifestyle, diet, and energy cultivation.
- The Complete System of Self-Healing (Dr. Stephen T. Chang) — Taoist health practices for self-sufficiency in wellness.
VII — Yogic & Mystical Autobiography
- Autobiography of a Yogi (Paramahansa Yogananda) — The foundational first-person transmission of Kriya Yoga to the West, descending through the Babaji → Lahiri Mahasaya → Sri Yukteswar lineage that runs to Yogananda. Life story illustrating yoga’s transformative power and direct experience of divine consciousness. One of the most influential spiritual books of the twentieth century. Read alongside Sri Yukteswar’s The Holy Science (Section I) for the doctrinal architecture beneath the lived narrative.
- Siddhartha (Hermann Hesse) — The spiritual seeker’s journey from doctrine to direct experience. The novel that most clearly expresses Harmonism principle that truth must be lived, not merely believed.
- The Doors of Perception (Aldous Huxley) — The foundational Western text on entheogenic experience as epistemological event. Relevant to the Entheogens pillar of the Wheel of Presence — sacred plant medicine as a valid mode of knowing.
VIII — Systems, Consciousness & Self-Knowledge
Integral & Evolutionary Maps
- Gene Keys: Unlocking the Higher Purpose Hidden in Your DNA (Richard Rudd) — The activation sequence of human consciousness through the genetic matrix; bridges ancient wisdom (I Ching) with modern consciousness. A practical system for connecting purpose with service.
- The Wisdom of the Enneagram (Don Riso & Russ Hudson) — Nine Enneagram personality types and their spiritual unfolding; deepens self-knowledge essential for authentic connection and conscious growth.
Psychology & Depth
- Man’s Search for Meaning (Viktor Frankl) — Finding purpose through suffering; the existential foundation of resilience and service. Logotherapy’s core thesis — that meaning is the primary drive — aligns directly with Harmonist position that Dharma (alignment with purpose) is the center of a well-lived life.
- Modern Man in Search of a Soul (Carl Jung) — The analytical psychology companion to Harmonism. Shadow work, individuation, archetypes, the collective unconscious. Jung’s model of psychic integration parallels the Wheel’s diagnostic function: finding where the soul is fragmented and restoring wholeness.
- The Road Less Traveled (M. Scott Peck) — Discipline, love, and spiritual growth as the path to psychological maturity.
- The Way of the Superior Man (David Deida) — Masculine consciousness, sexual polarity, and spiritual purpose. Practical framework for the Warrior & Gender Path within the Learning sub-wheel.
IX — Nature, Permaculture & Ecology
- Permaculture: A Designers’ Manual (Bill Mollison) — Foundational text on regenerative design principles; the framework for systems aligned with natural law.
- One Straw Revolution (Masanobu Fukuoka) — Radical simplicity in farming; the philosophy of do-nothing agriculture as spiritual practice. Fukuoka’s insight — that nature already knows what to do, and the farmer’s job is to stop interfering — is the ecological expression of Presence.
- Gaia’s Garden (Toby Hemenway) — Accessible permaculture for the home scale; practical design for regenerative food systems.
- Edible Forest Gardens Vol. 1 & 2 — Polyculture systems that mimic natural ecosystems; demonstrates systems thinking applied to food and land.
- Braiding Sweetgrass (Robin Wall Kimmerer) — Indigenous botanical science meeting ecological reverence. Embodies what the Nature wheel describes: Reverence as center, science and sacred relationship as complementary. Kimmerer is a Potawatomi plant ecologist — the integration is not metaphorical.
- Mycelium Running (Paul Stamets) — The hidden intelligence of fungi and their role in ecosystem health. Nature’s networks as both literal biology and metaphor for the web of connection Harmonism seeks to strengthen.
- Sepp Holzer & Geoff Lawton resources — Living examples of regenerative agriculture and permaculture mastery.
X — Relationships, Sacred Union & Poetry
Conscious Conception & Parenting
- Brighton Baby — Comprehensive guide to conscious preconception, pregnancy, and early childhood; foundation for raising connected, healthy beings from conception.
- The Continuum Concept (Jean Liedloff) — The anthropological study that exposed how far modern Western parenting has drifted from the evolutionary baseline. Liedloff lived with Yequana people in the Venezuelan jungle and observed what children raised with continuous body contact, on-demand feeding, and integration into adult life actually look like: easy, confident, non-manipulative. The parenting spoke of the Relationships wheel begins here — not with techniques, but with understanding what the human infant is actually designed to receive.
Sacred Union & The Psychology of Relationship
- Women Who Run With the Wolves (Clarissa Pinkola Estés) — The recovery of the instinctual feminine through myth, fairy tale, and depth psychology. Estés identifies the “wild woman” archetype — the animating force beneath social conditioning — as the source of creative vitality, relational authenticity, and spiritual endurance. The feminine pole of the Couple and Family spokes; the voice the relationships section was missing.
- Nonviolent Communication (Marshall Rosenberg) — Not philosophy but method distilled from a genuine ontological stance: that every human action, however destructive, is an attempt to meet a real need, and that the inability to name needs accurately is the structural root of relational violence. Distinguishing observations from evaluations, feelings from thoughts, needs from strategies — these are the technical instruments of the Communication spoke. Covers the Couple, Family, Community, and Communication spokes simultaneously.
Love, Poetry & Spiritual Communion
- How to Love (Thich Nhat Hanh) — The Buddhist teacher’s concentrated teaching on love as practice. The four elements — loving-kindness (metta), compassion (karuṇā), joy (muditā), equanimity (upekkhā) — and the central insight that understanding is the other name for love: you cannot love what you have not understood, including yourself. Among the shortest and densest books on this list.
- The Gift (Hafiz, trans. Daniel Ladinsky) — Sufi ecstatic poetry; divine love and human love as one movement. The literary expression of the heart (Anahata) fully open.
- The Prophet (Khalil Gibran) — Poetic wisdom on love, marriage, freedom, and the sacred dimension of interdependence.
- Rumi’s Poetry (especially The Essential Rumi, trans. Coleman Barks; Mathnawi) — The supreme poet of divine love and union. Language that operates at the level of the heart, not the intellect.
XI — Service, Leadership & Strategy
- Servant Leadership (Robert K. Greenleaf) — The foundational articulation of leadership as stewardship. Greenleaf’s core claim — that the great leader is servant first, and that the test of leadership is whether those served grow as persons — is the organizational expression of Dharma in action. The functional definition of the Service pillar’s Leadership spoke.
- Reinventing Organizations (Frederic Laloux) — Maps the evolution of organizational consciousness from domination through conformity and achievement to what Laloux calls Teal: self-management, wholeness, evolutionary purpose. The most Harmonism-aligned organizational theory in existence; the Architecture of Harmony rendered at the institutional scale, showing what organizations look like when they stop treating human beings as resources and start treating them as souls.
- The Fifth Discipline (Peter Senge) — Systems thinking, personal mastery, mental models, shared vision, team learning. Senge’s argument — that organizations become pathological when they lose the capacity to learn, and that systems thinking is the discipline that integrates all others — mirrors Harmonism’s diagnostic function exactly. Essential for the Systems & Operations spoke of Service.
XII — Podcasts & Interviews
Long-form conversations that reveal the thinking process of consequential individuals — strategy, philosophy, engineering, civilizational vision. A different medium from books: less polished, more revealing of how minds actually work under pressure.
- Jensen Huang × Lex Fridman (2025) — Three-hour conversation with NVIDIA’s CEO. Covers extreme systems co-design, the four A.I. scaling laws, the CUDA install-base strategy as moat, leadership through collective reasoning (60+ direct reports, no one-on-ones, shaping belief systems over years before announcing decisions), “speed of light” first-principles engineering, China’s builder-nation culture and open-source dynamics, supply chain as civilizational architecture, the TSMC trust relationship, and the explicit distinction between intelligence (functional, commoditizable) and humanity (consciousness, character, irreducible). Huang: “Intelligence is a commodity… the word we should really elevate is humanity. Character, humanity. Compassion, generosity… those are superhuman powers.” Independently validates Harmonism ontological position on A.I. under Stewardship. Essential listening for Service (Leadership, Vocation), Matter (Technology, Stewardship), and the A.I. dimension of the The Integral Age.
XIII — Recreation, Storytelling & Visionary Art
Films & Documentaries
- Baraka / Samsara (Ron Fricke) — Visual meditation on the human condition; wordless cinema that embodies Harmonist perspective on unity and disharmony.
- Koyaanisqatsi (Godfrey Reggio) — “Life out of balance” — the thesis of Harmonism rendered in visual form.
- Into the Wild — The call of nature and the limits of solitary seeking; the tension between freedom and connection.
- The Matrix — Awakening from constructed reality; the red pill as metaphor for integral awareness.
- Studio Ghibli Films (Hayao Miyazaki) — Harmony with nature, childhood wisdom, the sacred in the ordinary.
See also: Greatest Films for the extended Harmonism film canon.
Fiction as Philosophical Instrument
- Crime and Punishment / The Brothers Karamazov (Fyodor Dostoevsky) — The deepest fictional explorations of conscience, guilt, redemption, and the existence of God. Dostoevsky dramatizes what Harmonism articulates philosophically: that ethics emerge from alignment with a real moral order, not from convention.
- Dune (Frank Herbert) — Ecology, consciousness, political power, sacred substances, the dangers of messianic leadership. A systems novel that touches nearly every Harmonism dimension: Nature, Governance, Presence, Entheogens, Service.
- 1984 (George Orwell) / Brave New World (Aldous Huxley) — The two poles of civilizational dystopia: control through pain vs. control through pleasure. Essential negative examples for the Architecture of Harmony — what happens when civilization systematically violates Dharma.
The Visual Narrative Canon
Visual storytelling at its deepest — warrior paths, metaphysical epics, existential confrontation, the transmutation of suffering into transcendence. These are not entertainment but narrative philosophy.
Manga — Essential Reading:
- Berserk (Kentaro Miura) — The supreme dark epic. Guts’ struggle against fate, sacrifice, and the demonic is the warrior path taken to its absolute limit. Willpower as spiritual force.
- Vagabond (Takehiko Inoue) — Musashi’s path from killer to gardener; one of the most Harmonism-resonant manga ever drawn. The Wheel of Presence through the way of the sword.
- Lone Wolf and Cub (Koike/Kojima) — The foundational warrior-path manga. Ogami Ittō’s walk is Dharma, sacrifice, and the ronin as spiritual archetype.
- Saint Seiya (Masami Kurumada) — Mythic combat, cosmic hierarchy, the warrior’s devotion to a transcendent principle. The childhood initiation into everything Harmonism articulates philosophically.
- Hokuto no Ken — The warrior as healer, destroyer, and bearer of sorrow. Kenshiro’s journey is compassion armed with lethal precision.
- Kingdom (Yasuhisa Hara) — War, statecraft, and the forging of a unified civilization. The Architecture of Harmony in epic narrative form.
- Devilman (Go Nagai) — The original dark metaphysical epic. Good and evil, sacrifice, apocalypse, the cost of consciousness. Everything from Berserk to Evangelion descends from this.
- Buddha (Osamu Tezuka) — Siddhartha’s path rendered by the god of manga.
- Fullmetal Alchemist (Hiromu Arakawa) — Equivalent exchange, sacrifice, the search for wholeness. Alchemy as metaphor for spiritual transformation — the Hermetic principle in shōnen form.
Anime — Essential Viewing:
- Vinland Saga — Warrior path → pacifism → spiritual transformation. One of the most Harmonism-aligned anime in existence.
- Mushishi — Pure Presence animated. Nature, reverence, stillness. Each episode is a meditation.
- Legend of the Galactic Heroes — Political philosophy, war, destiny, civilizational architecture. The Architecture of Harmony in anime form.
- Ghost in the Shell — Consciousness, identity, the boundary between human and machine. The philosophical question Harmonism answers with its ontology of the soul.
- Cowboy Bebop — Existential solitude, karma, the weight of the past. Cool surface, devastating depth.
- Princess Mononoke (Hayao Miyazaki) — Nature vs. civilization, spiritual ecology, the cost of progress. The Wheel of Nature rendered as myth.
Bandes Dessinées — Essential Reading:
- Works of Alejandro Jodorowsky — L’Incal, La Caste des Metabarons, Le Lama Blanc; visionary art that bridges shamanic consciousness with narrative. The single most Harmonism-resonant body of work in European comics.
- Moebius — The World of Edena, Arzach; transcendent visual imagination. Consciousness exploration through pure graphic art.
- Enki Bilal — La Trilogie Nikopol; dystopian prophecy with mythological depth.
- Jean Van Hamme — Largo Winch, Thorgal, XIII; strategic intelligence and mythic adventure.
- Les Cités Obscures (Schuiten & Peeters) — Philosophical, architectural, metaphysical. Cities as living organisms governed by invisible principles.
See The Visual Narrative Canon for the comprehensive collection: favorites & priority reading lists ranked by Harmonism resonance.
XIV — Death, Dying & Conscious Transition
The recovery of what the West forgot: how to die with grace, how to accompany the dying, and what the traditions and modern investigators have mapped of the terrain beyond physical death. See Dying Consciously.
Books
- Shaman, Healer, Sage (Alberto Villoldo) — The foundational text for the Andean death rites. Introduces the Luminous Energy Field, the 8-chakra system, and the energy medicine practices through which the Q’ero tradition accompanies the dying. The Great Death Spiral, chakra cleansing, and the luminous body’s journey home are all grounded here.
- Life After Life (Raymond Moody) — The 1975 classic that introduced the term “near-death experience” to the Western world. Based on accounts of 100 individuals pronounced clinically dead and revived. The recurring patterns — tunnel, beings of light, panoramic life review, overwhelming love — converge precisely with what the shamanic traditions mapped independently through centuries of direct exploration.
- On Death and Dying (Elisabeth Kübler-Ross) — The work that broke the Western taboo on talking about death. The five stages of grief are the most widely known contribution, but the deeper legacy is Kübler-Ross’s insistence that the dying have something to teach the living — and that modern medicine’s refusal to engage with death as a human event rather than a clinical failure is itself a civilisational pathology.
- On Life After Death (Elisabeth Kübler-Ross) — Four essays drawn from two decades of working with the dying and studying near-death experiences. More personal and metaphysically direct than On Death and Dying. Kübler-Ross here speaks openly about the survival of consciousness, the luminous beings encountered at the threshold, and her own certainty — grounded in clinical observation — that death is not an ending.
- The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying (Sogyal Rinpoche) — The most accessible presentation of the Tibetan Buddhist teachings on death and the bardos. Three million copies in 34 languages. Maps the dissolution of the elements, the dawning of the ground luminosity, the bardo of becoming, and the practice of phowa (consciousness transference). The Tibetan cartography’s equivalent of what Villoldo transmits from the Andean tradition.
- The Tibetan Book of the Dead (Bardo Thodol) — The primary source text. “Liberation Through Hearing During the Intermediate State.” Read to the dying and recently deceased to guide consciousness through the bardo stages. The Padmasambhava transmission that underpins the entire Tibetan tradition of conscious death.
- The Four Insights: Wisdom, Power, and Grace of the Earthkeepers (Alberto Villoldo) — The four core wisdom teachings of the Laika tradition: the way of the hero, the luminous warrior, the seer, and the sage. The “way of the sage” directly concerns mastering the death process — dying consciously and stepping beyond time.
Organisations & Websites
- The Four Winds Society — Villoldo’s organisation; offers the Light Body School curriculum and periodic Dying Consciously teacher trainings. The institutional carrier of the Andean death rites in the modern world.
- Dying Consciously — The dedicated project of the Institute for Energy Medicine (IEM), the non-profit arm of the Four Winds. Free educational resources, step-by-step guides to the death rites, volunteer network, and training information.
- IANDS (International Association for Near-Death Studies) — The premier research organisation for near-death experience investigation. Curated film lists, peer-reviewed publications, local support groups, and conference archives. The most rigorous institutional bridge between NDE testimony and academic inquiry.
- Living/Dying Project — Founded by Dale Borglum, a spiritual approach to conscious dying combining contemplative practice with direct service to the dying. Audio, video, and meditation resources.
- The Art of Dying Well — Practical guidance on accepting mortality, advance care planning, and finding meaning in the dying process. Bridges the clinical and spiritual dimensions.
YouTube & Media
- Coming Home — Near-death experience testimonies presented with care and depth. Run by twin brothers dedicated to collecting and sharing NDE accounts whose messages illuminate what the traditions have long taught: consciousness survives the body, the life review is real, and love is the organising principle of what lies beyond.
- The Four Winds — The Great Death Rites — Villoldo’s own presentation of the death rites: overview of the luminous energy field at the time of death, the steps of the Great Spiral, and the purpose of sealing the chakras.
- IANDS NDE Films & Series — Curated list of recommended documentaries and series on near-death experiences, maintained by the leading research organisation in the field.
XV — Bodily Sovereignty & Circumcision
The research and advocacy landscape for those examining circumcision from a bodily sovereignty perspective. These organizations and databases represent the most rigorous and useful entry points — ranging from the comprehensive scholarly reference library to medical professionals speaking from within the profession. See Circumcision: The Hidden Trauma.
Research & Reference
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CIRP — Circumcision Information and Resource Pages — The most comprehensive scholarly reference library on circumcision available online. Founded 1995. Searchable database of peer-reviewed literature covering anatomy, harm, history, psychology, and ethics; full text of all major medical organization policy statements (AAP, BMA, RACP, etc.); and detailed procedural documentation. The essential starting point for anyone wanting to read the actual science rather than institutional summaries of it.
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Doctors Opposing Circumcision (DOC) — Non-profit founded 1995 by George Denniston, MD. Medical and health professionals arguing from within their own profession that non-therapeutic infant circumcision violates the foundational medical principles of non-maleficence and informed consent. Includes medical organization statements, resources for professionals seeking conscientious objection guidance, and scholarly commentary.
Psychology & Harm
- Circumcision Resource Center — Founded by Ron Goldman, PhD, whose research on the psychological sequelae of circumcision — grief, rage, and retrospective harm in adult men — is among the most developed work in this dimension. Education, counseling resources, and speaking. The psychological literature on circumcision is thin; Goldman’s work is the primary exception.
Advocacy
- Intact America — The largest professional advocacy organization opposing circumcision in the United States. Well-organized entry point for parents, with documented evidence of institutional pressure tactics used by US hospitals and healthcare providers to push circumcision regardless of parental preference. Founded 2008 by Georganne Chapin.
Key Thinkers & Influences
Convergent voices Harmonism stands alongside. Ordered by depth of convergence with the system.
- Alberto Villoldo — Primary lineage of practice transmission. Shamanic practitioner and energy medicine pioneer; the 8-chakra system, the Luminous Energy Field, the Four Insights. The Q’ero-stream practice lineage flowing into Harmonism’s lived register
- Sri Aurobindo — Evolutionary philosopher; The Life Divine offers the most elaborate modern articulation of integrating matter and spirit, with which Harmonism converges on its own ground
- Jean Gebser — Consciousness historian; the structures of consciousness that explain why integral synthesis is possible now
- Sri Dharma Pravartaka Acharya — Vedic philosopher; the most significant external voice for the Architecture of Harmony’s civilizational vision
- René Guénon — Traditionalist philosopher; the diagnosis of modernity that the Architecture of Harmony seeks to remedy
- Ken Wilber — Integral theorist; the AQAL map that Harmonism transforms from epistemology into ontological blueprint
- Carlos Castaneda — Toltec transmission; the assemblage point, the three centers, impeccability as Presence
- Gabriel Cousens — Holistic physician; integrates nutrition, consciousness, and spirituality
- Mantak Chia — Taoist master; energy cultivation, internal alchemy, sacred sexuality
- Nassim Haramein — Theoretical physicist whose holofractographic model of the universe converges with Harmonism’s cosmological architecture: the vacuum as infinite potentiality (the Pregnant Silence), the proton as microcosm (holographic information density), the torus as fundamental creation dynamic (the soul’s double-torus geometry), fractal scaling (Logos at every scale). See The Fractal Pattern of Creation
- Paul Stamets — Mycologist; nature’s intelligence through fungi and symbiotic networks
- Truth Calkins — To be expanded. Jing mastery, tonic herbalism, the embodied dimension of health sovereignty
- Omraam Mikhaël Aïvanhov — Bulgarian mystic; the sacred dimension of daily practices
- Paramahansa Yogananda — Yoga master; direct realization through sustained spiritual practice
- Ibn Khaldun — Civilizational theorist; the dynamics of social cohesion and decline
Cross-References & Integration
This library supports learning across all Harmonism dimensions:
- Presence — breath, meditation, consciousness, virtue, entheogens
- Health — nutrition, sleep, recovery, movement, purification
- Matter — stewardship, technology, finances, self-sufficiency
- Service — vocation, leadership, collaboration, right livelihood
- Relationships — couple, parenting, family, community, communication
- Learning — philosophy, practical skills, healing arts, science
- Nature — permaculture, ecology, water, animals, planting
- Recreation — music, film, sports, reading, travel, social gatherings
Notes for Contributors
This collection grows as the Harmonia community discovers and integrates new resources. Each entry includes an annotation explaining relevance to Harmonism. Areas marked “to be expanded” invite research and contribution. Use wiki-links for Harmonism-internal concepts; use Grokipedia links for external figures and concepts on first mention. Prioritize resources that bridge wisdom traditions with contemporary understanding and practical application.
Last updated: 2026-04-20