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Heavens on Earth: The Scientific Search for the Afterlife, Immortality, and Utopia Kindle Edition

4.4 out of 5 stars 225 ratings

A scientific exploration into humanity's obsession with the afterlife and quest for immortality from the bestselling author and skeptic Michael Shermer


In his most ambitious work yet, Shermer sets out to discover what drives humans' belief in life after death, focusing on recent scientific attempts to achieve immortality along with utopian attempts to create heaven on earth.


For millennia, religions have concocted numerous manifestations of heaven and the afterlife, and though no one has ever returned from such a place to report what it is really like--or that it even exists--today science and technology are being used to try to make it happen in our lifetime. From radical life extension to cryonic suspension to mind uploading, Shermer considers how realistic these attempts are from a proper skeptical perspective.
Heavens on Earth concludes with an uplifting paean to purpose and progress and how we can live well in the here-and-now, whether or not there is a hereafter.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"This book's theme is the one of greatest practical importance to all of us: does some heaven or afterlife await us after we die? Most Americans, and even many atheists, believe that the answer is 'yes.' If there is no heaven, how can we find purpose in life? Michael Shermer explores these big questions with the delightful, powerful style that made his previous books so successful--but this is his best book."
--
JARED DIAMOND, professor of geography at UCLA and Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Guns, Germs, and Steel and other books
"Thank goodness for Michael Shermer's sound and inspired mindfulness and for this importantly useful volume. Truly a delicious read. Ten Goldblums out of a possible ten Goldblums!"
--
JEFF GOLDBLUM, actor
"Heavens on Earth is absolutely brilliant, filled with profundity, startling facts, and mind-expanding ideas. Michael Shermer somehow manages to be entertaining and scientifically erudite at the same time. He also brings some of history's greatest thinkers to life and makes their ideas accessible. This is one of the most fascinating books I've read in a long time."
--
AMY CHUA, Yale Law professor and author of Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother and coauthor of The Triple Package
"I appreciate every evolutionary step skepticism takes toward openness. Heavens on Earth is an affirmation that other worldviews deserve respect and understanding. In this book science may actually be catching up with the world's wisdom traditions."
--
DEEPAK CHOPRA, M.D., coauthor of War of the Worldviews and You Are the Universe
"Michael Shermer is a beacon of reason in an ocean of irrationality."
--
NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON, director of the Hayden Planetarium, host of Cosmos and StarTalk, and author of Astrophysics for People in a Hurry

About the Author

Michael Shermer is the publisher of Skeptic magazine, a monthly columnist for Scientific American, and a Presidential Fellow at Chapman University. He is the author of The Moral Arc, The Believing Brain, and many other bestselling titles.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B072TZ735W
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Henry Holt and Co. (January 9, 2018)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 9, 2018
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 29.2 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 303 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 225 ratings

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Michael Shermer
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Dr. Michael Shermer is the Founding Publisher of Skeptic magazine, the host of the Science Salon Podcast, and a Presidential Fellow at Chapman University where he teaches Skepticism 101. For 18 years he was a monthly columnist for Scientific American. He is the author of New York Times bestsellers Why People Believe Weird Things and The Believing Brain, Why Darwin Matters, The Science of Good and Evil, The Moral Arc, and Heavens on Earth. His new book is Giving the Devil His Due: Reflections of a Scientific Humanist.

(Photo by Jordi Play)

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4.4 out of 5 stars
225 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book thought-provoking, with one review noting its hard scientific approach to life's big questions. Moreover, the writing style receives positive feedback for being well-written and easy to read, and customers appreciate its accessibility.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

21 customers mention "Thought-provoking"21 positive0 negative

Customers find the book thought-provoking, with one review highlighting its hard scientific approach to life's big questions, while others appreciate its informative content and interesting perspectives.

"...This is a well-argued and -written, fun- and thought-provoking book. The perfect gift if you know someone who's fixin' to check out!" Read more

"...Positives: 1. Shermer is a gifted writer. He has great command of the topic and is able to convey his thoughts in a clear, concise manner...." Read more

"...reasonable way of life for modern people that faces and answers the big questions in life...." Read more

"...The four parts deal with “Varieties of mortal experiences and immortal guests, the scientific search for immortality, our yesterdays and tomorrows,..." Read more

20 customers mention "Readability"20 positive0 negative

Customers find the book engaging and intriguing, with good stories that make it a worthy read.

"...The first half is a fascinating tour through all the various ways people try to outwit death, from paradises to mind-uploading and immortality pills...." Read more

"Michael Shermer has written a fine book based on his experiences as a skeptic encountering those who believe either in an afterlife or some sort of..." Read more

"Deep down, it is an important book that tackles some of the most difficult questions asked by humankind: is life all there is?..." Read more

"This is an excellent book...." Read more

14 customers mention "Writing style"14 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, finding it well-argued and easy to read, with one customer noting its relaxed tone.

"...than deep-drilling, entertaining rather than compelling, thoughtful instead of brilliant, and full of targets of opportunity in lieu of a single..." Read more

"...to be broadened by Shermer’s obvious breadth of knowledge, humor and integrity." Read more

"...reading this book very much as it explores in a clear, scientific, logical, and common-sense way our secret longings for heaven and immortality...." Read more

"..."Heavens on Earth" is erudite and well written, challenging the vocabulary of serious readers, and if you enjoyed Shermer's [..." Read more

3 customers mention "Accessibility"3 positive0 negative

Customers find the book accessible.

"...Heavens on Earth” is an intellectually provocative yet accessible book that explores the afterlife...." Read more

"Dr. Michael Shermer has written a wonderful, engaging and accessible book about one of the fundamental questions people across all cultures ask..." Read more

"...And the treatment of fascism is scholarly yet accessible and poignant to current events in the 2020s...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2018
    This may be Chief Skeptic Michael Shermer’s best book yet. For those wary of his theory in the Moral Arc, this one will be reassuring. Heavens on Earth is wide-ranging rather than deep-drilling, entertaining rather than compelling, thoughtful instead of brilliant, and full of targets of opportunity in lieu of a single objective. Very Shermer! He’s a fine guide to how the scientific set thinks about reality.

    There are two main foci and several ancillary ones. The first half is a fascinating tour through all the various ways people try to outwit death, from paradises to mind-uploading and immortality pills. Shermer isn’t impressed by any of them, although some have more scientific merit than others. They’re mostly infantile: some humans are so impressed with their own minds they think it should live forever in some future techno-Eden. Take the singularitarians: Ray Kurzweil is firmly convinced of his own immortality. But what would you say if, say, a fish decided to cheat death by uploading its mind into some corner of yours? It’s nothing against Ray’s brain, but the far future is likely to think that it’s served its purpose.

    This points to the internal contradiction of immortalism: it is the moral equivalent of death by stopping time. Either you die and life goes on, or neither. Shermer is on to this in his observation of the genetic necessity of death, or at least the continuous renewal of life. Another variant of this truth is the reported fact that in Heaven, everyone sooner or later asks to be allowed to just die – they can’t stand waking up to another perfectly perfect day in that giant cruise ship in the sky. Life’s about struggle.

    Shermer makes a dog-leg in the middle of the book, railing against fashionable declinism with a hyper-optimistic, Panglossian ode to progress and the idea that this is the most perfect of all possible times. Here he continues the cheerful theme of the Moral Arc, again building on Steven Pinker’s irrational exuberance with “how things are going these days.” You can cherry-pick a lot of facts and numbers to support this, and Shermer does. But there are so many issues here that it’s hard to know where to begin.

    Yes, the fraction of people living in desperate conditions has declined rapidly recently. But there are probably more of them than ever, because the total population is exploding. Yes, chattel slavery has nominally been outlawed. But slavery is a universal human institution; it simply takes new forms. There are far more real slaves today than ever before. Yes, we defeat one disease after another. New ones take their place. Yes, humans live longer – because they enslave and extinguish other species.

    The problem with the Pollyanna-Cassandra spectrum is obvious: Good and bad don’t exist except in our heads; they’re mere opinions. And, a rope has two ends; to say that one end is longer makes no sense. So the real skeptic would say only: things change; deal with it. Not once is Shermer (at least here) troubled by the real probability that humanity is self-destructing and taking most of creation with it; like rafters on the Niagara River, we are making terrific progress now! Don’t worry about the roar ahead!

    Shermer indulges in the materialist fallacy: that economic growth, or TVs and PCs and SUVs make for a better world. Our standard of living is, say, 10,000 times that of cave-man’s – but we are not 10,000 times happier than in the Stone Age, if at all. It doesn’t have anything to do with that. We minimize suffering by inclusive and respectful culture. Shermer surely knows this, but it is critical to point our that poverty is not the problem; material excess is.

    In transition, Shermer (whose job is to pop peoples’ balloons) promotes the Copernican Principle: that we are not “special.” Not the center of the universe; not God’s gift to same, deputized by Him to stomp on all the rest. There’s no Santa Claus, and we have no “rights.” Here Shermer is on to an even more fundamental principle we can call the Particularist Illusion: the notion that I/we, or our tribe/race/species/planet is “special.” (Overlaps with the controversial anthropic principle in physics.) It’s easy to see how the immortalists fall into this trap. But so do the human triumphalists, like Elon Musk, who wants to make “us” a multiplanetary species. He’d better take about a million other species with him – for as Shermer notes, even a human is merely trillions of ever-changing cells in close formation, not even, by far, of the same species!

    The Particularist Illusion also applies on the macro level: however much someone refuses to die, we are all increasingly minute cells in a global consciousness that is rapidly changing from a DNA to a technical substrate. Obviously, technical connectivity is the new neurological system; and while it’s hard to pin down where consciousness arises in the global superorganism, it’s equally hard to find in the human brain!
    Point is, life is all one chaotic process, one blob. Death doesn’t exist per se – leaves fall from the tree and new ones take their place. This macro-view is also why Shermer is wrong when he mocks the rising warnings against Artificial Intelligence. We are not really afraid that our Roombas are plotting against us. We recognize that everything, even down to the lightbulbs, are increasingly networked and subject to outside manipulation. Have we not already seen people’s minds taken over by forces they don’t understand? In contrast, Stephen Hawking is dead-on warning about this, but we can probably do nothing about it. If humans are obsolete, resistance is futile.

    The book’s second focus is a tour of utopias, which invariably turn into dystopias instead of the protopia sensible folks like Shermer advocate (incremental progress by trial and error). There are no revolutionary insights here, but a lot of amusing vignettes. Shermer gets around to quite a few fun places, from Fristad Christiania to Jonestown. Oddly, he doesn’t cite the kibbutzim, surely a critical proving ground of socialist utopianism. And he doesn’t mention the biggest and most successful utopia, the United States, a daring Enlightenment experiment. People are always trying to create their own utopias, large and small. They are bound to fail because they cannot outrun human nature.

    Here we get into genetics and eugenics. Critics, Shermer included, are keen to point out how foolishly provincial were early racial theorists. But folks like Darwin and Galton were on to a more fundamental insight: that the only way to improve the human condition in the long run is through genetic policing. It doesn’t mean killing those you don’t like; it means, for example, discouraging genetic diseases. Again, Hawking has said for decades that our best hope is in creating a genetically engineered brainy post-human species less inclined to mayhem than ours. (Perhaps a lot like Hawking sans ALS!)

    Shermer’s last section, How to Find Meaning where there is None, is his most heartfelt, serious and strenuous effort. It is also the least logical and persuasive. Most readers will probably nod in agreement with his long list of warm fuzzies that give “meaning” to life (meaning that Mike likes them). He gets quite Aynrandian in promoting self-actualization, Shakespearian in “to thine own self be true,” pastorial in emphasizing peace, love and compassion. Well, Hitler was true to himself. Allah is merciful; can’t always say the same for his followers.

    There is no better way to make smart people flail than by asking them the meaning of life, because it’s like asking them to divide by zero. The temptation is for a skeptic or scientist to indulge in ersatz-religious pontification. No animals ask this question: they know. The Tao nailed it: the meaning that can be described is not the true meaning.

    Shermer is not wrong, but people, not to mention other species, run different programs. So his challenge is to distill the essence and find the Ur-meaning. What distinguishes life from not-life? Agency. Life acts. Each organism is a middle finger against the Second Law of Thermodynamics. It’s the same for a fungus, a fruit fly, and Dr. Shermer: The world tries to kill you, you try to stay alive. If life has meaning, it lies in autonomy: acting at your own behest.

    This is a well-argued and -written, fun- and thought-provoking book. The perfect gift if you know someone who's fixin' to check out!
    23 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on February 15, 2018
    Heavens on Earth: The Scientific Search for the Afterlife, Immortality, and Utopia by Michael Shermer

    “Heavens on Earth” is an intellectually provocative yet accessible book that explores the afterlife. Dr. Michael Shermer is a well-known skeptic, professor and accomplished author of many books. This enlightening 303-page book includes twelve chapters broken out into the following four parts: I. Varieties of Mortal Experiences and Immortal Quests, II. The Scientific Search for Immortality, III. All Our Yesterdays and Tomorrows, and IV. Mortality and Meaning.

    Positives:
    1. Shermer is a gifted writer. He has great command of the topic and is able to convey his thoughts in a clear, concise manner.
    2. As fascinating a topic as you will find, the scientific search for the afterlife, in the capable hands of Shermer. “This book is about one of the most profound questions of the human condition, one that has driven theologians, philosophers, scientists, and all thinking people to try to understand the meaning and purpose of our life as mortal beings and discover how we can transcend our mortality.”
    3. Intellectually provocative. “To experience something, you must be alive, so we cannot personally experience death. Yet we know it is real because every one of the hundred billion people who lived before us is gone. That presents us with something of a paradox.”
    4. Makes great reference to other great authors. “In his book Immortality, for example, the British philosopher Stephen Cave contends that the attempt to resolve the paradox of being aware of our own mortality and yet not being able to imagine nonexistence has led to four immortality narratives: (1) Staying Alive: “like all living systems, we strive to avoid death. The dream of doing so forever—physically, in this world—is the most basic of immortality narratives.” (2) Resurrection: “the belief that, although we must physically die, nonetheless we can physically rise again with the bodies we knew in life.” (3) Soul: The “dream of surviving as some kind of spiritual entity.” (4) Legacy: “More indirect ways of extending ourselves into the future” such as glory, reputation, historical impact, or children.”
    5. The debunking of the soul. “The soul has been traditionally conceived as a separate entity (“soul stuff”) from the body, but neuroscience has demonstrated that the mind—consciousness, memory, and the sense of self representing “you”—cannot exist without a brain.”
    6. Interesting look at suicides. “People desire death when two fundamental needs are frustrated to the point of extinction; namely, the need to belong with or connect to others, and the need to feel effective with or to influence others.”
    7. A look at Christian heaven. “Once you get to the Christian heaven, what’s it like? Since no one has ever gone and come back with irrefutable evidence, believers must once again be content with biblical or theological narratives, sprung entirely from the imagination of the narrators.”
    8. Addresses ideas about the afterlife and immortality from the perspective of spiritual traditions. “Dualists believe that we consist of two substances—body and soul, brain and mind (called “substance dualism” by philosophers). Monists contend that there is just one substance—a body and a brain—from which consciousness is an emergent property, “mind” is just the term we use to describe what the brain is doing, and the soul is just the pattern of information that represents our thoughts, memories, and personalities.”
    9. Philosophically provocative questions. “In other words, if brains are not the source of consciousness, then what is?”
    10. Examines evidence for the afterlife. “And we can ask ourselves what’s more likely: that NDE accounts represent descriptions of actual journeys to the afterlife or are portrayals of experiences produced by brain activity? Many lines of evidence converge to support the theory that NDEs are produced by the brain and are not stairways to heaven.”
    11. Debunked claims and stories. “It is revealing that the author of The Boy Who Came Back from Heaven, improbably named Alex Malarkey, recanted his allegedly true story, admitting that he made it all up.”
    12. Examines reincarnation. “In this sense reincarnation is a type of cosmic justice in which the scales are ultimately balanced, or life redemption in which wrongs are righted and the crooked is made straight, and it fits squarely into the Law of Karma, which holds that the world is just so justice will prevail sooner (in this life) or later (in the next life).”
    13. A look at biases. “Such longings make us all subject to a number of cognitive biases, most notably the confirmation bias in which we look for and find confirming evidence and ignore disconfirming evidence.”
    14. Examines the soul. “The neurobiologist and philosopher Owen Flanagan summarizes the three primary characteristics of the soul: the unity of experience (a sense of self or “I”), personal identity (the feeling of being the same person over the course of a lifetime), and personal immortality (the survival of death).” “The vast majority of people base such belief on religious faith, but science tells us that all three of these characteristics are illusions.”
    15. So can science conquer death? “They are the cryonicists, extropians, transhumanists, Omega Point theorists, singularitarians, and mind uploaders, and they are serious about defeating death.” “As the name suggests, singularitarians are scientists considering singularity-level technologies to engineer immortality by, among other things, transferring your soul—the pattern of information that represents your thoughts and memories as stored in the connectome of your brain—into a computer.”
    16. A look at utopias. “In 1935 a former chicken farmer instituted the Society for Research and Teaching of the Ancestral Inheritance, devoted to the historical and anthropological search for the origin of the superior Germanic race. His name was Heinrich Himmler, and he went on to became the Reichsführer of the Nazi Schutzstaffel (SS) and the titular head of the Reich’s die Endlösung der Judenfrage—the final solution to the Jewish problem. Such is the power of myth when put into action.”
    17. So was Atlantis real? Find out.
    18. A look at Hitler’s inspiration. “Adolf Hitler, in fact, read Chamberlain’s biography of Wagner, and he drew heavily from the racial theorist for his own ideas about racial purity, one of which was that for the Germanic peoples to survive, the Jews would have to be removed from German society.” “All such utopias are premised on a vision of a past that never was and a projected future that can never be, a heaven on earth turned to hell.”
    19. A look at why we die. “For scientists, the ultimate answer to why we age and die begins (and ends) with the Second Law of Thermodynamics, which guarantees that the cosmos is running down and in the long run must come to an end hundreds of billions of years from now.” “To date, no convincing evidence showing the administration of existing ‘anti-aging’ remedies can slow aging or increase longevity in humans is available.”
    20. Interesting perspectives. “Participants reminded of global warming, for example, were more supportive of international peacemaking, in the sense that a threat to all of us reduces the concerns about the differences between us.”

    Negatives:
    1. Honestly, this wasn’t Shermer’s best effort.
    2. Lacks depth.
    3. No formal bibliography.

    In summary, I enjoyed this book. Shermer has a knack for covering very interesting topics and does so with the layperson in mind. I like Shermer’s approach and what keeps this book from five stars is the lack of depth and dare I say I sense the book was rushed. It lacks the awe I sensed from what I consider his greatest book, The Believing Brain. That said, I’ve enjoyed Shermer’s books and look forward to more material in the future. I recommend it!

    Further suggestions: “The Believing Brain” and “Why People Believe Weird Things?” by the same author, “Immortality” by Stephen Cave, “The Problem of the Soul” by Owen J. Flanagan, “Science in the Soul” by Richard Dawkins, “The Physics of the Future” by Machio Kaku, and “How to Create a Mind” by Ray Kurzweil.
    32 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • galloway
    4.0 out of 5 stars Il cielo in terra?
    Reviewed in Italy on May 28, 2021
    Un affascinante viaggio nell'ignoto. In fondo tutto ruota intorno alle classiche 5 domande: chi cosa quando dove perché. Ognuno di noi se le fa dando risposte diverse. Solo noi umani possiamo farcele senza però essere in grado di rompere il muro della nostra ignoranza nella quale siamo imprigionati sin da quando quello spermatozoo colpisce quell'ovulo. Il cielo in terra. Con queste parole l'autore chiude il suo libro. Ma non mi pare che abbia risolto il problema. Ed io resto qui ancora a chiedermi chi sono, cosa ci faccio qui, perché sono qui, da dove vengo e dove andrò e sopratutto il perché di tutto questo. Per me come per i milioni e milioni di altri miei simili, bianchi, neri o gialli, giovani o vecchi, ignoranti o sapienti, di ieri di oggi e di domani, tutti senza una risposta. Il cielo in terra ...
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  • Ian Liberman
    5.0 out of 5 stars I highly recommend the book and I actually think it is best ...
    Reviewed in Canada on March 26, 2018
    I highly recommend the book and I actually think it is best that I have read. You learn about different cultures and how they approach death while Michael examines the science behind no afterlife. Worth every penny. Congrats to Michael Shermer.
  • Avid Reader
    5.0 out of 5 stars Good
    Reviewed in India on April 19, 2021
    I have always wanted to read about Afterlife and this book was really interested.
  • Walter
    5.0 out of 5 stars Has led me to become an Atheist
    Reviewed in Germany on February 15, 2021
    Was a very devout believer before this . Book changend my mind completely. If you want the ultimate atheist starter pack i recommend also 'The Good Book of Human Nature. An Evolutionary Reading of the Bible' by Carel van Schaik and 'Alpha God: The Psychology of Religious Violence and Oppression' by Hector A. Garcia. This book willl always have a special place in my bookshelf
  • Ted
    5.0 out of 5 stars Total Sanity Michael, my sanity and interest is even more than ever before
    Reviewed in Australia on August 17, 2021
    The writing is clear, sane, scientific, not aggressive, humanistic thoughts about life and facts thereof…I am touched and educated,glad that there are people like Shermer who can also write so well
    Ted

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