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It's all good: The appeal of Deepak Chopra
What pulls people like Michael Jackson, Demi Moore and Bill Clinton to this spiritual tycoon? Is it a hunger for wonders or lack of sense?

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By David Beers

May 10, 2001 | I am reading "How To Know God" by Deepak Chopra as I sit in Helen's Grill, a greasy spoon near my home in Vancouver, British Columbia. Outside the window in the rain, framed within the newspaper vending box, is the face of a young, beautiful girl. Next to that face is headline type, big and black: "'Amazing' teen killed in Whistler crash."

For some reason the words reinforce the illusion that the little vinyl and Formica world of Helen's Grill is a shared refuge, a place immune to life's random ravages.

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Deepak Chopra, the spiritual instructor who appears on Larry King and Oprah, the alternative healer with the handsome looks of a Bollywood movie star, the personal source of inspiration to Michael Jackson, Naomi Judd and Bill Clinton, has sold 10 million books.


 
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Here is some of what Chopra, a former endocrinologist in Boston hospitals, believes and teaches:

  • That a person is a field of vibrating energy, information and intelligence connected to the entire cosmos;
  • That this view is substantiated by Ayurvedic medicine of ancient India as well as theories of quantum physics;
  • That all organs of the body are built up from a specific sequence of vibrations, and that when organs are sick they are vibrating improperly;
  • That certain herbs and aromas, when applied, can help restore proper vibrations to malfunctioning liver, heart, stomach, etc.;
  • That certain gems and crystals can rejuvenate human skin;
  • That good thoughts can heal the body and reverse the aging process;
  • That people can levitate and that he, while sitting and meditating, has flown a distance of four feet;
  • That one can know God at seven different levels corresponding to physical and psychological reactions in the brain, and that miracles, including visits by angels and reincarnated relatives, occur when a person leaves the material level of existence and intersects a "transitional" level called the "quantum domain";
  • That anyone following his methods can achieve "unlimited wealth" and a "brilliantly blissful life."

    Chopra does not believe reports that he once described himself as "just a regular guy with the gift of gab." As he told me in a recent conversation, "I am just a regular guy. But I don't have the gift of gab. I wish I did." When not on the speaking circuit, Deepak Chopra is at work on his 27th book and adding to his more than 100 audio, video and CD-ROM titles, while presiding over the Chopra Center for Well Being in La Jolla, Calif.

    Go to Web sites like Skeptic's Dictionary, The Shameless Mind and Quackwatch, and you will find all the ammunition of scientific rationalism aimed at Chopra.

    He is said to have misconstrued quantum physics. "Deepak Chopra has successfully promoted a notion he calls quantum healing, which suggests we can cure all our ills by the application of sufficient mental power," writes Victor J. Stenger, professor emeritus of physics and astronomy at the University of Hawaii, in the Skeptical Inquirer. Many words and diagrams later, Stenger concludes that "no compelling argument or evidence requires that quantum mechanics plays a central role in human consciousness or provides instantaneous, holistic connections across the universe."

    Chopra's sweeping claims for Ayurvedic healing -- a 2,000-year-old tradition rooted in astrology, demonology and balancing energy through diet and exercise -- come under similar assault. "As far as I can tell," writes Stephen Barrett, M.D. in Quackwatch, "Chopra has neither published nor personally conducted any scientific studies testing whether the methods he promotes help people become healthier or live longer."

    A lot of other credentialed scientists take their runs at Chopra's "factual errors" and "absurd ideas." All of them are wasting their time, because their angle of attack cleanly misses the appeal of Chopra today. What pulls people to Chopra is their yearning to pull free of scientific rationality, or, more accurately, to escape the unenchanted world that two centuries of the Age of Reason has bequeathed us.

    . Next page | Blaming the hunger for wonders on incurable human frailty
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    Illustration by I. Patrick Walsh/Salon


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