Skip to main content
University of California Press

The Way Things Are

Conversations with Huston Smith on the Spiritual Life

by Huston Smith (Author), Phil Cousineau (Editor), Phil Cousineau (Preface by)
Price: $29.95 / £25.00
Publication Date: Sep 2003
Edition: 1st Edition
Title Details:
Rights: World
Pages: 338
ISBN: 9780520938816

About the Book

"Where can we find what is ultimately meaningful? How can we discover what is truly worth knowing?" In one form or another Huston Smith has been posing these questions to himself—and the world—all his life. In the course of seeking answers, he has become one of the most interesting, enlightening, and celebrated voices on the subject of religion and spirituality throughout the world. The twenty-three interviews and essays in this volume, edited by cultural historian and filmmaker Phil Cousineau, offer a uniquely personal perspective on Smith's own personal journey, as well as wide-ranging reflection on the nature and importance of the religious quest.

In The Way Things Are, readers will find Smith in conversation with some of the world's most influential personalities and religious leaders, from journalist Bill Moyers to religion scholar Philip Novak, and recounting his personal experiences with such luminaries as Joseph Campbell, Aldous Huxley, Timothy Leary, Daisetz Suzuki, Ram Dass, and the Dalai Lama. Throughout these engaging exchanges Smith speaks with passion and humor of his upbringing as the son of missionary parents in China, of the inspiring and colorful individuals he has known, and of his impressions of the different religious and philosophical traditions he has encountered. A fascinating view of the state of world religion and religious leadership over the past fifty years, the book also looks to the future with a final interview on the vital importance of the transcendent message of religion for the post-9/11 world. Readers will find The Way Things Are to be Huston Smith's most and accessible book to date.

About the Author

Huston Smith, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Syracuse University, is considered the country's preeminent public scholar of world religions. The author of The Religions of Man (1958, republished as The World's Religions in 1991) and Why Religion Matters (2001), Smith has influenced multiple generations of readers, artists, scholars, and students. He has been profiled in a PBS series by Bill Moyers and appears frequently on national TV and radio. Phil Cousineau is the author and editor of numerous books, including, most recently, Once and Future Myths: The Power of Ancient Stories in Modern Times (2001), The Art of Pilgrimage: The Seeker's Guide to Making Travel Sacred (1998), and Soul Moments: Marvelous Stories of Synchronicity (1997).

Table of Contents

Preface: The Way Things Are for Huston Smith
No Wasted Journey: A Theological Autobiography
Introduction by Huston Smith

PART ONE: THE HEART OF RELIGION
Chapter 1. The Way Things Are
An interview with Timothy Beneke
Chapter 2. The Primordial Tradition
An interview with John Loudon
Chapter 3. Winnowing the Wisdom Traditions
An interview with Mark Kenaston
Chapter 4. This Is It
An interview with Richard Marranca
Chapter 5. The Soul of the Community
An interview with Philip and Bridgett Novak
Chapter 6. Encountering God
An essay by Huston Smith

PART TWO: THE STRUGGLE BETWEEN SCIENCE AND RELIGION
Chapter 7. The Place of Science
An interview with Steve Reuys
Chapter 8. The Limits of the Scientific Worldview
An interview with Jeffrey Mishlove
Chapter 9. Science as the Oracle of Our Age
An interview with Michael Toms
Chapter 10. Science, Faith, and Infinity
An interview with Tracy Knauss and the Reverend Jack Young
Chapter 11. Toward a Partnership between Science and Religion
An interview with April Thompson
Chapter 12. The Battle for the Human Mind
An interview with Richard Gazdayka
Chapter 13. The New Paradigm
An interview with Richard Smoley and Jay Kinney
Chapter 14. Countering Scientism
An essay by Marsha Newman
Chapter 15. The Striking Parallels
An interview with Phil Cousineau

PART THREE: FROM PLATO'S CAVE TO THE ENCHANTED GARDEN
Chapter 16. The Sacred Dimensions of Everyday Life
An interview with Jeffrey Kane
Chapter 17. Demystifying Spiritual Practice
An essay by Huston Smith, with commentary by Sarah Ban Breathnach
Chapter 18. The Varieties of Religious Explorations
An interview with Jeffrey Mishlove
Chapter 19. Cleansing the Doors of Perception
An interview with Richard Scheinin
Chapter 20. Fathoming Psychedelic Mysticism
An interview with Timothy White
Chapter 21. The Wisdom of Faith
An interview with Bill Moyers
Chapter 22. Why Religion Matters Now More Than Ever
An interview with Phil Cousineau

References
Acknowledgments
Index

Reviews

"Anyone who read his Why Religion Matters knows how demanding a thinker Smith can be; these candid conversations add new dimensions to his important work."
Global Rhythm
"Ralph Waldo Emerson once said that he would gladly walk 100 miles through a snowstorm for one good conversation. Fortunately, readers don't have to trudge through a blizzard or even leave their armchairs to listen in on these 22 fascinating conversations. Readers will find themselves ravenously eavesdropping on captivating discussions... dialogues that are timeless. Cousineau's stunning preface is worth the price of admission alone."
Publishers Weekly
“[A] substantive book that should make it to the best-seller lists. . . .Cousineau’s preface and Smith’s introduction, a theological autobiography, are worth the price of the book. . . .Smith helps remove our blinders to the spiritual realities of the universe.”
News & Record
“[An] engaging collection of interviews that cover Smith’s rich career of inuiry into religion and the nature of consciousness. In these interviews . . . Smith passionately lets us in on his fascinating lifelong journey to understand and practice a living spirituality in an increasingly secularized world. Like a profound conversation that lasts deep into the night, this book will captivate readers in search of a brilliant mind.”
Ions Review
“A remarkable autobiographical window into Smith’s soul.”
Library Journal
“Can the spoken word make good literature? This book shows us that it can, at least when the interviewee is Huston Smith.”
Parabola
“Engaging . . . fascinating.”
Religion And Spirituality
“Huston Smith’s ruminations are radiant, rich, passionate, informed and thought-provoking. They will remind you once again why religion matters so much.”
National Catholic Reporter
“It is a rare thing in any age to find a model of sweetness and light so intent on the pursuit of the truth that [Smith] passes on his excitement like a holy contagion. But when you find one who can mix such rigor with such grace, and bring real spirit to real scholarship, you can consider yourself truly among the blessed.”
Shambhala Sun/Buddhadharma
“Only a scholar as brave and plain-spoken as Huston Smith would try to produce a single, slim volume that makes sense of the world’s vast diversity of faiths. Smith, now 84 and frail, actually spoke this text in a question-answer format to interviewer Phil Cousineau, but his insights have been polished by a lifetime of scholarship until his answers are crystal clear. What’s so inspiring is that, after decades of witnessing religious conflict, Smith’s enthusiasm for the enduring lessons of faith remains undimmed.”
Detroit Free Press
“Smith’s erudition, wit and conviction are engagingly displayed in wide-ranging exchanges.”
Christian Century
“THE WAY THINGS ARE sparkles with philosophical insights, cross-cultural epiphanes, religious truths, memorable stories, and a wonderful batch of juicy quotations about the human adventure. This is a must-read.”
Spirituality & Health
“This book is important because it reveals and honors the example of Smith’s life and work.”
Bridges: A Lib-Con Dialogue
"My idea of heaven (here on earth) is sitting in a room and listening to Huston Smith talk (and sparkle and sing); the next best thing, surely, is having him here, as he is in these pages, passing on his contagious delight and excitement in the Real in a voice of miraculous clarity and humanity. I can't think of a more moving and beautiful, more rigorous and wise, book to help us through these troubled times."—Pico Iyer

"In this his new book, Huston Smith gives us his readers a priceless gift during our time of struggle with the nature of good and evil, carefully differentiating between the concepts of good and perfect."—Robert A. Johnson, author of Inner Work and We

"Huston Smith, in conversation, sometimes becomes as spontaneous and radiant as the ineffable beauty he talks about. Not all the time. He admits to having a spiritual flu on some days. Wherever he is, though, a clean wind of truth blows through his presence. He always makes me feel more alive! He knows, and lives, and loves whereof he speaks."—Coleman Barks, poet and translator, Rumi: The Book of Love