We must learn to listen to another person and to see with her eyes and to merge our reality with hers, to see how her perspective is a real, ontological, part of reality. Listening to a stranger becomes the highest form of jihad.
This is the deep listening. The constant listener.
Criticism: the creed in the front of the book seems to be spot on and just plain sloppy.
The format of the book is similar to a Wilberian presentation (with fewer additional comments within parentheses), that intriguing narcissistic tendency to present ones deep seated duty towards the ever changing enlightened attitude.
This is not a systematic theology or philosophy...nor should it...nor could it be...