Stressing that there can be a charisma based on goodness and genuine devotion to truth rather than on the power of personality, Storr warns against teachers who claim to know what he judges no single person can know: 'No one knows in the sense that Gurdjieff or Rajneesh or Jung believed that they knew and were supposed to know by their disciples.' But Storr's elegantly written account is tarnished by his own unacknowledged authoritarianism. While insisting that none of these latter can be described as insane, Storr considers their authoritarian certainty an ominous sign. He analyzes the lives and works of the destructive, unbalanced cult leaders Jim Jones and David Koresh, and he uses their symptoms-isolation, narcissism, paranoid delusion-to take the measure of other, generally more respected, 'gurus,' including Gurdjieff, Freud, Jung, Rudolf Steiner, Rajneesh, St. Storr (Music and the Mind), a psychiatrist, uses this ancient caution as the epigraph to a fascinating yet frustrating investigation into the appeal of guru figures. 'The wisest men follow their own direction and listen to no prophet guiding them,' wrote Euripedes.
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