Gurdjieff clearly wanted his pupils to try to understand Objective Science. He left two accounts of it. One adorns the pages of In Search of the Miraculous; the other merges itself into the text of Beelzebub's Tales to His Grandson. He described its study as a necessity-one of five obligolnian strivings. And yet, most books about The Work steer clear of the topic. This book moves in the opposite direction. It...