I needed to find more intelligent people for more intelligent conversation in my life. Im grateful I found The Great Simplification with Nate. I appreciate the access to such an informative field
@treefrog3349
Күн бұрын
For anyone, particularly young people, I would encourage them to familiarize themselves with two old books from almost a hundred years ago : Gen.Smedley Butler's "War is a Racket" and Edward Bernays' book "Propaganda". Together these two small books will be a fundamental "primer" for understanding our contemporary world. From perpetual warfare, to rabid consumerism, to political manipulation and to eventual environmental degradation, these two simple books will explain and expose A LOT!
@MattAngiono
Күн бұрын
The book I would add as even more fundamental (these two are certainly great ideas) is the Tao De Ching. It shows us that there were fundamental flaws in human ways of thinking thousands of years before global imperialism and capitalism ever took hold. Most importantly, this helps with questioning one's own assumptions and exposes to us how we think. It's very dialectic in that regard. Plus, it's all about getting at the flow and the nature of things. Also seeing how language is often insufficient. It's just jam packed with ancient wisdom that still applies today. I think some parts can probably be improved upon with the modern predicaments we are dealing with, but it's a good place to start. If nothing else, it will remind you to get into nature to learn about the world and to reset your monkey mind from this crazy world we've inherited
@ricos1497
12 сағат бұрын
@@MattAngionoyou forgot to say which translation! I have Ellen Chen's. It's good.
@MattAngiono
11 сағат бұрын
@ricos1497 good point, and honestly I don't know, because I usually listen to it here... I like the "chillstep" music versions when I'm out running or making art in nature. Good mix of music and let me think about each line for a bit.
@truepatriot6388
Күн бұрын
McGilchrist's perspective seems highly relevant to the IDG framework, which appears to be using a left-brain approach to reach out for a "right-brain" mindset. The lists and categories of skills, and the abstraction of the Framwork itself, are the map not the territory. From the website: "The IDG Framework is not another framework to implement, rather it is a lens that helps map, understand, and refine your strategy." It is encouraging that Erik recognizes the risk for corporate capture. Time will tell if the framework is able to help us transcend the individualistic frame by becoming our authentic selves within our local contexts, and in service to Life (Syntropy), but this is clearly pointing in the right direction. Thanks for sharing, Erik, Nate and TGS team!
@john1boggity56
Күн бұрын
Another brilliant guest on an absoluteky brilliant podcast!
@anthonytroia1
Күн бұрын
"Enabling people to discover when they feel most alive, the most meaning, the most connection, and to really cement that experience that they decide on, that they found the patterns in. Because if they did, they would not accept the system that we have created" *mic drop* 🎤😎
@klausfaller19
7 сағат бұрын
Thanks Nate. The greater good is hard to explained, it is easier to be felt. The greater good the blueprint for the creation of paradise, and we should be in service to it. We love to create, it gives us purpose and after all we made in his image. To agree what to create is another question. Stay sane all
@TheSphat
Күн бұрын
OMG Nate, this conversation brought me to tears.
@john1boggity56
Күн бұрын
Me too❤
@islanddenaagikont1642
Күн бұрын
I am so happy, and proud someone from my own country can have such deep emotion and share it with all of us. And someone that I've done an enormous sacrifice that hopefully leads to one wave that can lead to a shift, when the many come together. Thank you Nate for having Eric here.
@john1boggity56
Күн бұрын
Lovely post!!❤
@CarolFoegen
Күн бұрын
I love this conversation please have Erik back.
@john1boggity56
Күн бұрын
Yes please!!
@colint3375
Күн бұрын
Awesome guest and conversation. Clear signal, low noise. 🐘⚡️🕉️
@NancyBruning
Күн бұрын
Thanks again so much for another brilliant heartfelt conversation. The last 20 minutes especially are priceless. Imagine being raised by an Olympian and a Mormon and you develop into this fellow!
@KimberleyHare-r8r
14 сағат бұрын
What a thoroughly fabulous human being Erik is. Bravo!
@TheFlyingBrain.
Күн бұрын
IDG hub here I come. Nate, Eric, team: Gratitude. 🙏
@MichaelSmith-dy4vb
5 сағат бұрын
I love this content & will steep myself in it again!
@RodBarkerdigitalmediablog
Күн бұрын
Great discussion, thank you Nate and Erik for this uplifting and insightful conversation. This discussion made me think a lot, and about how Schwartz's Values Theory which identifies ten universal human values contrasts with Buddhist values. Especially in the motivations underlying human behaviour and the focus on individual versus collective well-being. While there are overlaps, for instance, around compassion and the welfare of others, many of Schwartz’s values reflect goals that Buddhism approaches with caution or frames differently. I've put together how some of Schwartz's values compare and contrast with core Buddhist principles. 1. Self-Transcendence (Benevolence and Universalism) vs. Compassion and Interconnection • Schwartz’s Values: Benevolence (enhancing the welfare of close others) and Universalism (tolerance and protection for all people and nature) are values that align well with Buddhist ideals of compassion and interconnectedness. Both frameworks promote altruism and care for others. • Buddhist Values: Compassion (karuṇā) and loving-kindness (mettā) are central to Buddhist ethics, aiming at the well-being of all sentient beings without attachment to personal gain or distinctions between close others and strangers. Buddhism emphasizes a deep sense of interbeing (as taught by Thich Nhat Hanh), recognising that the self is not separate from others or the environment, which aligns with Universalism but goes beyond it by dissolving the individual ego. 2. Achievement and Power vs. Non-Attachment and Humility • Schwartz’s Values: Achievement involves pursuing success and demonstrating competence, while Power is about control and dominance over people and resources. These values reflect a focus on personal success and influence, which are highly valued in competitive environments. • Buddhist Values: Buddhism teaches non-attachment to worldly success and material power, as these are seen as sources of suffering (dukkha). The pursuit of power and achievement often leads to ego inflation, which Buddhism views as a barrier to spiritual liberation. Humility, contentment, and letting go of the desire for status or control are key Buddhist principles that directly contrast with the self-enhancing aspects of Achievement and Power. 3. Self-Direction vs. Non-Self (Anatta) and Mindfulness • Schwartz’s Values: Self-Direction prioritises independence, freedom, and the ability to choose one’s path in life, which reflects a strong focus on the self and personal autonomy. • Buddhist Values: Buddhism teaches the concept of anatta (non-self), which holds that the sense of an independent, permanent self is an illusion. Rather than pursuing individual autonomy, Buddhism encourages mindfulness (sati) and the awareness of the present moment, with an emphasis on interdependence and relinquishing self-centred desires. The Buddhist path is about liberation from the self, rather than enhancing it. 4. Hedonism vs. Mindful Moderation • Schwartz’s Values: Hedonism is about seeking pleasure and gratification for oneself. It represents the pursuit of sensory enjoyment, which Schwartz sees as a natural and universal human drive. • Buddhist Values: Hedonism contrasts sharply with Buddhist teachings on moderation and the Middle Way, which advises against indulgence in sensory pleasures. Buddhism warns that the pursuit of pleasure can lead to attachment and suffering. Mindful moderation, simplicity, and contentment are preferred, as they lead to greater inner peace and freedom from cravings. 5. Security and Conformity vs. Impermanence and Inner Freedom • Schwartz’s Values: Security focuses on safety, stability, and order in one’s environment and relationships. Conformity involves adhering to social norms and expectations to maintain harmony. • Buddhist Values: Buddhism teaches the principle of anicca (impermanence), which holds that all things are in constant flux, including our security and social structures. Rather than seeking external security, Buddhism promotes inner freedom through the acceptance of impermanence and the practice of detachment. Conformity to societal expectations is often questioned in Buddhist teachings, as these can lead to attachment to status and fear of change, which impede spiritual growth. 6. Tradition vs. Right Understanding and Insight • Schwartz’s Values: Tradition values respect for cultural and religious customs and practices that have been passed down through generations. • Buddhist Values: While Buddhism honours the wisdom of the Buddha and the Sangha (community), it places a higher value on right understanding and personal insight gained through practice and direct experience. Rather than clinging to tradition for its own sake, Buddhism encourages questioning, personal growth, and the application of the Dharma in ways that lead to liberation from suffering. Summary of Contrasts • Individual vs. Collective Focus: Many of Schwartz’s values, such as Achievement, Power, and Self-Direction, emphasize individual goals and personal success, while Buddhism focuses on dissolving the ego and promoting collective well-being through compassion and interconnection. • Material vs. Spiritual Emphasis: Schwartz’s values of Hedonism, Power, and Security reflect material and external desires, while Buddhist values encourage mindfulness, simplicity, and the cultivation of inner peace beyond material attachments. • Impermanence vs. Stability: Schwartz’s values like Security and Tradition seek stability and order, whereas Buddhism recognises the impermanence of all things and teaches adaptability and non-attachment to external circumstances. In essence, Schwartz’s Values Theory outlines a range of motivations, many of which reflect individualistic, materialistic, or societal aspirations. Buddhist values, by contrast, emphasise spiritual growth, non-attachment, and compassion, focusing on transcending the ego and recognising the interconnectedness of all life.
@truepatriot6388
Күн бұрын
Thanks, Rod, for putting this together and sharing with us. At first glance it looks most helpful. I've copied to go through it with care. It seems you are on the path. How's it going?
@ricos1497
9 сағат бұрын
Sounds like Schwartz was talking out of his arse then? I'm not familiar with his work, but I guess those ten values are values of the superorganism, certainly.
@iczgighost
Күн бұрын
Thank you Nate and Erik! I agree that learning how to sit and feel the uncomfortable, uintegrated emotional imprints from our childhoods instead of continuing our frantic, unconscious, and misdirected efforts to sedate and control these uncomfortable feelings is the root cause approach to addressing the human predicament (ie-turning barrels of oil into microliters of dopamine).
@carlbarstad3784
15 сағат бұрын
Amazing conversation. Thx Nate and Erik!
@truepatriot6388
Күн бұрын
BODY AS TEACHER - Thanks Erik for sharing your fall into debilitation and recovery back to health. Along with the suffering, or perhaps because of it, there are important lessons on offer from such experiences. And understanding beyond our individual health. Seems to me, our body-mind is the starting place for understanding the planet since both are living systems with similar processes but our most salient experience is with our own body-mind. And our mind-soul is sovereign of our inner realm, our individual being, with radical authority and accountability for how we exert control over it. Forget about trying to wield power and authority in the wider realms of community and biosphere, shouldn't we focus first on understanding our own kingdom with its family of 30 trillion differentiated beings (our human cells), and even more non-human creatures living on and inside us? Perhaps only when we have shown competence in our dominion here, should we contemplate exerting control elsewhere.
@Raze1283
Күн бұрын
In this time of the great acceleration, I find the forward looking version of 7 generations quickly becomes too abstract to be useful. The version that considers 3 previous and 3 future generations is grounded enough for me to wrap my mind around it
@melusine826
Күн бұрын
Perfect timing- my frustration with so much "wellness" , "self development " and "productivity " always rubs me the wrong way and has no greater context/purpose beyond personal goals and gains (feels very capitalistic, hollow)
@MattAngiono
Күн бұрын
Yeah, those things certainly serve capital, at least in the way they are promoted for profit. It's not the concepts themselves, which are good things, but how they get used within the system
@shamirkeren3954
4 сағат бұрын
thank you
@riffking2651
Күн бұрын
Man, I tell ya - trying to move the needle at all surrounded by people who are cynical and checked out is bloody impossible. Almost every conversation I have unfolds revealing that we can and do have a role to play in the future, and then the person is like "yeah, well that's hard and I'm busy". It's tempting to think "fuck you. you'll get what you pay for with this" but of course this isn't a helpful response.
@timtam2126
21 сағат бұрын
Keep up changing the world 🌎 for the better and you will find like minded people
@treefrog3349
Күн бұрын
The "inquietude" that is so tactfully expressed and demonstrated within this on-line venue by BRILLIANT, well-informed guests, should be an "eye-opener" for us all. Most of us are the equivalent of naive children who trust in the presumed benevolence and benign wisdom of our "elders". The current untenable status of global affairs SHOULD be an indicator that this is not the case. Our contemporary conundrum has been orchestrated by a cadre of international self-serving fools who do NOT consider the plight of 8 BILLION people to be of significance! The cultural insanity that has been insidiously normalized in the 21st Century needs to be recognized and addressed. There is ONLY one Earth. As a species, we are systematically destroying it. It is good to be old.
@JMW-ci2pq
Күн бұрын
civilization it's self is "self serving". Agriculture/mono culture; mining; fire; pointy sticks are all self serving. All these things give artificial advantage over all other species until the biotope collapses in an effectively noticeable way.
@MattAngiono
Күн бұрын
Yeah, we've certainly lost our way and don't know who were following. That's been deliberate though. It's brainwashing. Awakening from that is quite difficult because the fundamental quality of it is hiding that it even happens. We still think school is about education and not compliance. Most of us don't even know what critical thinking looks like let alone be able to engage it. We have to help each other realize just how cripple we've become. Then maybe true leaders and elders can also emerge
@TheFlyingBrain.
Күн бұрын
Perfect opening. 🎯
@anotherthez7598
23 сағат бұрын
We know... Brilliant, thank you!
@wallace09ish
Күн бұрын
How can I undertake training to be a leader in my community in Australia for this organisation? I am willing to travel to undertake training ?
@PeterTodd
Күн бұрын
Google innerdevelopmentgoals. There's a link to the hubs there. Unless you're in Perth and Hobart.
@sarahheys2770
16 сағат бұрын
It's all available on line or join Regen Places Network in Au too 🌱
@JessieLydia
Күн бұрын
The framing is a feel-good response, that humanity is good and was invaded by something bad. From a natural systems view, basically that all material systems develop by growth as nature’s beginning of change, shows us a very very different and much more useful story. As ALL new lives appear to develop by an emerging organizational growth processes, which hidden in very plain sight, goes through a number of successive stages, like a formative “start up process” followed by a “maturation process,” as we see in any system’s development that survives its very unsustainable startup growth. So… what seems to be the correct statement of what happened to our growth process, and distinguish our growth from the usual quite successful ones, is... That along the way, we missed a turn. With that, most any open minded person should be able to start filling what turn we missed.
@MattAngiono
Күн бұрын
The SDGs come from the very same thinking, and often even the same people who created these problems in the first place. For this reason, it's important that we reassess what exactly they are and what they are suggesting. I don't think they are all bad, but under closer examination, they seem to perpetuate, rather than solve, many of our greatest concerns. If you think about them from a modern economics perspective you can see that they lack any sort of truly liberating values that get us away from the systems of oppression that created this mess. I believe we need to look at a lot more fundamental aspects of how we operate civilization and within our own minds that go far beyond just the catastrophe management presented by the SDGs. This isn't a criticism of your guest btw (I'm still just starting the episode). It sounds like his work is well-informed in other ways and very important too. I just think it's important we learn to question things more deeply that are coming from these global institutions and likely don't truly care about liberating humanity from the oppressive system and leaders we have now. Generally, people in power want to retain and even concentrate their power. SDGs seem very much in line with that kind of thinking
@sarahheys2770
16 сағат бұрын
Erik did a TED Talk, the slide behind him shows the SDGs with a big red "SYMPTOMS" scrawled over it.
@melusine826
Күн бұрын
Would love to hear his wife's side of that experience
@antonyjh1234
Күн бұрын
@ 1hr.16 there is a short video out there called HAPPINESS: A Guide to the Drugs That Can Help You Get There, that talks to which drug is for which reason like this. Cool talk, how do we care for all the people while telling them they must suffer? Telling people to be the best you can be has succeeded over the highest integrity. People have told me life begins at the end of my comfort zone, so I extended it.. There is a free myer briggs test online, 16 personalities, a good start too for understanding ourselves.
@robinschaufler444
26 минут бұрын
I've seen it said that evil is the refusal to suffer.
@antonyjh1234
4 минут бұрын
@@robinschaufler444 We all use oil that other people have been killed over and have for decades, I don't think people mind suffering, but the question remains, how do we strip everybody bare while still making them feel held?
@anthonytroia1
Күн бұрын
27:45 Great episode, and, with all due respect my friend GET YOUR ASS TO A VIPASSANA COURSE, NATE ♥It will be life-changing. You are an amazing being, and you have one of the most important messages of our time. Vipassana will hone you into an even more effective agent for change. I GUARANTEE IT! 🙏
@thegreatsimplification
Күн бұрын
Am considering. But…. I’m afraid… (I have bad back and don’t think I can sit for 3 hours let alone 200)
@anthonytroia1
Күн бұрын
@@thegreatsimplification They'll give you a chair if you ask. And the sits are only one hour long (each). You can get up and walk as much as you need. They are accommodating. PLEASE GO!
@TheFlyingBrain.
Күн бұрын
@@thegreatsimplificationI second that encouragement. In fact , I'd say this kind of training is indispensable.
@TheFlyingBrain.
Күн бұрын
With appropriate accommodation and support for your back, it's quite possible that the practice might actually encourage and enhance self-healing in your back.
@truepatriot6388
Күн бұрын
@@TheFlyingBrain. Agreed. Inflammation and tissue injury is usually caused by not moving mindfully (too much force, too much stretch, too much repetative movement, too much immobility). This includes hampering healing from injury. Flipping that around, enhacing our capacity for mindful movement will reduce risk of injury, enhance tissue healing, and help us avoid inflammation. If sitting (prolonged immobility) causes more inflammation, consider walking meditation, Tai-chi, Chi-Gong or other practice based on mindful movement. As I commented above, we are soveriegn of a kingdom of 30 trillion souls (far more if we count the immigrants) - the cells of our body, each of them a living being. A good leader will listen to them (awareness) and care for them (intent) by challenging them properly, and protecting them as needed.
@adrianhodgson4448
10 сағат бұрын
"Regenerative Development" concept (from Carol Sanford, Pamela Mang, et al) descibes that inner development must happen simultaneously with outer development as a coevolving mutualism.. otherwise qualitative development would be majorly limited in both if understood as separate work (which Erik is saying too).
@allonesame6467
Күн бұрын
Epiphany in the garden: Technology degrades, breaks and pollutes. Life builds, heals, cleanses, feeds us and makes more life.
@adrianhodgson4448
11 сағат бұрын
David Bohm's work on 'dialogue' relates here.
@cg000gc
7 сағат бұрын
For every person who saves a drop of oil, there are ten others who will willingly consume that drop. Who's right, who's wrong? Are you the person to decide? Why you? What is your right to decide how people should live their lives?
@melusine826
Күн бұрын
Im surprised to see use of Myers Briggs- I thought that was lacking in scientific backing/ origin?
@ReesCatOphuls
Күн бұрын
20:40 Klarna. The buy now pay later service with 25% interest. And this after he "pivotted on how he saw himself and society". I guess encouraging people into unserviceable debt is a form of "support" for Niklas. One way to "create a better world" by encouraging consumerism.
@ChimpJacobman
13 сағат бұрын
This, the good point. I expected to see more negative comments about this clear charlatan, but alas, people just love anything Nate puts out.
@robinschaufler444
21 минут бұрын
Thanks. Now I have to listen to the episode again, to hear this part in context.
@jenniferreinbrecht7125
Күн бұрын
Thank you so much for this. I so appreciate all youve done, presented - and it's so depressing and i feel so hopeless in the face of it. I have no power, deep pockets or ability i can see to help the scale of change humanity needs.
@jennysteves
Күн бұрын
You have your compassion and love, Jennifer. They matter. In the end they are everything. It’s beyond unfortunate that we’ve created economy-based societies and education systems that underestimate what true power is .. power we do not understand and cannot monetize. In the end it’s the flow of this open loving energy between us that saves us. ❤
@MattAngiono
Күн бұрын
Likely everyone in this audience feels like this. These tools that were meant to connect us often keep us isolated in this illusion of connection. We have to take these feelings into our lives outside the internet and build resonance in the real world, which I agree, is quite challenging right now. People still think voting is going to make a difference... The real work is so much harder, sadly
@MattAngiono
Күн бұрын
@jennysteves those really are the most important values to begin with. Kindness fits in nicely too and goes a long way. These digital tools often drives us away from remembering these core values
@truepatriot6388
Күн бұрын
@@jennysteves Yes because anything that is abundant and readily available is worthless in an economy based on scarcity. If all our streets were paved with gold, gold would be worthless. The manifestation and sharing of Love has no limits. It can manifest anywhere, everywhere, anytime.
@lorilafferty4099
Күн бұрын
Agreed
@ChimpJacobman
13 сағат бұрын
Erik's client with 11 generations of family ownership... can you imagine the horrors that this business committed over the years to survive? The exploitation, the ecological damage, the inhumanity... but hey, they're working with Erik, so that blood money is clean now, they care now, its fine, let them keep their business. Good conclusion 👌 go get you some more Klarna money.
@polymathpark
2 сағат бұрын
Malsow's hierarchy originally included community actualization and a form of global transcendence in his final models but of course the western bastardization remained in our pursuit of egotistic individualism.
@JMW-ci2pq
Күн бұрын
Crystal's Edict "The Point" -Is so far reaching that it is nearly impossible to say in words. Speaking and lecturing or listening to speaking and or lecturing about "living; life/Nature" are mostly just received as some kind of esoteric truth and a longing for something more meaningful. The actual meaning of the same Truth is that only Heaven exists and humans are the only thing lost to it and from it. Servitude to Nature alone is the only road to redemption. Inside or outside. Death / life are just misnomers, change of state. The Purpose remains constant. One Soul many faces. No one form is superior to another. Civilization it's self is the cause of all life's destruction. Accepting this as some kind of necessary phase or step TO something is delusion. Now is always constant. All and every essence is always dying & being born. Action is now. Preservation of complexity for the sake of All beings NOT civilization at all And not humans first 1billion humans to dismantle all infrastructure and returning ALL mined/drilled materials to their inertial place of origin by order of density and toxicity. 1billion humans to create "Earth-Ship" type self generating environments from as much earthen material as possible. As many species as possible must be able to migrate to & from these .... All the rest to support the the first two. One Soul Many beings /faces/species Crystal's Law
@melusine826
Күн бұрын
50:59 can I suggest ikea makes sure they pay proper taxes
@melusine826
Күн бұрын
1:27:26 need clarity on if this is leaning into prolifer /Mormon /breeder expectations? I am a big fan of "for all children of all species for all time" ethos, but not at expense of autonomy and health
@websmink
Күн бұрын
I will try and save the planet and fix society when I am done taking care of my work that feeds me, my parents that need me, my family that I am responsible for and my health issues that need constant attention. Because there is nothing more important to me than making sure that the earth survives until the sun destroys it. I am being sarcastic but I really do appreciate Eric and his passion. I also love what Nate is doing. I may disagree with how invested we should all be in changing things or postponing the inevitable but still appreciate the fact that thanks to those conversations more people are seeing the situation for what it is. I believe sentient life is hellish and saving it is unethical or silly. Let anyone prove to you that the pain and suffering of millions is worth the temporary joy of one, which is the average ratio in nature.
@MattAngiono
Күн бұрын
The question is how much suffering you as an individual see yourself being willing to endure to experience true bliss. I think with training we can improve that ratio to a point where lots of pain is manageable because the extent of the joy is so much more meaningful. This isn't given though, and it's quite hard to achieve in this society that trains that out of us. Hedonism gives us the wrong approach and eventually makes even the simple joys in life much less meaningful. Eastern wisdom traditions are much more helpful IMHO
@melusine826
Күн бұрын
1:14:01 eye contact is not easy for everyone- ableism / Neuro-divergent disconnect?
@MendeMaria-ej8bf
Күн бұрын
Ikea is sustainable? Sorry, I'm in doubt.
@chris4973
8 сағат бұрын
Nate, interview Jason Stanley. His recent Erasing History is an essential read. Anyone believing that those in power will relinquish their position without employing every known tactic of subterfuge, dis/misinformation, etc is woefully inadequately informed As an aside… listening to you (a very privileged human - top 10% easily) talk about your visits to India and how you fly around the planet talking about what we need to do to fix the problem of which YOU are so obviously an integral part… What are YOU doing in your personal life to diminish your personal contribution?
@TennesseeJed
Күн бұрын
👍
@JacquesLaurin
Күн бұрын
"We live in a “naturalistic” society. Only a naturalistic society produces this boundary between self and other, by introducing the idea of “nature”, which implicitly underpins a representation of the world based on a dichotomy between nature and culture. Nature would be that which does not belong to culture, that which does not belong to the distinctive features of the human species, and to human knowledge and know-how. Whereas nature (the physical world) is fundamentally universal (the same atoms underpin the entire universe, and the same laws and determinisms apply to humans and non-humans alike), culture differentiates not only humans from non-humans, but also human societies from each other. Typical of Western cosmologies since Plato and Aristotle, naturalism produces a specific ontological domain, a place of order or necessity where nothing happens without a cause, whether this cause is referred to a transcendent instance or is immanent to the texture of the world. To the extent that naturalism is the guiding principle of our own cosmology, and that it permeates our common sense and our scientific principle, it has become for us a kind of 'natural' presupposition that structures our epistemology and, in particular, our perception of other modes of identification”. - Philippe Descola Problems relating to perception cannot be changed with conceptual intelligence.
@truepatriot6388
Күн бұрын
I like what you have tossed out, Jaques. I think part of the problem with classical naturalism and modern views of "Nature" is that these are limited to duality between mind-body, spiritual-physical, man-nature, self-other, I-it, us-them. These categorical distinctions and boundaries have a degree of meaning, especially when it comes to reductionist science. In terms of determinism, the breaking of wholes into parts can reliably yield predicable outcomes (initially at least) by reducing the complexity down to the simple math of separate "form/function parts" that can then be added. Such a process is entropic, and this is the basis of most of our science and technology. This is because it allows entropic power and control to yield greater entropic power and control - weaponry, technology, consumption, etc... Still, systems science and spiritual traditions helps us to understand that Platonic and Cartesian divisions are parts of a transcendent whole. And that this is not a matter of addition (1 form/function + 1 form/function = 2 form/functions). When parts are allowed to unite, in self-directed ways, there can be emergence of a new form with new functions and greater complexity, beauty and intelligence. Our planet is such a greater whole. And beyond Earth, we humans are part of the whole of wholes: Big Mother Nature, the Universe, Reality, the Divine. Nature includes entropic flow, but the dominant flow that creates beauty, intelligence, truth and Life is opposed to entropic flow. This "syntropic flow" allows many smaller wholes to unite into wholes. Syntropic flow and emergence is not deterministic, it requires the parts (forms/function) to have capacity for self-directed agency oriented to transcendent intent. This cannot be predicted by boundary conditions in the way entropic flow can. Syntropic flow is the opposite of reductionistic. It is creatively synthetic and requires degrees of true freedom in realms of potentiality. This is the flow of evolution and emergence, and the sacred source of the highest value.
@SpenderDebby-x6n
Күн бұрын
Walker Lisa Rodriguez Timothy Taylor Kimberly
@pookah9938
Күн бұрын
Trapped, worthy, hijacked...hmm. We have met the enemy...etc. Pogo
@melusine826
Күн бұрын
1:06:34 Mormonism.... I really hope that's not part of the IDG framework
@uptoit100
Күн бұрын
Another one who talks with his hands. ...
@MattAngiono
Күн бұрын
You should try riding in the back seat when my dad is driving.... Since he can't not talk with his hands, you constantly are wondering who's driving the car 🤮
@soltari2007
Күн бұрын
TLDW.
@thegreatsimplification
Күн бұрын
Your loss, but I understand 🙏
@soltari2007
Күн бұрын
@@thegreatsimplification I'm just begging for some shorter videos here. I just don't have an hour and half to spare. Your content is very interesting and I respect what you're doing. It's very important.
@TennesseeJed
Күн бұрын
@@soltari2007Sometimes I watch it in parts. I think these longform conversations give them time to warm up and start relaxing for a natural way of talkin'.
@ChimpJacobman
13 сағат бұрын
You didn't miss anything
@thegreatsimplification
12 сағат бұрын
@@soltari2007 just watch the short clips, the Franklies on Fridays and the upcoming R101 video series (that will be 8 hours but in 100 short pieces :-)
@melusine826
Күн бұрын
1:14:01 eye contact is not easy for everyone- ableism / Neuro-divergent disconnect?
Пікірлер: 101