12 posts tagged “videos”
Brondu~ dancing while sober…chicks dig this kind of thing :)
(Crossposted from www.c4chaos.com)
Just finished watching this very cool film. It's called,
I AM. It's a free movie.
What makes this film especially cool, aside from its very
meaningful message, is that it's also probably
"the first major 'open source film' project in history" wherein everyone is
invited to
co-create
the film. I'll look forward on how this film would evolve overtime.
In the meantime, go ahead and check it out. It's a very touching story of our collective Kosmic journey, from creation (or Big Bang if you don't dig Intelligent Design), to evolution, to awakening.
So keep an open mind while watching the film. Relax and breathe in the imagery. Allow yourself to drift into a meditative awareness...
And to all the Trekkies out there, I'm sure you'll dig this. It's like a prequel to Star Trek generations ;)
Thanks to Casey for the heads up!
~C (for Cosmic voyage)
(via zPod:SSE)
Check out this awesome interview with Amory Lovins via Social Innovation Conversations. A must-hear :)
Amory Lovins is one of the globe’s most visionary thinkers. His focus is an issue of global proportions – the enormous potential of energy efficiency and renewable energy resources. As CEO of the Rocky Mountain Institute, he has already been credited with having done more than any other single individual to redefine the thinking around energy policy and to link it with environment, development and security issues. Lovins and his the team of researchers delight in challenging conventional wisdom by demonstrating advanced resource productivity that avoids depletion and pollution, and still shows a profit.
It’s not all thought and no action for Lovins. He has worked aggressively to move his ideas into widespread practice, chiefly via the private sector, spinning off several for-profit companies from the nonprofit he runs, RMI. Not surprisingly, he was chosen several years ago by the editors of The Wall Street Journal as one of the people most likely to change the face of world industry.
Related Book Readings via zBooks:Lists:Starship Social Enterprise:
Winning the Oil Endgame: Innovation for Profits, Jobs and Security
(download here for FREE)BONUS VIDEO: Here's a link to a video of Amory Lovins presenting the Oil Endgame on MITWorld (found via Treehugger)
(Crossposted from www.c4chaos.com)
“That “ol' black magic” is a fickle force. The chemistry of romantic love can trigger the chemistry of sexual desire and the fuel of sexual desire can trigger the fuel of romance. This is why it is dangerous to copulate with someone with whom you don't wish to become involved. Although you intend to have casual sex, you might just fall in love.”Source: Why We Love: The Nature and Chemistry of Romantic Love , Page: 86
I think it should be Love AND Lust! Schwing!
Check out this awesome talk by Helen Fisher @ TEDTalks. Very fluffy look at gender differences, and that crazy little thing…
Helen Fisher
Helen Fisher is an anthropologist with Rutgers University, specializing in gender differences and the evolution of human emotions. (Recorded February 2006 in Monterey, CA. Duration: 24:13)
(Crossposted from www.c4chaos.com)
I've been watching a lot of TEDTalks lately. Those talks are very cool. Check it out. But I want to pay particular attention to these talks by Pastor Rick Warren and Philosopher Daniel Dennett. I suggest that you watch the talks first before reading my own reaction so you can form your own analysis without my lame-ass babbling interfering with yours. Here are the videos. Sit back. Relax. Open up.
Rick Warren
Pastor Rick Warren is author of The Purpose-Driven Life, which has sold 30 million copies worldwide. (Recorded February 2006 in Monterey, CA. Duration: 21:46)
Watch Online Download Audio Download Video
Dan Dennett
Dan Dennett is a Tufts philosophy professor and cognitive scientist, most famous for his books, Consciousness Explained (1991) and Darwin's
Dangerous Idea (1995). In this talk, he responds to the presentation by
Pastor Rick Warren, taking issue with claims in his book, The Purpose-Driven Life. (Recorded February 2006 in Monterey, CA. Duration: 25:29)
Watch Online Download Audio Download Video
INJUNCTION: Ok, now that you've seen the talks, I want you to come up with your own analysis of the these two brilliant worldviews. In your opinion, which worldview is better? Who won the “debate”? How can you best integrate these two brilliant worldviews? Ponder on these, then feel free to post your thoughts on the comment section of this blog or post them on your own blog and drop me a link.
Now allow me to do my own musing….
MY TWO CENTS: After watching these talks I thought to myself, Wow these two people are just freakin' brilliant! But howcome they don't seem to meet eye to eye?
Dennett was obviously talking from a highly advanced cognitive scientific point of view, while Warren was talking from a highly advanced spiritual point of view albeit with a Christian flavor. Dennett's arguments appeals to the exterior of reality (e.g. biology, physics, evolution etc.) while Warren's arguments appeals to interiority (e.g. meaning, purpose, creation etc.).
When I saw Dennett's video championing his own Atheism I had no problems agreeing with all the scientific reasoning that he's dishing out. When he criticized religion, he hit the bull's eye of its problem: lack of scientific evidence, lack of education, lack of exposure to other religions. Yeah! Go get 'em Dennett! From what I gather from Dennett's arguments, the solution to the problem of religion is “educating” everyone. Well, I definitely agree on the education part, because that is key. However, Dennett seems to ignore (or has forgotten) that people go though stages of moral development and reasoning. You can educate people as much as you can but their interpretation and beliefs will be shaped depending on what stage of reasoning they're at. So his proposal is like trying to teach three year old kids advanced calculus. But I think I understand what Dennett is getting at. In his ideal world, religious tolerance and scientific inquiry are championed. I'd love that too. Unfortunately, in the “real” world, organized religions hijack the development of the majority of the population preventing them from reaching the stage of reasoning that Dennett already occupies.
But here's the rub: Dennet's critique of religion is lacking because it's not fully qualified. He lumps all religions altogether, especially the levels of religious beliefs. Religious beliefs go through stages of moral reasoning too: pre-conventional, conventional, post-conventional. So I wonder what stage of religion Dennett was attacking. I'll bet he's attacking the pre-conventional and conventional stages. If that's the case, then Dennett rocks! But then Dennett went on to critique Warren. Rightly so, because Warren had written some statements in his book which can be interpreted in pre-conventional and conventional ways. But when I watched Pastor Warren's video, I noticed that he is coming from a post-conventional stage of religious belief. I haven't read Warren's book but from the way he speaks, I'll assume that the book was written with a post-conventional reasoning under the guise of Christianity – thus making it a bestseller since the majority of the population is Christian. The catch of course is, will the majority of the Christians who read the book interpret it using conventional, or post-conventional beer-goggles?
The bottomline: I'd give Dennett the points for a blow by blow critique on religion. He wins the scientific and exteriority arguments, but when it comes to interiority, meaning, and sense of purpose, Pastor Warren is the winner, hands down.
~C (for Cows are sacred)
P.S. All in all, it's cool to see those two brilliant perspectives at play. However, if I'll have it my way, I also want to see something that will “integrate” those two perspectives into a believable worldview. It would've have been cool to see Ken Wilber talking at TEDTalks along with Dennett and Warren. Actually, I think Ken should talk at these conferences rather than just talking to people who already agrees with him. I think it's high time to stop preaching only to the choir, but also preach and integrate the rest of the memes out there. Conferences like TEDTalks would also give Wilber more mainstream exposure and it would be good for I-I. Now I wonder, does Wilber get invited to these talks and he just declines, or Wilber still doesn't have the mainstream recognition (like Dennett) to be invited to these talks? If it's the former, then I'll say, “Ken, you're not very fluffy.”
(Crossposted from www.c4chaos.com)
“If you follow your bliss, you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that you ought to be living is the one you are living. Wherever you are – if you are following your bliss, you are enjoying that refreshment, that life within you, all the time.”
Source: Power Of Myth : Programs 1-6 (Power of Myth) , Page: 113I just love watching all the Joseph Campbell videos on YouTube. Here are some more video segments from the The Power of Myth. They're all about God, life, death, sex, marriage, love, nonduality, impermanence, and following our bliss: Bliss 01, Bliss 02, Bliss 03.
Here's the video for Bliss 03.
May you all find your blissful rabbit holes!
~C (for Campbell still rocks!)
(Crossposted from www.c4chaos.com) "Now, I came to this idea of bliss because in Sanskrit, which is the
great spiritual language of the world, there are three terms that
represent the brink, the jumping-off place to the ocean of
transcendence: sat-chit-ananda. The word "Sat" means being. "Chit"
means consciousness. "Ananda" means bliss or rapture. I thought, "I
don't know whether my consciousness is proper consciousness or not; I
don't know whether what I know of my being is my proper being or not;
but I do know where my rapture is. So let me hang on to rapture, and
that will bring me both my consciousness and my being." I think it
worked."
Source: The Power of Myth, Page: 120
Speaking of the four Ls, by some weird serendipity I happen to bump into this classic Joseph Campbell interview. It's a video segment of The Power of Myth. In this video Joseph Campbell talked about Love, the Holy Grail, and God. It's a cool hyper-overview of Campbell's massive knowledge of mythology. Campbell's beer-goggles is a perfect example of DEPTH and SPAN. This video a must-see
I {heart} you all!
~C (for Campbell rocks!)
(Crossposted from www.c4chaos.com)
"As community grows, change accelerates."
Continuing with my Social Enterprise theme...
Check out this hour-long video of Ashoka's Founder Bill Drayton
speaking at Google. Learn stories of people who went out there and
change the existing status quo for the better.
Video blurb: "Bill Drayton, Chairman and CEO of Ashoka:
Innovators for the Public and lifelong entrepreneur, helped build the
field of social entrepreneurship 25 years ago and remains committed to
shaping a dynamic, global citizen sector. He was recently selected as
one of America's Best Leaders by US News & World Report and Harvard's Center for Public Leadership." Being the change is one thing, changing the world is another. Let's do them at the same time and see what gives :)
(Crossposted from www.c4chaos.com)
Check out this video overview of Ashoka's Social Entrepreneurship Series as narrated by Bill Drayton, founder of Ashoka – a global nonprofit organization that identifies and invests in leading social entrepreneurs. This video preview is a cool “introduction to remarkable leaders who offer practical wisdom garnered from lifetimes of innovation.”
(Crossposted from www.c4chaos.com)
Check out this cool interview with Noam Chomsky on Charlie Rose (sans Charlie Rose). Mr. Chomsky (aka "the most important intellectual alive") talked about Failed States and how the U.S. falls in the that broad category. They also covered such topics as international terrorism. Very interesting.
But what I'd like to see is Noam Chomsky and Ken Wilber discussing the many faces of terrorism to see where those two great thinkers agree and where they part. Hmmm, maybe those two can have an intellectual discourse via their blogs. Chomsky blogs here. Wilber blogs here. Moving forward I'd prefer if Wilber would have dialogues with mainstream-recognized thinkers instead of having intellectual food fight with critics who are not authorities in the respective fields they criticize. Now that would be more interesting.
Also, in Part Two, Mr. Chomsky thrashed B.F. Skinner's behaviorism without batting an eyelash while keeping his cool. Nice.
~C (for Chomsky got BIG Compassionate Balls!)
