Ken Wilber shares a beautiful set of pointing out instructions on the "Myth of the Given" conference call....
Tagged with:
Saved by ~C4Chaos
about 1 year ago.
In this third and final installation of David and Ken's dialogue, we explore the role of sports as a "hidden religion," an age-old tradition with the extraordinary ability to evoke powerful states of transcendence
Tagged with:
Saved by ~C4Chaos
about 1 year ago.
In this dialogue, Brother David and Ken Wilber discuss the concept of Integral panentheism
Tagged with:
Saved by ~C4Chaos
about 1 year ago.
Ken Wilber discusses harmful spiritual movements with Jacob Bartels, and how an understanding of stages and shadow can help to see why things go wrong....
Tagged with:
Saved by ~C4Chaos
about 1 year ago.
Dr. Warren Farrell and Ken Wilber discuss some of the ingredients of an Integral account of human sexuality, while exploring the nuances of relationships between men and women, the many attempts of feminism to redefine sex and gender, and the historic causes behind the division of labor and the rigid patriarchies that followed
Tagged with:
Saved by ~C4Chaos
about 1 year ago.
The author of one of the most searing, courageous personal memoirs of our time shares how an Integral Approach helped him reconcile a life of fierce inner struggles with what it means to be a gay man in today
Tagged with:
Saved by ~C4Chaos
about 1 year ago.
In the last chapter of Up from Eden ("Republicans, Democrats, and Mystics"), I made the observation that, when it comes to the cause of human suffering, liberals tend to believe in objective causation, whereas conservatives tend to believe in subjective causation. That is, if an individual is suffering, the typical liberal tends to blame objective social institutions (if you are poor it is because you are oppressed by society), whereas the typical conservative tends to blame subjective factors (if you are poor it is because you are lazy). Thus, the liberal recommends objective social interventions: redistribute the wealth, change social institutions so that they produce fairer outcomes, evenly slice the economic pie, aim for equality among all. The typical conservative recommends that we instill family values, demand that individuals assume more responsibility for themselves, tighten up slack moral standards (often by embracing traditional religious values), encourage a work ethic, reward achievement, and so on.
Tagged with:
Saved by ~C4Chaos
about 1 year ago.

Help



