A Revolution in Thought? - Dr Iain McGilchrist

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Darwin College Lecture Series

Darwin College Lecture Series

Күн бұрын

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@TheDAT9
@TheDAT9 10 ай бұрын
That lecture should be broadcast on every media channel world wide, in every country in every language.
@suzettedarrow8739
@suzettedarrow8739 10 ай бұрын
The hemisphere theory is silly, tho. Isn't it? Surely you don't take his hemisphere theory seriously. Do you?
@kensears5099
@kensears5099 10 ай бұрын
@@suzettedarrow8739 Ah, well, suzette certainly blew that lecture out of the water, didn't she! Nothing to nuke learning, experience, inquiry and exploration like a snarky thread comment, huh! I suppose they'll take this video down now that Suzette's arrow-like voice has pierced the fog for the ages.
@suzettedarrow8739
@suzettedarrow8739 10 ай бұрын
you gotta understand that on the internet it pays to speak in provacative language. i can back up my skepticism.@@kensears5099
@siyaindagulag.
@siyaindagulag. 10 ай бұрын
@@kensears5099 Maybe we stick around and see how it does ; ages ,that is. 😉
@kensears5099
@kensears5099 10 ай бұрын
@@siyaindagulag. Agreed!
@brendonlake1522
@brendonlake1522 10 ай бұрын
Iain is an important voice, thank you for making this lecture so widely available. I wish more people would watch it!
@BlessedAssurance949
@BlessedAssurance949 10 ай бұрын
That's the best single summation of the modern world problem I've heard.
@SCITom
@SCITom 8 ай бұрын
funny it comes from a brain research
@karakoima
@karakoima 7 ай бұрын
McGilchrist sure has something to say, but it needs to be translated to something possible to digess for the masses.
@BlessedAssurance949
@BlessedAssurance949 7 ай бұрын
@@karakoima huh, that could be an interesting challenge. Any thoughts on what form that might take?
@keithalcock7173
@keithalcock7173 5 ай бұрын
@@karakoimaso far I do not have indigestion. Cheers from Cannada
@dostoeolstoy6529
@dostoeolstoy6529 4 ай бұрын
​@BlessedAssurance949 I've always felt a well thought out fiction outlining The Master and his Emissarys philosophy would be a marvelous film adaptation. Would be quite the challenge to get it right, something gripping and entertaining yet dense with information pertaining to the modern-day, missteps, and shortsightedness committed on the regular.
@gedofgont1006
@gedofgont1006 10 ай бұрын
Brilliant and profoundly moving. Iain is a modern day intellectual warrior, with a heart to match. I'm both uplifted and depressed, simultaneously, by listening to him speak: uplifted because his command of language and subtle insights are always a joy to witness; depressed because it is painfully apparent just how far we are from achieving the kind of transformation we so desperately need. I fear the full extent of the metacrisis has yet to reveal itself and we must continue to suffer under a failed paradigm for a good while yet. The analogy that comes to mind is the obsessive (left hemisphere dominated?) Coyote in the Roadrunner cartoons, who runs off the cliff in pursuit of his quarry, but doesn't begin to fall until he looks down and sees the yawning void below. That sudden irruption of awareness is the right hemisphere, finally being acknowledged - in Coyote's case, too late.
@karakoima
@karakoima 7 ай бұрын
Go say that to people of working class roots
@amemabastet9055
@amemabastet9055 7 ай бұрын
We are not far. Gilchrist is brilliant and worth listening to, but he is also stuck in the old patterns of thinking that led us into the troubling times we are in. He is a Newtonian, not an Einsteinian thinker. Gilchrist is able to analyse, but he nonetheless misses the point, namely that there are underlying thought forms and patterns that dictates how we are programmed to think. It isn't the analysis of ourselves that has killed beauty. It is the a priori thought form of utilitarianism and capitalisation of biology that is the problem, because these frameworks for our perception of reality leads us into believing that for anything having value, we must be able to allocate meaning and value to it through money or usefulness in a commercial setting. There's the hinge he should have been looking at.
@colsmith434
@colsmith434 7 ай бұрын
​@@karakoimawhat are you implying?
@karakoima
@karakoima 6 ай бұрын
@@colsmith434 that transformations and revolutions are what kids from wealthy families always strive for, to find meaning and life fulfilment. While working class people is fully content with a stable society. Not giving a sh*t about the life prospects of the plebeys might have worked, but doesnt work any longer. Brexit, Trump and Nationalist parties growing is what you get. Learn the lesson of Reichtagswahl 1928 and 1930. Never tamper with the lives of good job jobber citizens.
@pvc25
@pvc25 10 ай бұрын
It took great courage to speak in such terms to that audience. Thank you and bravo Iain.
@finnmacdiarmid3250
@finnmacdiarmid3250 10 ай бұрын
Never discount the power of synopsis
@karakoima
@karakoima 7 ай бұрын
What? Why should that audience object? Go speak it to a working class high school audience, or to people in a factory.
@karakoima
@karakoima 3 ай бұрын
@@LeeGee i’m working class too. And for him to talk to university students doesnt seem all that brave.
@deanedge5988
@deanedge5988 10 ай бұрын
Surely one of the most important minds and voices of our time.
@wolfie71231
@wolfie71231 10 ай бұрын
A truly great intellectual and human being, his stature will grow with time.
@zaydeshaddox7015
@zaydeshaddox7015 10 ай бұрын
I've been reading The Master & His Emissary, reading it slowly and actually highlighting and then copying certain passages into a private journal by hand because I think it's one of the most important books I've ever read. When I was in high school, I took a class in calligraphy and had many after-class discussions with my teacher on various subjects. At one point, I asked him for some advice on living my life and his advice was "Seek to become a Renaissance man", which he defined as developing both hemispheres of my brain as much as possible. So Dr. McGilchrist's book is particularly personal to me.
@kascally
@kascally 9 ай бұрын
Steve Jobs study of calligraphy was crucial to his development, and Apple's early focus.
@zaydeshaddox7015
@zaydeshaddox7015 8 ай бұрын
@@KL0098 I will take that chance. You can live in fear of the unknown and call it "skepticism" if you like. It's your life. But there is no "we" going on here.
@zaydeshaddox7015
@zaydeshaddox7015 8 ай бұрын
@@KL0098 My calligraphy teacher advised me to devote my life to developing both sides of my brain. He used the term "Renaissance Man" to characterize this. You are now nitpicking over how accurate that term is. Who cares? What a petty argument. The meaningful part is developing both sides of the brain. BOTH sides. This has nothing to do with "assurances of received ideas". So no, you're quite wrong. And I am wondering what you think you're accomplishing with your argument. After all, I'm only describing a focal point in MY life. You're the one using the term "we", like my focus is a threat to everyone else. What's up with that?
@siyaindagulag.
@siyaindagulag. 10 ай бұрын
Come the hour, cometh the man. His work...a gift,most appreciated.
@rodcameron7140
@rodcameron7140 10 ай бұрын
WOW! The more I listen to Dr. McGilchrist the more I respect him. He consistently expresses views that hold such a deep and accurate understanding of the true underlying cause of things. In other words, he often speaks from true wisdom. I have learned to be very attentive to every word he utters. I am even more excited to finish one of the books I am reading so that I can start his book The Master and His Emissary.
@johnhaynes9910
@johnhaynes9910 10 ай бұрын
I am a great fan of Dr McGilchrist, as much for his style as his substance, views expressed calmly, unlike the 'shouty, shouty world' we are currently forced to endure.
@carolkatholnig585
@carolkatholnig585 10 ай бұрын
I agree I love listening to his beautiful calm voice. If only people in government spent some time listening to each other.
@LenaCabana
@LenaCabana 10 ай бұрын
Exactly. Thank you for your comment. It is quite extraordinary nowadays to hear a person calmly explaining his points.
@MikeFuller-ok6ok
@MikeFuller-ok6ok 9 ай бұрын
His knowledge includes psychiatry, philosophy, neuroscience, psychology, poetry, literature, and history. Whew!! I am a neuropsychologist but I am not at his level.
@michellejohnsen912
@michellejohnsen912 4 ай бұрын
​@@MikeFuller-ok6okand Theology!
@robertwhiteley-yv1sy
@robertwhiteley-yv1sy 10 ай бұрын
I truly believe Ian’s theory is possibly the greatest realisation in the world.
@finnmacdiarmid3250
@finnmacdiarmid3250 10 ай бұрын
At the same time it’s always been obvious, just not clearly marked
@mindsindialogue
@mindsindialogue 10 ай бұрын
Reading other sources while keeping his theory nearby as an anchor, it becomes rather deeply convincing. My interest turned to the question: if one juxtaposes the hemisphere theory with cognitive anthropology, what might one find?
@mindsindialogue
@mindsindialogue 9 ай бұрын
@@Am33304Jeff, would you mind paraphrase what is that, that you are asking?
@mindsindialogue
@mindsindialogue 9 ай бұрын
@@Am33304oh, thank you for clarifying :) In a nutshell, Ian's theory proposes that there is an ontological difference in attention; the way one attains to existence and to self. Attention given by the right hemisphere will be different from the left given attention. Holism vs reductionism. A disclaimer must follow, as both hemispheres are working at all times; often enough, however, dominance of the left hemisphere is exercised. Ian goes arm length further and proposes that today's way of living, which stems out of attention that is dominated by the left (reductive) hemisphere thinking and vision. Stepping out of this theory and going back to what I postulated, it seems to me that there is a constant dynamical trade-off of type of attention that implicitly embedded through-out history of human kind. Hunter-gatherers, for example, must have prioritized right hemisphere attention while using left hemispheric attention for surgical operations (food hunting and habitat construction and re-construction). Civil orchestration (egalitarianism) can only happen when attention is exercised by the right hemisphere and patrolled by the left. The prioritization happened naturally for their ecological and social ontology were utterly different from the one moderns know. Pardon for leaked enthusiasm of mine and over simplification.
@mindsindialogue
@mindsindialogue 9 ай бұрын
@@Am33304 Very much so. :) If we take the "hemisphere theory" seriously, we must then presuppose sound grounding for the belief that there is indeed another way to pay attention to, for lack of more precise terminology, existence. Now, the immediate response to that is: what is that other way? What does it even mean? Where does one look to even define what that way of attention, the one employed at this very second, is? Does it feel like something? Does it have a different cognitive structure, given that cognition is a dynamical system? Never-mind the invitation to include the phenomenological aspect in the inquiry; for if one does so, things become transparently obvious, if I can put it in such a way without sounding ambiguous, so forgive me, but language here limits me. As far as the ever-morphing synthesis, which I am able to hold somewhat accurately, goes, it brings one to tautology; to the shallow-waters. For instance, yes, different cognition leads to a very different apprehension of 'all', since again, cognition is a dynamical system; a change in one variable leads to a shift in the entire system (depending on the strength, of course). What is the workshop of yours is about?
@robertalenrichter
@robertalenrichter 10 ай бұрын
I've listened to many hours of McGilchrist, but this is the best speech, outstanding.
@Vedicvibesorg
@Vedicvibesorg 10 ай бұрын
he just reads from a paper, ths is no speech.
@robertalenrichter
@robertalenrichter 10 ай бұрын
@@Vedicvibesorg Traditionally, speeches are actually read from paper, though sometimes not.
@Vedicvibesorg
@Vedicvibesorg 10 ай бұрын
well that is very 19th century....perhaps the splendid isolation helped to conserve such a tradition....@@robertalenrichter
@druidjuicer636
@druidjuicer636 10 ай бұрын
So, you listened to this presentation and this was the comment you thought best summarised it@@Vedicvibesorg? It really does seem you can lead a horse to water...
@Vedicvibesorg
@Vedicvibesorg 10 ай бұрын
thanks I think that would be possible for me...@@druidjuicer636
@rowley555
@rowley555 9 ай бұрын
I can't explain how profoundly moving this is, so eloquent, clear and inspiring, spoken with such compassion and humility.
@dustinwbarrington
@dustinwbarrington 10 ай бұрын
This is one of your clearest and most compelling presentations. Well done, sir.
@CarliMichelle
@CarliMichelle 10 ай бұрын
God bless you Dr McGilchrist for your work as well as for the abundance of new lectures
@peterweston1356
@peterweston1356 10 ай бұрын
I have read both Iain’s books and I am rereading The Matter With Things. Further I have probably watched many 10 of hours of his talks and debates. In his last few appearances he seems to have become better at describing his splendid takes on the modern world. He now presents a much clearer picture of the implications for mainly Western societies, for us as individuals and what we can do to respond as individuals. Respond in a way to experience a richer, more colourful and fulfilling life. I am by no means academic or even particularly bright, holding a single degree theses days means very little. What I do find surprising and a little sad is that so few public figures, media types, politicians or educators have any idea who Iain is or how his ideas merit a much greater airing. It seems to me that much of society (and many of my friends and family) seem belligerently blind to the idea that improving our lot starts with oneself, inside ones head and heart on a journey towards the ‘holy’. I see so many folk protesting or lobbying or law making falling foul of their left hemispheres.
@tomgreene1843
@tomgreene1843 10 ай бұрын
Have just started the second volume of TMWthings ....what a work! I am old enough to remember something of what is lost...a ground that needs recovering.
@SC-gw8np
@SC-gw8np 9 ай бұрын
See how many people flinch the moment you mention the world virtue? They perceive that as you shining a light on their vices, because they have no virtues to speak of.
@user-cg3tx8zv1h
@user-cg3tx8zv1h 10 ай бұрын
Above all the brilliance, what a wonderful human being...
@sheilaoneil18
@sheilaoneil18 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this wonderful and beautiful lecture. My heart warms to this man.
@kateoneal4215
@kateoneal4215 10 ай бұрын
Iain McGilchrist is in my pantheon of gods. Thanks for this!
@omarose7504
@omarose7504 10 ай бұрын
Wonderful and greatly appreciated. Thank you so very much! I always add to "Know Thyself" also Love Thyself.
@scottishpine
@scottishpine 10 ай бұрын
Yes! And in that the growing of understanding and practice of love in its deepest essence and meaning. Check out Rudolf Steiner s insights on the interpendent connections between love and "Erkenntnis", the act of coming to know...
@lioubovshegera4474
@lioubovshegera4474 10 ай бұрын
Прекраснейшая лекция.Спасибо.Во мне вы пробудиши чувство,что не всё ещё потеряно.. и ещё не все потеряны...есть люли думающие..и мысшящие.
@babakrasolzadeh7854
@babakrasolzadeh7854 10 ай бұрын
Ian’s multi- and inter-disciplinary intellect is a desperately needed one in the so called modern era. In fact the emergence of a voice like his is IMO not lucky or timely coincidence, but most likely a result or even one last synergistic attempt by the greater system of our human culture to save us from this meta crisis and the spiraling down the left hemisphere’s dark hole, by producing an intellect capable of articulating the inarticulate, trying desperately bringing us back on a healing path of synthesis between the two hemispheres. Thank you Iran for being that intellect. Your contributions to humanity will be remembered for centuries to come, lest we succumb to this meta crisis.
@johnluke37
@johnluke37 10 ай бұрын
Iian is, IMHO the greatest consolidator of current social conditions and the movement towards the destruction of balanced life. The loss of beauty, Love and truth to a left brain machine. We ignore this understanding at our peril. Thank you Dr Mcgililcrest
@johnluke37
@johnluke37 9 ай бұрын
Well put yourself!
@frankwhite1816
@frankwhite1816 10 ай бұрын
Epic! A prodigious lecture! Required viewing! One of the clearest, most eloquent, thoughtful and positively truthful summations of our current predicament I've ever heard and brothers and sisters, I've heard a lot of them. Been in the Metacrisis game for decades now (way before it was called that by the inimitable group at The Consilience Project, we just called it THE MACHINE, see Orwell and such). An incredible speech from a kaleidoscopic mind. One of the greatest minds of our time. Such a gift to hear you speak, Dr. McGilchrist. Thank you, thank you, thank you, a million times thank you! Please share with everyone.
@seamusoluasigh9296
@seamusoluasigh9296 10 ай бұрын
Thank you Dr. McGilchrist for a deeply moving and thought provoking lecture.
@kennethflorek8532
@kennethflorek8532 10 ай бұрын
The first and only meta-lecture.
@lordemed1
@lordemed1 10 ай бұрын
As a right-hemisphere dominant person, i understand Iain McGilchrist and totally agree with him.
@resiliencewithin
@resiliencewithin 10 ай бұрын
Have you finished 6th grade?
@magouliana32
@magouliana32 10 ай бұрын
⁠@infiniteshoeblackAristotle vs Plato …
@Impaled_Onion-thatsmine
@Impaled_Onion-thatsmine 9 ай бұрын
You never seen that cartoon telling you not to think, how easy it is to mindlessly process grammar and words.
@hurley-brian
@hurley-brian 8 ай бұрын
Iain has just kicked another door wide open on my journey of self discovery and human understanding. Taking the time to comment after my second time listening to this Lecture. Thank you Iain.
@artandculture5262
@artandculture5262 10 ай бұрын
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏❤️ Iain. Love to Iain. Thank you to your university. We need what you did in platforming him. Thank you to all. 👏👏👏👏
@StephanieSoressi
@StephanieSoressi 10 ай бұрын
Well done, Iain -- well done.
@beefandbarley
@beefandbarley 9 ай бұрын
Brilliantly perceptive and articulated. Thank you for this.
@ChrisOgunlowo
@ChrisOgunlowo 10 ай бұрын
Thoughtful. Thank you, Dr Iain.
@foxdenham
@foxdenham 10 ай бұрын
Superb Iain. I am oh-so encouraged X
@carolspencer6915
@carolspencer6915 10 ай бұрын
Good afternoon Darwin College and Iain Again super Sensemaking Sense, indeed. Truly grateful for your work. Sanity brain gym. 💜
@CarolPrice4p
@CarolPrice4p 8 ай бұрын
Thanks, Dr. McGilchrist's thinking is such a treat.
@bfuiltugomaith
@bfuiltugomaith 10 ай бұрын
This angel has a wonderful empathy God bless you always
@dosesandmimoses
@dosesandmimoses 10 ай бұрын
Bravo. Well said…Gratitude 🙏
@eueueq
@eueueq 10 ай бұрын
amazing! what a beautiful and courageous speech!!!!!
@zumamaya2396
@zumamaya2396 9 ай бұрын
Very enjoyable lecture and worth several reviews. I laughed at the last few minutes, at 67, I frequently reflect on how much there is to learn and yet all that matters is the experience of life. The only possible response is one of Wonder and Gratitude for the opportunity we are given.
@goansunborn
@goansunborn 10 ай бұрын
Another gem from Mr McGilchrist!
@Xehr1
@Xehr1 13 күн бұрын
Prof
@catherinelawrence424
@catherinelawrence424 9 ай бұрын
Compelling, heartfelt and very human. Inspiring is an overused word but this lecture truly is.
@cheri238
@cheri238 10 ай бұрын
Thank you again, Dr. Iian McGilchrist, for your depths of meaning, your wisdom , lectures, and books bring light to all in various fields and to all of us who seek a different path for the betterment of humanity. 🙏❤️🌏🌿🕊🎵🎶🎵
@tonygodden1006
@tonygodden1006 10 ай бұрын
Life and people decoded. Brilliant.
@kirktucker7360
@kirktucker7360 9 ай бұрын
Truly outstanding lecture and he is so brave as he tackles our new found problems in society with such eloquence.
@RevVolt22
@RevVolt22 9 ай бұрын
This lecture is like an inside beautiful fire to warm up our right hemisphere … thank you for your words and sharing.
@AnAlgernon
@AnAlgernon 9 ай бұрын
The era of great and humble men is not yet ended. Bravo!
@V_Hayden7
@V_Hayden7 4 ай бұрын
If you check these comments Dr. McGilchrist: Thank You! I got your book, "The Master and His Emissary," a couple of weeks ago, and though I didn't know it, it is the book I've been looking for all my life. The most important work in modern history, maybe all of history. I was also glad that I wasn't the only one listening to your talk to get choked up at the end, as did the host. Thanks also to Darwin College for having him!
@nicolawakeling7996
@nicolawakeling7996 9 ай бұрын
As a cognitive therapist my work has predominantly become about working with individuals to integrate the right hemisphere back into the whole and anchoring that as a new way of being. They come for solutions and yet the solution os never known by the left hemisphere. As for the individual, as for society. I have long made the argument that this approach is the one way… and in my opinion is at odds with much of the current mental health protocols - which are left hemisphere solutions to left hemisphere problems. Iain, thank you for describing something that most elude to in daily conversations, but fail to coherently understand the importance of our insights.
@shaunsanders9673
@shaunsanders9673 9 ай бұрын
Thank you. Brilliant! Now if only I can get my academic colleagues to listen :)
@theobservereffectexplained1102
@theobservereffectexplained1102 10 ай бұрын
Yes it’s magnificent awesome presentation of human for humanities. Thank you for your generosity of sharing your life’s work . It was beautiful good and true!!
@montyoxymoron4704
@montyoxymoron4704 10 ай бұрын
I’ve been comparing your thought with the “Integral” philosophy of Ken Wilbur. A very different style to be sure but in common a rediscovery of ‘the Sacred” and the spiritual but within a framework that doesn’t suppress the body: both spiritual and embodied at once, that’s what we need today! The problem is: will anyone listen?
@montyoxymoron4704
@montyoxymoron4704 10 ай бұрын
@@T-aka-T yes and that’s a great strength for it! Mind you Wilbur would say he has included physical reality in his “Four Quadrants”; but that remains a theoretical construct in the end.
@rackedbound1648
@rackedbound1648 8 ай бұрын
This is the guy future generations will hopefully be writing and learning about like we did with Freud or Wittgenstein.
@RuriRuri24
@RuriRuri24 6 ай бұрын
From South Africa - I say-- that a real good speech! I will replay
@НаташаНикулина-е2у
@НаташаНикулина-е2у 7 ай бұрын
Dr Iain McGilchrist has brought me to that very place fromwhere i know what to do ! Thanks !
@KatherineTaylorDavis
@KatherineTaylorDavis 8 ай бұрын
I am astonished by the critical insight and depth of humanity in this; to be embraced with utmost urgency.
@LizChild-u9i
@LizChild-u9i 9 ай бұрын
Well done, Iain! Spot on. Human Ecology at its best. It's such a relief to hear an intellectual broadening the parameters of thinking by relating it to the 'Meta-Crisis". The one we are drowning ourselves in, and killing off the Natural World. Thank you for what you do.
@DrSulikSquirrel
@DrSulikSquirrel 10 ай бұрын
"Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge: it is those who know little, not those who know much, who so positively assert that this or that problem will never be solved by science." -- Charles Darwin
@iart2838
@iart2838 10 ай бұрын
How can we turn off politicians' left hemisphere
@eliaslyman9256
@eliaslyman9256 10 ай бұрын
Incredible speech, thank you.
@stvbrsn
@stvbrsn 10 ай бұрын
As relates to theoretical physics (and believe it or not, I’ve been saying this for years before I knew of Iain’s brilliant work) there is no “particle/wave duality,” only two different ways of looking at things.
@lepidoptera9337
@lepidoptera9337 10 ай бұрын
Most of what you are being told about as dualities are merely false dichotomy fallacies. Particle wave duality is one of those, but it's not something that comes from theoretical physics. Dirac, one of the best theoretical physicists in history, has pointed this out in the early 1930s and even the most cursory look at any physics library (or even at a high school science textbook) will confirm that he was right. So where does this fallacy live? It lives mostly in the layman literature and now on the internet.
@mindsindialogue
@mindsindialogue 10 ай бұрын
@@lepidoptera9337mind to provide citation? Would love to explore his thought.
@caeciliapotter8353
@caeciliapotter8353 10 ай бұрын
Profound summation of all the crises that beset us
@balgrantango460
@balgrantango460 9 ай бұрын
Great lecture ! Thank you.
@reinholdhubner8880
@reinholdhubner8880 9 ай бұрын
What a speech! It gave me the courage back I've been depleted over the years in this crazy time. Let's flourish the good, beauty and truth, communion and trust, nature and spirituality. For all we know - let's go beyond.
@mbrochh82
@mbrochh82 9 ай бұрын
Here's a ChatGPT summary: Dr. Iain McGilchrist discusses the importance of understanding the brain's hemispheric differences. - He emphasizes that the left hemisphere is focused on manipulation, while the right hemisphere understands the contextual whole. - The left hemisphere's narrow beam attention is contrasted with the right hemisphere's broad, vigilant, and uncommitted attention. - McGilchrist argues that the left hemisphere's dominance in Western culture has led to a loss of direction and value. - He notes that the left hemisphere is seductive and offers simple answers, which can be addictive and misleading. - The left hemisphere's worldview is easier to articulate, leading to its dominance in public discourse. - McGilchrist suggests that the left hemisphere is delusional when operating independently, often denying inconvenient truths. - He traces historical patterns of cultural flourishing and decline, linking them to hemispheric dominance. - The lecture explores the paradoxes of modern life, such as the pursuit of happiness leading to less happiness. - McGilchrist calls for a change in hearts and minds, not just actions, to address the metacrisis facing society. - He recommends cultivating awe and wonder, compassion, and a recognition of our limited knowledge as steps toward healing. - The lecture concludes with an appreciation for the complexity and beauty of the cosmos and the potential for human greatness. - Main message: The dominance of the left hemisphere's mode of being in Western culture has led to a crisis of meaning and value, and a shift towards a more balanced hemispheric understanding is necessary for personal fulfillment, societal flourishing, and addressing the metacrisis.
@hglatGAIA
@hglatGAIA 8 ай бұрын
This is superb!
@MiyamotoMusashi9
@MiyamotoMusashi9 8 ай бұрын
The most accurate synopsis of the unabomber manifesto ive ever heard. Thank you sir.
@2DXYSU
@2DXYSU 10 ай бұрын
"The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine the can design." F. A. Hayek. THE FATAL CONCEIT.
@janbloxham4485
@janbloxham4485 4 ай бұрын
A most excellent effort. Thank you!
@hankchinaski_
@hankchinaski_ 10 ай бұрын
magnficent reading.... magnificent
@luisaqueiroz5173
@luisaqueiroz5173 9 ай бұрын
Amazing! Thank you !!
@tomgreene1843
@tomgreene1843 10 ай бұрын
An important voice today.
@katespellxx9529
@katespellxx9529 7 ай бұрын
Great chat, thank you! Lots of food for thought in there.
@kuettler
@kuettler 10 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@onemysore6120
@onemysore6120 10 ай бұрын
Yes complacency at the end of the world. But the ASMR here is magnificent.
@carolenash3234
@carolenash3234 9 ай бұрын
one of Ian's best. Consider being part of that 3%
@charlottesills3977
@charlottesills3977 7 ай бұрын
A simply wonderful lecture. I cried.
@onaleemcgraw4048
@onaleemcgraw4048 6 ай бұрын
Vital Truth, A great scholar given to us now....
@ZecZli
@ZecZli 10 ай бұрын
That's it. Amen! Yes, Love (of Life) against the Machine (of lusts...). I've never heard more beautiful speech in my life, thank you Sir. 🙏
@christopherdew2355
@christopherdew2355 10 ай бұрын
How good it is to see an academic in an academic gown!
@arthurchinaski3736
@arthurchinaski3736 9 ай бұрын
A very good and brave lecture in today's cultural environment. I would humbly recommend everyone who liked it to consider reading Erich Fromm's work. He talked wisely about these self same matters in the mid- 20th century and seems to be oddly unappreciated now. I'd recommend his book 'The Sane Society' as a good starting point.
@poetryinmotion8112
@poetryinmotion8112 10 ай бұрын
Totally brilliant
@tbabbittt
@tbabbittt 10 ай бұрын
Nice lecture, it dawned on me that even using the terms right and left hemisphere are very left hemisphere.
@nicolalairdon2625
@nicolalairdon2625 6 ай бұрын
This is so important to the survival of the human race. May we all learn before it’s too late
@MikhailKrilov
@MikhailKrilov 10 ай бұрын
Thanks! A Speech on the magnitude of Solzhenitsyn. As he says "The Truth is seldom pleasant, in fact it is invariably bitter."
@artandculture5262
@artandculture5262 10 ай бұрын
I add antagonism as a cultural habit. It blocks reflection and pushes contagion.
@maddieandjowjow
@maddieandjowjow 9 ай бұрын
Stunning❤
@TheSepetto
@TheSepetto 10 ай бұрын
Overall i can say a very helpful set of arguments that help us build a better understanding of the world. The critism i have is this: the representative aspect (the map example) of the left brain leads to a reductionist view of the world. A lecture is a shortened form of a greater view, in other words a representation. I felt like more nuanced details were overlooked (reduced) for the sake or the lecture (representation). Maybe Dr. Gilchrist expands upon the topics he mentioned here in his books, but here i think "mechanistic view versus the nature" is a reducted view of the nature/mankind relationship which in itself is quite nuanced. Also Dr. Gilchrist's comments on "western" world versus the "authoritarian" regimes and his comments on concepts like service to the country etc. i believe reflect a reductionist and simplified version of the world (which is completely okay as it is impossible to communicate anything without some degree of simplification). The reason i am mentioning this is I believe the way of solution to our problems lies partly in these details that are simplified away for the sake of the presenting a lecture. Just wanted to add this side note as a non-English listener. Cheers.
@TantraYoga1
@TantraYoga1 10 ай бұрын
The Master and the Emissary on Audible is 23 hours long.
@curtisgrindahl446
@curtisgrindahl446 10 ай бұрын
There also is about 29 hours of conversation on The Matter with Things between Iain and Alex Gomez-Marin, a theoretical physicist turned neuroscientist. If you want a more subtle reading of things you might consider those conversations. They are found on KZbin.
@kateoneal4215
@kateoneal4215 10 ай бұрын
It's fascinating that what he starts describing in some detail about the midpoint of this lecture relates to our western societies much more than the eastern cultures....
@joejohnson6327
@joejohnson6327 10 ай бұрын
Watch a documentary about the state of the environment in modern-day India & China. Nothing is sacred to any country's "elites" anymore.
@poetryinmotion8112
@poetryinmotion8112 2 ай бұрын
Yes, we need to revisit our thought process.
@Dani68ABminus
@Dani68ABminus 10 ай бұрын
Bravo!
@rogertoennis8592
@rogertoennis8592 10 ай бұрын
Best thing I've ever experienced.
@petercripps2730
@petercripps2730 9 ай бұрын
Wisdom, thank you Ian
@bma1955alimarber
@bma1955alimarber 10 ай бұрын
لا يغير ما بقوم حتى يغيروا ما بأنفسهم . لا يمكن مواجهة خطر التغيرات المناخية إلا انطلاقا من تغيير ذواتنا و علاقتنا بالمجتمع و بالطبيعة. على أساس القيم الأخلاقية التي نادى بها ايمنويل كانط، و على رأسها الصدق، من جهة و على أسس اقتصادية سليمة، متجاوزين بذلك المفاهيم التي قامت عليها النظم الاقتصادية السابقة في زمن العبودية و الإقطاعية و الرأسمالية. و ذلك اعتمادا على التحليل الماركسي لهته الأخيرة . م.علي برادة. مراكش
@waxon2
@waxon2 10 ай бұрын
@bma1955alimarber Beautifully and elegantly stated truths. Thank you. So then perhaps our mission becomes to maximize the extent to which we (each) and we (the collective) can change what is in ourselves that manifests as continued denigration and exploitation of our larger selves, e.g., the environment and the "Other".
@bma1955alimarber
@bma1955alimarber 10 ай бұрын
@@waxon2 yes, thank you very much for your kind message. I hope we will change sooner to make the world a better place to live and enjoy
@hopaideia
@hopaideia 9 ай бұрын
More than being productive, the purpose is to be fruitful. Que cierto !! Ironico que esta extraordinaria ponencia, haya sido dada en el Darwin College en Cambridge.
@richardmanoogian8513
@richardmanoogian8513 5 ай бұрын
I’m left handed and have always felt different from those around me. Now I know why.This makes my day.
@Xaxtarr_Neonraven
@Xaxtarr_Neonraven 10 ай бұрын
"Artists" can see and feel the crisis, what the speaker calls a "metacrisis," each and every day and it is utterly overwhelming. Too many are losing touch with the gestalt, with the intuitive; and, oppressive control and acquisition of narrow focused symbolic materiality is taking it's place, fixated ideation and identity. There are those who have no idea as to what I am referring but that is an indication of the impoverishment implicit in the problem. They have lost the ability to think outside of the box but instead have thought themselves into a box of their own creation, and it is destroying them and us.
@beefandbarley
@beefandbarley 9 ай бұрын
Perceptive and well articulated.
@jamescox5297
@jamescox5297 10 ай бұрын
Wonderful. Yes, I have seen this need also.
@mesolithicman164
@mesolithicman164 10 ай бұрын
Wow. So much truth here. Suppression of the individual instinct and obsession with the process or system. Everything calibrated and still going disastrously wrong.
@givemorephilosophy
@givemorephilosophy 10 ай бұрын
31:33 we can understand everything. I have. In all humility I can explain the mind beyond matter the life atom and all the theories of the same.
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