Understanding Relationships and Ecology with Fritjof Capra | TGS 138

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Nate Hagens

Nate Hagens

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 173
@treefrog3349
@treefrog3349 19 күн бұрын
At the age of 75 I am utterly stunned by the parallels between Fritjof Capra's intellectual epiphanies and my own. I have never written a book, and I have only a layman's grasp of quantum physics, but beyond that our evolving grasp of the human predicament has been quite similar. Strikingly so. In recent years I have often wondered If my own mental faculties were diminishing, especially in light of recent events and the current trajectory of the human species and American domestic and global politics. I am NOT crazy! But I fear the world has gone mad.
@Slick-666
@Slick-666 19 күн бұрын
“A sane person to an insane society must appear insane.” ― Kurt Vonnegut
@phcobb2635
@phcobb2635 19 күн бұрын
​@@Slick-666"It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." -- Jiddu Krishnamurthy
@Charles_Raymond
@Charles_Raymond 19 күн бұрын
Shifting baselines. Only our generation can see the immense cultural changes. But then again, as one grows older, one can clearly see the evolution of culture unfolding at an accelerated pace. 'Tis the arrow of time.
@steveo5295
@steveo5295 19 күн бұрын
As a young man I was to busy earning a living to provide for my family to focus pacifically of the changes going on. I'm in my late 60s now and it boggles my mind how I missed it? At least it comforts me I'm not alone thinking that whole World went crazy in a short period of time...
@TennesseeJed
@TennesseeJed 19 күн бұрын
I have been questioning my sanity too, and I am only sixty.
@anthonytroia1
@anthonytroia1 19 күн бұрын
"The subatomic world cannot be described in terms of isolated objects, but is an interconnected web of relationships." 🎯
@Mtnshell56
@Mtnshell56 19 күн бұрын
Amazing- Fritjof Capra. I read his book The Tao of physics over 30 years ago. And then went on to get a degree in physics. was a high school scienceteacher and now I'm in acupuncture School. Wow it's so great to hear him speak.
@from_el_dourado
@from_el_dourado 19 күн бұрын
His book is also one of the reasons I went to study physics, although I am a bit more standard worker, working in Hydrogen engineering other than acupuncture haha but never forgot the concepts of Wu Wei and how spiritual our science can be!
@rossr6616
@rossr6616 19 күн бұрын
@@from_el_douradoWoo Wei and Woo Woo 😂
@beefandbarley
@beefandbarley 19 күн бұрын
Great subject, great guest, great host. Thanks for doing this.
@markcounseling
@markcounseling 19 күн бұрын
I remember reading him as a young physics student in the late 80s. Amazing how what was once very exotic to me became gradually foundational.
@idatong976
@idatong976 19 күн бұрын
Fritjof Capra and his book The Tao of Physics was my inspiration for many years. I'm so delighted to see him here. Thank you both so much.
@Corrie-fd9ww
@Corrie-fd9ww 19 күн бұрын
Nate, it’s been a joy to see elder systems thinkers from all backgrounds being interviewed on this show. This interview is a goldmine, imo, and I wish so much that tech people in the spiritual and personal development spaces would listen to this. I used to work in the spiritual and personal development industry and saw an influx of tech-minded people venturing into spiritual philosophies of oneness (non-dual traditions like The Dao, or advaita Vedanta, etc) and doing so through the peak experiences of plant medicines (shamanism/traditional healing, which is all about relationships with nature and within nature, what we now call ecology or systems thinking) but inevitably those direct experiences of connectedness would just wind up with more people competing in the marketplace of neoliberal economics. I see more clearly that so much of modern spirituality, modern personal development, tech innovation, and even “holistic wellness” are founded on neoliberal economics. And neoliberal economics is rooted in the human-centered worldview, which we know is not compatible with life on earth. I guess it’s a sad and enraging, but a typical irony, that our ridiculous species can have easy access to original wisdom (systems thinking through timeless philosophies like the Dao, advaita, and shamanism) and yet wind up even more tyrannical. I gotta add, the warping of the nature of reality being oneness, the way tech bros do it, with their memeified version of The Matrix movies, it’s devastating.
@Slick-666
@Slick-666 19 күн бұрын
Great interview. Heartwarming to hear about that feeling of spiritual kinship. These are the best parts of humanity.
@E.Houghton
@E.Houghton 16 күн бұрын
Capra is one of the few scientists and thinkers who recognized very early the lack - and the need - for ecological literacy in our society. It remains marginalized and largely voluntary within education systems today as we now confront what you call the 'polycrisis' - and educators who pay any attention to the state of the world call climate change and biodiversity loss. Very few people discuss the need for general ecological education to understand how we might protect the world we depend on for our survival. All students should be taught ecology and thinking in systems. But politically, it goes in direct opposition to the neoliberal market fundamentalist economy we are forced to live in - and be educated in - with perpetual growth as our collective goal. We need to be educated to be aware of that problem in order to work on it.
@TheFlyingBrain.
@TheFlyingBrain. 12 күн бұрын
🎯💯
@adrianmacfhearraigh4677
@adrianmacfhearraigh4677 19 күн бұрын
Fritjof's ideas and writings have been an inspiration for years now. One day I hope to attend one of his courses. Thanks for inviting this fantastic guest to your channel for a discussion.
@camillacalhoun1089
@camillacalhoun1089 15 күн бұрын
Same here….
@dustibecker4233
@dustibecker4233 17 күн бұрын
Great session, Nate and Fritjof! BTW, 1969 was profound experience the connectivity of life, too. It involved psychedelics at what may have been too tender of an age in terms of brain development and wisdom. I was only 15. Fortunately, in 11th grade our school offered a choice for a science credit of either Ecology or Chemistry. I took Ecology and it changed my life goals, blending with the connectivity experience in terms of academic interests and activism (Earth Day, for example). Much to the angst of my parents, the premature awakening led me to drop out of high school to quell a Quixotic goal of experiencing all the biomes of North America. I must remind all that we have the wicked problem of our own human numbers, and it dwarfs economic growth. People are already dying from hunger and the fight for lands globally are obvious. The superpowers are acting like children, especially the USA, and that must evolve significantly towards peace and collaboration soon, as we are on the precipice of WW3.
@kathrynwells5936
@kathrynwells5936 5 күн бұрын
If land was used with awareness nu m bers could I crease. The nuclear family is nuts in so many ways
@JaseboMonkeyRex
@JaseboMonkeyRex 19 күн бұрын
I love these conversations ... the depth of the knowledge and wisdom is enriching to one's soul.
@user-vi6ro8bd4l
@user-vi6ro8bd4l 19 күн бұрын
Mind blown again! Its so exciting and makes good sense to see Capra here. I've been following him since he founded the Elmwood Institute in Berkeley, 1984. That's 40 years. What was radical then was his ability to get people from across a wide variety of disciplines to discuss and explore and exchange knowledge with one another. A great eclectic meeting of minds not easily or frequently accessed prior to the internet. Bravo!!!
@grahaminglis4242
@grahaminglis4242 16 күн бұрын
In Fritjof Capra’s book “The Turning Point”, I found mention of J Krishnamurti and that was a turning point in my quest for wisdom that led to the understanding of awareness in daily living which fundamentally altered my personal life as a carer of a family member who was labelled paranoid schizophrenic.
@raystephens9550
@raystephens9550 14 күн бұрын
Excellent, and I thank you for the memo. This KZbin is one I will share widely. Earthman since 1957, here for the innocent since 1967. (when I first heard about Thylacine, Passenger Pigeon etc,..
@annethacker8292
@annethacker8292 4 күн бұрын
Wow...I had goosebumps at the end...Thank you to both of you so much!!
@Breathe-slowly
@Breathe-slowly 14 күн бұрын
I studied with Fritjof at Schumacher college as he was publishing his book the web of life in 1996. It was such an honor. Moving societal values takes a long time. Having the hippie mindset now be our elders and the people with power in government, gives me a glimmer of hope. The youth will always push for a better future as they are not burdened by such silly things as mortgages… But knowing that we are all connected to each other and the planet is what will make the difference. Be ok with less convenience and work towards living locally.
@simoneerceg7116
@simoneerceg7116 19 күн бұрын
In just 50 years it's quite staggering. I love learning from our elders. Thank you gentlemen ❤❤
@4211Rob
@4211Rob 14 күн бұрын
This is an excellent discussion and I look forward to more. Thank you!
@BrianBennett-rv7oz
@BrianBennett-rv7oz 19 күн бұрын
Great interview with Fritjof Nate🙏. Thank you for bring in him to the discussion. We missed the opportunity to turn our civilization back in the 60’s/ 70’s for sure.
@galaxy2012future
@galaxy2012future 18 күн бұрын
Beautiful wide ranging conversation with Fritjof Capra! Hanging on every word. I have encountered Fritjof's writings in bits and pieces over the years, but never heard him speak. Lucid, precisely spoken explanations not cluttered with useless rhetoric. Your questions Nate are precise and relevant. One the most enlightening podcast interviews I've encountered of late. Thank you Nate and Fritjof 🙏
@judeellenful
@judeellenful 18 күн бұрын
Nate like many here I have been a systems thinker for many years catalyzed by frijof's tao of physics- but he is a superbly elusive or reluctant public figure SO GOOD to see and hear him with you. A delight listening to you two evolve your connection Thankyou.
@andyking6051
@andyking6051 15 күн бұрын
Hi Fritjof , i read your book uncommon wisdom , and i learned so much from it particularly at that time of my life , thankyou so much , i will like before watching , you are a legend imo .
@blindpuppy7786
@blindpuppy7786 18 күн бұрын
Spectacular interview. Fascinating, insightful and strangely uplifting.
@richardlane5498
@richardlane5498 19 күн бұрын
Surprisingly, I just realized that I have been channeling Fritjof Capra for the last 50 years...; ). An amazing interview, Thank you Nate.
@d.r.m.m.
@d.r.m.m. 11 күн бұрын
What an awesome conversation! Thank you
@Gloriagannaway
@Gloriagannaway 16 күн бұрын
I read The Tao of Physics about 45 years ago and was blown away by it, I haven't heard anything about Capra in a long time because I obviously wasn't looking. I was so so thrilled to be sent the link to this interview by my daughter who said she thought I would like it. Boy, did I ever!! The interview is Wonderful!! Fits exactly with my thinking and reading and writing now. I listened to it twice and have started reading The Systems View of Life. Thank you, Nate. I just subscribed. I've now been sent links to your show by several people so it's clear that I need to get on board. Looking forward to your next show!!
@tbnrplayz8848
@tbnrplayz8848 11 күн бұрын
Tha I you Mate and Fritjof. I always learn from Fritjof whether in books, the course or interviews like this.
@ideafood4U
@ideafood4U 19 күн бұрын
Glad you are interviewing sages.
@gaiadominicana
@gaiadominicana 13 күн бұрын
Interesante como siempre fritjof...Cada vez + compactas y claras sus reflexiones/Afectos desde el Caribe estimado Profesor.
@FREEAGAIN432
@FREEAGAIN432 18 күн бұрын
beautiful and profound messages of WISDOM and INTERCONNECTEDNESS. Deep bow to you both Fritjof and Nate. So grateful.
@June-unearthed2150
@June-unearthed2150 19 күн бұрын
Listening for the second time. Thank you for speaking with these beautiful thinkers. I now again feel less isolated, even though I am living surrounded by climate change deniers. Two years to go before I - hopefully. - move into Witchcliffe Eco Village, Western Australia and begin to share time with kindred souls. X
@Seawithinyou
@Seawithinyou 17 күн бұрын
Perfect Timing Nate and in Awe of Fritjof’s describing our Conscious and Subconscious state of mind I myself have on numerous occasions been as he puts it In the Flow or In the Zone Whether it’s walking along the beach and being so mesmerised by the rhythm curling of the pounding waves or even when I used to Flowing mind state while shingle surfing on my old Dirtbike down a shingle riverbed I felt so relaxed a as if I was Flying Also doing sculptures has a profound creative effect for me too etc… As I mentioned before reading Dr James Dotys first book called Into The Magic Shop also mentions Consciousness Meditation and Manifesting An incredibly wonderful book of the Power of Love ❤
@johnm1030
@johnm1030 19 күн бұрын
What an amazingly enjoyable positive meeting! Nate that was fabulous, inspiring, informative and hopeful. What a great guest and human being!
@magnushomestead3824
@magnushomestead3824 19 күн бұрын
This is great!!! Fritjof Capra has been a huge influence on my journey!! I lived in the Land of Enchantment AKA New Mexico in the late 60's early 70's So much consciousness was rising back then - 50 plus years later I am still on the Bus!! As Western society and Industrial Corporate Capitalism begins to collapse it is minds like Fritjof and yourself that will inform the Deep Adaptation necessary for Humans of the Eairth to continue. Thank you Nate for bringing us this wonderful conversation!!
@dermotmeuchner2416
@dermotmeuchner2416 19 күн бұрын
What bus? Bozo’s or…
@nancercize
@nancercize 19 күн бұрын
It’s wonderful to hear yet another OG on systems thinking and connectedness. Thank you Nate, as always, for your creative thinking and persistence in seeking such guests. I’m applying to the Capra Course so I can broaden and enrich my thinking and, hopefully, integrate it into my modest community- building efforts in my little (but interconnected) pocket of the world.
@anthonytroia1
@anthonytroia1 19 күн бұрын
OG😎
@looking4amanda
@looking4amanda 18 күн бұрын
Very worthwhile interview. I remember Capra being an important figure back in the late sixties and seventies, but didn't then understand what his message was. Your interview with him fills that gap. I agree with just about everything he had to say. But like just about all the thinkers trained in physical science that you interview, he neglects the humanities. Yes, we need to know the general principles of all life systems, but we also need to know specifically how human life systems operate and the humanities are a window on that which is more revealing, I think, than the so-called social sciences.
@dankoepp68
@dankoepp68 19 күн бұрын
listen to Mr Capra talking i felt reminded to Mr. Lovelock‘s Gaia theory - shortly after he mentioned Mrs Lyn Margulis, who is the co founder of the Gaia theory. He also reminds me of Mr. Ophuls background of far eastern practices culminating in „Buddha takes no prisoners“. Enlightening stuff this is! Gratitude!
@fotoplaf7702
@fotoplaf7702 19 күн бұрын
That was a good one Nate. I hope you you can have him back and perhaps strengthen those systems connections!
@anthonytroia1
@anthonytroia1 19 күн бұрын
1:01:35 Such a beautiful moment. Fritjof's delight is palpable. TGS doing its job in real time! 🥰
@c.oreilly1387
@c.oreilly1387 19 күн бұрын
Wonderful conversation, thank you. His point about embodied intelligence is such a crucial one.
@m.dgaius6430
@m.dgaius6430 18 күн бұрын
The film Mindwalk (1990) changed my life when I was very young. It is based on Capra's book The Turning Point. Psychedelics came later, along with literature, philosophy, and poetry and I've never been able to capitulate to our culture. My psyche had cast it's vote.
@anotherthez7598
@anotherthez7598 7 күн бұрын
Brilliant!
@phoebebarnard4621
@phoebebarnard4621 19 күн бұрын
I particularly love his strategy of collaborative dialogues to learn about all the related fields. I have done that instinctively too, and it's so satisfying. I guess that's your strategy too, Nate! Our world is so complex - we need this approach. I'm convening processes and roundtables towards civilizational shift. Your podcast is a huge resource.
@kerryburns-k8i
@kerryburns-k8i 18 күн бұрын
I bought it forty years ago, and The Tao of Physics set me on a journey which continues. I owe Dr Capra more than I can say, I just hunted the book down and will read it again. I have become interested in the ancient teaching that consciousness, energy and matter are aspects of the same thing, that consciousness facilitates the transformation of energy into matter, and that consciousness itself is fundamental. Since matter is derived from consciousness, there is sentience in all matter, relative to its situation. I´d like to see if the Tao resonates with this.
@Dan5482
@Dan5482 19 күн бұрын
What a wonderful, inspiring interview! Thank you!
@mayamichelle6741
@mayamichelle6741 15 күн бұрын
That was amazing! I’d love to hear a discussion between him, Schmachtenberger and Vanessa Andreotti! ❤❤❤
@gers1979
@gers1979 8 күн бұрын
Much inspiring. Looking forward to starting the Capra course 🙂 in order to colearn with a community.
@jenniferrayburn1011
@jenniferrayburn1011 14 күн бұрын
Thank you for this interview Nate! My mother died 5 years ago She had Mr. Capra's books. This interview has been so wonderful---superb and high quality.
@emceegreen8864
@emceegreen8864 19 күн бұрын
Interconnectiveness is the reality. Our economic reality doesn’t reflect physical reality. It’s gross consumption, economic efficiency and private ownership. What’s missing is the restorative and life giving element.
@jefbezoss7638
@jefbezoss7638 18 күн бұрын
The “patterning instinct” co-authored with Jeremy Lent is my most inspiring book in the last 10 years
@MichelleNayeliBouvier
@MichelleNayeliBouvier 18 күн бұрын
Amazing amazing amazing. Perhaps my favorite episode of all. As someone straddling science & spirituality - ecology, yoga, tantra plus movement & nervous system sciences - it’s all pointing to the same thing: relationships and flows between them- networks inherently regenerative, creative & intelligent. Hearing him speak to the power of shifts in consciousness resonates deeply. Thank you Nate!
@brianwheeldon4643
@brianwheeldon4643 11 күн бұрын
Wisdom comes not by unhinging our emotional selves from a siloed existence, but by immersing ourselves in multidisciplinary learning and by not being so full of our own cleverness that we allow our barriers fall away and gain fulfillment by working and joining with others and recognising that fact. We are not apart from, but a part of the greater whole of nature.
@lizzieconnor7
@lizzieconnor7 19 күн бұрын
An absolutely wonderful conversation - bringing my long-ago learning and my current learning together. Thank you so much Nate!
@edhero4515
@edhero4515 19 күн бұрын
Awesome! Thanks a million!!!
@NateKinch91
@NateKinch91 19 күн бұрын
When Capra refers to the huge swings he’s witnessed in just the last fifty years, it’s very Hegelian. We grapple, almost violently shifting from one extreme to another, all the while struggling to embrace the nuanced wisdom of ‘the middle way’ (recognising that is used in different ways across time a philosophical contexts).
@TheDiversifiedFarmer
@TheDiversifiedFarmer 16 күн бұрын
People are treating their children like the farmers treat the cattle and chickens in CAFOS, packed in and medicated, industrialized and streamlined for economical models
@evilryutaropro
@evilryutaropro 19 күн бұрын
Awesome episode! I noticed a couple of your guests are saying to get money out of politics. I think that’s an important major step. I worry tho that many in our society would stop listening to politicians if they weren’t blatantly corrupt. A lot of people still live in the old worldview where money and technology are everything. I think politicians should have to be barred from all commercial activity, posses no currency, be barred from land ownership, and be practicing ascetics.
@carolspencer6915
@carolspencer6915 19 күн бұрын
Good morning Nate and Fritjof Wellbeing indeed. Think we need to re think Adam Smith's thinking. Lots of thinking!😀 Thank you for this shared conversation. Again for me sanity sensemaking brain gym. Truly grateful. 💜
@pookah9938
@pookah9938 19 күн бұрын
So far, most profound conversation.
@BestFitSquareChannel
@BestFitSquareChannel 19 күн бұрын
Thank you Nate. Thank you Professor Capra. Best wishes.
@AdnAwd24
@AdnAwd24 19 күн бұрын
Before watching, I want to say that I was expecting this interview for a while I think you are the best in the field to interview to interview Capra Thanks a lot for bringing such a great hosts all the time
@garyjohnson1466
@garyjohnson1466 18 күн бұрын
Interesting, as a system thinker, I agree with this, wealth is about power and until they change their view of potential growth, the earth will eventually force change...
@MendeMaria-ej8bf
@MendeMaria-ej8bf 19 күн бұрын
Thank you for this interesting interview which I have been watching in night hours in Southern Germany. ❤
@SeegerInstitute
@SeegerInstitute 19 күн бұрын
Nate, he has so much to offer in this discussion needs to go so much and 20th to discuss how we need to develop biological networks and natural networks feel like you barely scratch the surface of everything he has to offer. Maybe you need to have them back as quickly as possible this is such a critical piece of the puzzle that we need to explore.
@camillacalhoun1089
@camillacalhoun1089 15 күн бұрын
Absolutely agree had same thought and wondered if Capra and Lovelock met…but glad to know he knew Margulis…and to read these comments of other people whose lives have been influenced by Capra’s work. I keep hoping for more signs of the Turning Point.
@adrianhodgson4448
@adrianhodgson4448 6 күн бұрын
I love what Capra has said about qualities of "aliveness" (was it: the dissolution of differentiation? I've got to go back and take some notes on that).
@steveo5295
@steveo5295 19 күн бұрын
I connected with this podcast, which is becoming more rear the older I become. Finding connectivity with others is nearly impossible, so this is proof for me it's not as bad as I thought...
@timmoore3188
@timmoore3188 13 күн бұрын
Great show. Listening to this my weird mind started thinking, you ought to have best selling author Margaret Atwood on your show. Her Madd Adam trilogy is a distopian look at the poly-crisis. Well, distopian, depending on your perspective. A group of greenies manages to survive a global pandemic by integrating an ecological religion, practical survival skills, and science into their daily lives. It is in a fantasy, sci-fi genre, but also a satire of our present corporate culture of growth at any cost.
@cdineaglecollapsecenter4672
@cdineaglecollapsecenter4672 19 күн бұрын
I greatly enjoyed this conversation. I certainly would not count on billionaires having a change of heart. But I'm going to try doing a little more meditation & writing myself.
@ouimetco
@ouimetco 19 күн бұрын
Damn Nate you hit one out of the park with this guest. Holy Awesome 🤩
@mathieuraetz2041
@mathieuraetz2041 18 күн бұрын
Simply great
@anthonytroia1
@anthonytroia1 19 күн бұрын
inspiring to see all the positive comments on this episode 🥰
@joehopfield
@joehopfield 19 күн бұрын
Delightful! Thanks Nate. I read TToP as a sprout in the 80s - a elegant bridge between Alan Watts' "The Book" (wishy-washy fun) and Feynman's "QED" -just-calculate.
@danielballard3364
@danielballard3364 17 күн бұрын
Just get constantly exposed to all kinds of different topics/subjects/people and their opinions, make sure to cultivate a general curiousity about anything from A to Z and get at least basic understanding in all these different areas and arenas, even intellectually challenging ones... make sure to always pause in between, take sufficient time to take in the input, reflect upon it, introspect and think about all these.. try to find similarities, connect the dots, build & enhance your mental model and afterwards try to apply new ideas incoming regularly on that mental model to further enhance/refine/shape it... and then go out again and repeat the same over and over again --> this is how anyone can become a systems thinker naturally and inherently and sees the environment/world/universe as what it is..
@Carbonbank
@Carbonbank 18 күн бұрын
Too good!!!
@timcoombe
@timcoombe 19 күн бұрын
I’m lucky to get three species of bird with Merlin in my back garden. Riches indeed Nate!
@NancyBruning
@NancyBruning 18 күн бұрын
There are studies that show that cities actually have a wider variety of birds than suburbs! I live in a city and iMerlin has detected dozens of birds during my walks in nearby parks. Isn’t that something! Very counterintuitive.
@wvhaugen
@wvhaugen 17 күн бұрын
At 34:00 Nate asks, "So is it possible that we could have culture wide or even in pockets such a radical shift in perception as you describe in the system's view of life." The counterculture had these radical shifts in perception and was well on the way to building this new world from 1966-1970. I know this because I was part of it. What happened was that federal, state and local governments - from Nixon on down - adopted an integrated campaign of quashing this new world. The Army, National Guard, state troopers and every police force in the country crushed us into bloody little hippie radical meatballs. Some of us surived intact; others sold out and became willing accomplices in the System; while others deteriorated into shattered husks that still live under bridges and in vacant lots. Here's a little advice for young activists and others who are still trying to build community. Be careful. Develop the mental toughness to be resilient. Most of all, don't quit.
@Dilmahkana
@Dilmahkana 18 күн бұрын
I've got his first two books, The Tao of Physics and The Turning Point. It is incredible how old they are, yet the learnings are still immeasurable. Maybe the best author to introduce people to real Systems thinking, not this modern systematic, bullet points thinking.
@johnm1030
@johnm1030 19 күн бұрын
Oh this is going to be a good one!
@big_gar_mt
@big_gar_mt 19 күн бұрын
At 28:40 “Descent through modification”
@josealmonacid8103
@josealmonacid8103 17 күн бұрын
Corey Bradshaw from your episode 2 weeks ago gave almost the same answer to the last question, he said: "I'd make political donation illegal".
@user-zh1th8sz2l
@user-zh1th8sz2l 10 күн бұрын
You think that would solve it? Things would just kind of spontaneously improve? That's like the humble citizen-voter's fantasy of representative democracy. That a single effortless, painless policy change will miraciulously save everything, and alter the fundamental essence of human nature, and our elected officials will finally do right by the people and by society,.and usher in sustainability and world peace. And the public can conintue on in their complacency and invidivualism. If only......
@indyrishisingh
@indyrishisingh 19 күн бұрын
"Where are the Gandhi's today?"... as an Indian, i can say that talkers/thinkers are put on pedestals instead of the doers getting dirty in the work to change the systems
@jonathantrautman
@jonathantrautman 19 күн бұрын
institutionalized corruption is THE issue
@wvhaugen
@wvhaugen 17 күн бұрын
Final comment. At the end of the interview, Capra admits that corruption is institutionalized in the System. This means the System is corrupt, just as I have been saying since 1968. However, if the System is corrupt, why should we bother preserving the System? BTW, I read The Tao of Physics when it first came out. There are probably many ideas I have that came from this book.
@hawkarae
@hawkarae 17 күн бұрын
We are metal shavings, coming inexorably closer. When we collide ❤✌️❤
@andywilliams7989
@andywilliams7989 15 күн бұрын
In the eighties we swapped psychedelics for coke and speed. Music, art, cars, clothes, mentality...yes mentality..not enough spirit and too much mental. We dropped the ball.
@wholebodysneeze
@wholebodysneeze 19 күн бұрын
Fantastic conversation! thanks, Nate 30:00 The work of Michael Levin shows that this understanding of biological development is still too limited. There are lots of things happening that cannot be understood in terms of the genome. His team is demonstrating this experimentally and has good evidence (e.g. two-headed planaria) that the environment is an essential aspect of the development of the organism, not simply a canvas the gene expresses itself onto.
@peterdollins3610
@peterdollins3610 16 күн бұрын
A lot of I's with our friend here though he talks of systems all the time. William E. Rees is much more compelling & convincing. Darwin's ideas cracked evolution open with many of his ideas being way ahead of his time. Lots more has been discovered since but pretty much everything of Darwin slots into new discoveries that basically confirm his theory.
@user-mb7ng1df7q
@user-mb7ng1df7q 18 күн бұрын
Nate please add the link to the online courses Fritjof spoke of. Apologies if it is there but I can't find it. I too read TTOP in the early 80's while an undergraduate. Life changing for me.
@MichaelTBishop
@MichaelTBishop 19 күн бұрын
Anyone enjoy the movie Mind Walk based upon his book The Turning Point?
@earFront
@earFront 19 күн бұрын
Perpetual growth is just another way of saying ( the Equation of Greed ) . There has to be a better way . . . . . 😶
@pacificatoris9307
@pacificatoris9307 19 күн бұрын
Thank you for the beautiful content. Remember the rough quote to the effect that liberal democracy rides on the back of carbon pulse. Do you think this type of academia, research also rides on it too? But for it, don't you think humans will be too busy working away of our lives without philosophizing too much?
@ouimetco
@ouimetco 12 күн бұрын
Hey Nate maybe you could get ex astronaut Ronald Guran on. His views fit. Thank you. Richard
@jared4034
@jared4034 16 күн бұрын
What is the driver function of dark triad? If we are to address the issues that we currently face as processes that naturally occur, we can't alienate this concept.
@graemetunbridge1738
@graemetunbridge1738 19 күн бұрын
50:50 '...I'm so rich...' rich in birds is real quality-of-life rich.
@cheweperro
@cheweperro 19 күн бұрын
What happened in the 70s? It's when capital recovered much of the power they lost post gilded age. So now we live in gilded age 2.0
@stephenburnett458
@stephenburnett458 19 күн бұрын
Humans for the most part are living far removed from nature, they are living an artificial life. We have found this way of living very beneficial to ourselves and have an unsaid belief in science and technological revolution. But we are all aboard a runaway train and we are fast running out of track. Will science and technology take us further towards the land of Utopia or will we all be outsmarted by those with vested economic interest and end up in a complete dystopia. The complete balancing of the books must include the debited loss of the ecology but which is constantly swept under the carpet. I don’t believe that science and technology will save the day because it will be a case of too little to late. Scientists do have the answers but those answers are not listened to because there words go against the grain of the cabals around the world who own the governments of the world who are competing against one another in a never ending war of staying or becoming top dog. Therefore any warning clarion calls are quickly muted or dismissed as laughable jokes. Therefore we are almost without doubt doomed because the whole world is not going to suddenly miraculously come to its senses and do a much needed mid term correction. It’s not going to happen because those who are driving this runaway train are mad, crazy, corrupt, and evil. We are doomed. Sorry.
@TennesseeJed
@TennesseeJed 19 күн бұрын
👍
@andrea-dawn
@andrea-dawn 17 күн бұрын
It is rather sad that the realization that everything is connected is not so intuitive for many, that they only learn that later in life. It is such a basic intelligence. Apes might know better.
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