Tuesday, July 31, 2007

A benefit of becoming more globally healthy

Getting the inner joy that enables us to be able to act with more goodness



Rare integral health practice


My creation
Originally uploaded by gop108

Yesterday a dear friend, specialist of very deep chi-kung, explained that real holistic / integral / global health practices are very rare because most people have such a hard time focusing on what they are doing -- they can rarely have their mind and body in one place, for example, even will executing disciplines such as hatha-yoga or breath exercise.

I couldn't agree more. It is so easy to fall short of the real thing when we lack the proper focus. That is one of the many reasons why I so strongly recommend daily meditation as a way to develop essential life skill muscles.

Monday, July 30, 2007

Post 2 on the text of Richard Tarnas

Common to these new perspectives has been the imperative to rethink and reformulate the human relation to nature, an imperative driven by the growing recognition that modem science's mechanistic and objectivist conception of nature was not only limited but fundamentally flawed. Major theoretical interventions such as Bateson's "ecology of mind," Bohm's theory of the implicate order, Sheldrake's theory of formative causation, McClintock's theory of genetic transposition, Lovelock's Gaia hypothesis, Prigogine's theory of dissipative structures and order by fluctuation, Lorenz and Feigenbaum's chaos theory, and Bell's theorem of nonlocality have pointed to new possibilities for a less reductionist scientific .world conception

 

            Interesting to many of them were influenced by India : Sheldrake lived in India for many years, Bohm was closely related to krishnamurti….

 

 

Evelyn Fox Keller's methodological recommendation that the scientist be capable of empathic identification with the object he or she seeks to understand reflects a similar reorientation of the scientific mind. Moreover, many of these developments within the scientific community have been strengthened and often stimulated by the reemergence of and widespread interest in various archaic and mystical conceptions of nature, the impressive sophistication of which is increasingly recognized.

 

            Still, science (just like western philo) has a terrible lack of yoga, were a meditative approach could be experimented, and not just a limited  knowledge of what the senses can gather (empiricism: pratyaksha limited to the externals) and dry intellectual speculation (anumana devoid of a global approach).

This need of a less reductionnist approach he speaks about is at the center of the Global Health approach and maybe the greatest nedd our actual international, mondial, global ociety faces in the 21st century

GT

Sunday, July 29, 2007

The need of a broad philosphical vision for our own global health (post 1)

Post 1 on Richard Tarnas wonderful book


Here is a few notes on the wonderful recap of western philo and thinking at large entitled : THE PASSION OF THE WESTERN MIND,

BY RICHARD TARNAS
(EX PROGRAM MANAGER AT Essalen and PHD…)


Joseph Campbell says of it: ‘The most lucid and concise presentation I have read, of the grand lines of what every student should know about the thought of history of western thought. The writing is elegant and carries the reader with the momentum of a novel’

Huston Smith : ‘The best intellectual history of the west in one volume I have ever seen’

I tend to think like them. It is quite well written and has some depth of analysis.

In black ink you will find quotes from his book (form page 404 to 410).

In blue there will be my small comment

The postmodern collapse of meaning has thus been countered by an emerging awareness of the individual's self-responsibility and capacity for creative innovation and self transformation in his or her existential and spiritual response to life. Following suggestions implicit in Nietzsche, he "death of God" has begun to be assimilated and reconceived as a positive religious development, as permitting the emergence of a more authentic experience of the numinous, a larger sense of deity

This might be one of the most optimistic paragraph of the whole book. The previous pages went on and on to describe the collapse of the post-modern way of thinking which basically turned upside down every conception that came from the greeks, the Christians, the renaissance humanist and the positivist scientism of modern man.

Now, his conception of the antidote for post-modern dysentery is quite romantic, but also very similar to Ken Wilber ‘spirit in evolution’. Basically : the Kosmos is evolving in consciousness trough us.

On the intellectual level, religion no longer tends to be understood reductively as a psychologically or culturally determined belief in nonexistent realities, or explained away as an accident of biology, but is recognized as a fundamental human activity in which every society and individual symbolically interprets and engages the ultimate nature of being.

That seems to me a very liberal conception that only a minority of elite may have

Science too, while no longer enjoying the same degree of sovereignty it possessed during the modern era, continues to retain allegiance for the rivaled pragmatic power of its conceptions and the penetrating rigor of its method.

Yes, let’s recognize the empirical value of science. But Scientist should stop claiming to be experts in metaphysics. They are quite adolescent and dogmatic at it, making bold dogmatic declaration like : ‘’there is no god, the soul does not exist…’’

Because the earlier knowledge claims of modem science have been relativized by both philosophy of science and the concrete consequences of scientific and technological advance, that allegiance is no longer uncritical, yet in these new circumstances science itself has seemingly been freed up to explore new and less-constricted approaches to understanding the world.

Tao of physics’ and all that stuff… that is often naïve but at least an attempt to get out of the reductionnist ghetto.

It is true that individuals who subscribe to an allegedly unified and self-evident "scientific world view" of the modem type are seen as having failed to engage the larger intellectual challenge of the age hereby receiving the same judgment in the postmodern era that the ingenuous religious person received from science in the modem era.

I hope more of this will happen. I see so much blind faith in science around me in this culture were deep analysis is minimal

In virtually all contemporary disciplines, it is recognized that the prodigious complexity, subtlety, and multivalence of reality far transcend the grasp of any one intellectual approach, and that only a committed openness to the interplay of many perspectives can meet the extraordinary challenges of the postmodern era. But contemporary science has itself become increasingly self-aware and self-critical, less prone to a naive scientism, more conscious of its epistemological and existential limitations. Nor is contemporary science singular, having given rise to a number of radically divergent interpretations of the world, many of which differ sharply from what was previously the conventional scientific vision.

That is where a global and integral approach like Vedanta and Global Helath could be helpful for our era… if truly lived Vedanta doesn’t die before it can deliver the goods.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Welcome

Enjoy my small attempts to present a sample of what I do

Guy : www.guyetreault.info