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Likely as music… Book: Charles offers us a literate and savvy look at how we got to where we are and what we will require to move past the suicidal, ecocidal myths that got us here.

FUTURE FOSSILS

Enjoy this bracing dose of cool, clear wisdom and bright insight: Subscribe on Patreon to watch the uncut interview: When is it useful to think of humans as part of nature and when is it useful to think of humans as distinct from nature? What wants to happen and how can we participate in that? How can we exercise our gifts in service to this larger thing? The human mind…ritual is its territory. Treating nature as a resource rather than as a community of minded cohabitants and potential collaborators is a self-fulfilling prophecy and an act of self-sabotage.

How the scientific quest for control over a purely mechanical cosmos pushed us all the way around into some truly weird revelations about the indeterminate, irreproducible, and contingent workings of our mysterious universe. How working on a Mars rover mission helped him develop a humility and appreciation for complexity. It makes us stupider, you know?

I think there are people who embrace intelligent practices; that allows them to have intelligent outcomes. Diaspora by Greg Egan How do you craft communications to reach everyone on a neurologically diverse team? How he got involved in space entrepreneurship and space exploration as a young man. The vital importance of a frontier, of curiosity, of exploration… Why the quest for certainty leads us astray and the quest for meaning leads us true. Michael has devoted his life to establishing new education systems that prepare young people for a lifelong learning process, to think for themselves and find their self-esteem in cultivated excellence, not rote memorization or decontextualized performance.

Civilization might mean domesticated people…but do want to live in the Calcutta Zoo? She also works with the supremely wise Buddhist deep ecologist Joanna Macy on The Work That Reconnects, and leads singing workshops in which she applies her lifetime of music and work with Macy to teach music as a form of collective healing. And music helps work in the realm of consciousness. And I think music has an intelligence on multiple levels that helps us with that.

And so, then, in that uncertainty, I have to ask myself — and I think we all have to ask ourselves — what do I want to do anyway?

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What do I want to do? The first one is that data exists, and the second one is that time exists. To pretend that there is, is to create a fiction. Ethics for Autonomous Machines. Is it wrong to create an Interspecies Internet that weaves nonhuman persons into our already-messy processes of electronic governance and culture?

I cannot wait to see what artificial intelligence may do…four to five generations from now. And the way that you grow your resilience is by putting yourself in that uncomfortable situation. So from my perspective, I try to put myself in that situation every day. Visionary artist Archan Nair joins Future Fossils this week for an infectiously fun conversation about the new creative opportunities of the digital age. My three-part essay on The Evolution of Surveillance, a psychedelic foray into the history of predator-prey co-evolution and our invention of weird new technological sense organs: You can grab it for free here: This talk is a three-part argument: Therefore, the best way forward in this crazy age may be to treat ALL things, the living AND nonliving, with compassion and respect.

Amazing Secrets of the Mayan Calendar [FULL VIDEO]

Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: Socially, intellectually, economically, technologically, and so on. Or to put it another way, is answering the Big Questions just a luxury, or is it the fruit and reward and deep work of human existence?

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Terry Patten is a lifelong practitioner of both contemplative spirituality and real-world activism whose new book, A New Republic of the Heart: An Ethos for Revolutionaries—A Guide To Inner Work for Holistic Change, gives us lucid instructions for how we can start to ask the hardest questions and engage the toughest problems in our age of global transformation.

I have to admit, I went into this conversation a skeptic. Get ready to have your mind blown by a conversation about the miracles that might be commonplace in just a few more years… http: Is this going to be affordable for everyone?

A New History of a Lost World. Their stories moved me as much as the story of how the dinosaurs evolved, came to dominate the landscape, and then disappeared. For like half an hour. About Tyrannosauroidea, specifically, and how T.

Mayan Calendar And The End-Of-The-World Explained

And how to survive a mass extinction. Being able to see in the shapes of hills, and the types of rocks that are exposed, and the colors of those rocks, being able to s. Tim Freke is a philosopher and the author of thirty five books on comparative religion, gnostic scholarship, and nondual awakening. I met him as a fellow speaker at the Global Eclipse Gathering in Oregon last year and was immediately taken by his bright presence, wit, and grounded genius. Not technology, as proposed by Kevin Kelly et al.?

If bodies can provide a vehicle for these nonphysical information patterns, can we engineer new bodies that invite souls into novel forms of incarnation? The universe is not made of things. But there was no rainbow. There is, rather, objective information objectively and subj. In part one, Charles laid out the map of the problem: Get ready for a heady brew of grit, dark humor, grief and relief, and the luminous truth that awaits us on the other side of suffering… Support these vital conversations with a small monthly contribution: The shadow is the part of ourselves so profoundly disowned that it shows up not as a quality of the self, but a trait of other people - not a choice that we are making, but a fate that imposes itself upon us.

And to whatever degree we continue to refuse acknowledgment of our shadows, we remain the desperate victims of life instead of its joyous collaborators. It isn't easy to write a new story of the self - and to constantly re-write that story, when new truths come to us in the form of disarming companions, rude awakenings, and other surprises. I watched his debut documentary on social marketing, Merchants of Cool, in my college Introduction to Film class which is how you know my teacher was, in fact, cool.

His book Present Shock: When Everything Happens Now was one of the core inspirations for this podcast and its examinations of time in the digital age remain some of my most frequently-recommended writing. Your FICO score is on there. So it turns programmers into potential magicians of unprecedented power. This week we chat with the philosopher and sociologist John Danaher about the book Robot Sex: John also runs the blog Philosophical Disquisitions, which has been an awesome resource for deep thinking online for over a decade.

But does any of this media, for or against, paint a realistic portrait of the impact of machines on human intimacy? In this episode, John and I talk about: Can we ever be convinced the love is mutual? You can pretty much trace this throughout history: In this episode we discuss his advocacy and activism, and the life-changing experiences that brought him to his current understanding and role in helping bring about a saner and more loving world… Subscribe to this show: So what is the least karmic consequence for all involved? Explicit 62 - David Krantz Cannabis Nutrigenomics. We had a publishing error last week and most subscribers missed Episode 61 with Jamaica Stevens on Crisis, Rebirth, and Transformation!

Definitely worth going back to listen to this awesome chat. David is a repeat guest from Future Fossils Episode , when he chatted with us about the future of electronic music, plant intelligence, and tripping with cats and modular synthesizers. Be sure to check that one out also! Maybe that can help other people besides myself.

Kerri Welch on dopamine and time perception https: Put the fire out. Bring a little water. See another and find the connection of this incredible humanity that we all share. Did you keep planting trees? Did you learn to wield well your resources? Did you give up on us? Did you become conscious?

And actually, your heart is liberated when you finally surrender to feeling. The former chair of John F. Part 1 - Civilization and its Discontents: Subscribe to this show: Explicit 53 - A Very Xeno Christmas! Merry X- is for Xenomorph -mas, everyone! Must be the nootropics. We have an awesome conversation about what it will take for us to thrive through our Age of Transition and into Now she lives in a cabin she built herself in the redwoods of Northern California and manages a acre native species nursery wilderness rehabilitation project as well as an amazing If you have ever wondered about time, this episode is for you.

This week we continue the special two-part conversation with historian, poet, and mythographer William Irwin Thompson. Explicit 40 - Andrew J. We discuss the future of the feminine, relationships, and reproduction — and laugh a lot. This week's episode is brought to you by Visionary Magnets, the refrigerator poetry magnets that turn your boring old kitchen appliances into the substrate for woke invocations, tantric pillow talk, and other occult goofery. Explicit 28 - John Petersen Forecasting the Unimaginable.

New essays , music , coloring book pages, and recorded talks coming soon for my supporters! How Our Bodies Experience Time, This week we chat with Daniel Zen, former Google engineer, technology instructor at zen. The Chinese have a curse: My Psychedelic Love Story. This week's guest is the delightful and insightful Susan Molnar!

But also, everything can be built. And sometimes, breaking it and then rebuilding it makes it even cooler. This week our guest is Tibet Sprague, former solar energy system manager and scholar-practitioner in search of sustainable alternatives to our unhealthy post-industrial communities. This week, we take an hour to explore the frontiers of the human experience with Trevor Goodman of the Body Hacking Conference in Austin, Texas.

Michael Phillip of Third Eye Drops. Explicit 13 - Rupert Till aka Dr. Rupert Till, aka Dr. Chill also has a habit of reconstructing ancient acoustic spaces from caves and temples, then writing This week our guest is Mark Lee Somnio8 , an amazing artist.

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One of my favorite visionary painters. We spoke in the Museum of Visionary Art at Boom Festival about free energy devices, the creative culture of Bali, and the awesome A special Boom Festival "Future Fossils on The Road" episode featuring some awesome people Michael met while playing and speaking at the amazing biennial psytrance festival in Portugal. Explicit 9 - Ashley Dawson Mass Extinction. A Radical History as well as an extensive list of publications on sociology, economics, and literature.

Explicit 8 - Kingsley Dennis New Monasticism. Explicit 7 - Shane Mauss Psychedelic Comedy. Featuring comedian Shane Mauss, to our knowledge the only person to have ever written feature length comedy routines about the evolutionary psychology of sex or about psychedelics. Shane is an amazingly humble dude, considering he interviews Featuring cyborg anthropologist and process worker Maraya Karena, whom Michael met in Peru once upon a time, and who can nimbly leap from talk of high technology to casual reflections on accessing visionary consciousness.

Maraya delivers us a The Spirit Molecule" and founder of Mythaphi. A more than usually enthusiastic group rap on the awesome potential of new On asteroid mining, the origins of life, growing up during the Apollo Program and the importance of unifying society under visions for Great Projects see also: Project Hieroglyph , the magic of lipids, thinking fractal and the similarity between Explicit 3 - Tony Vigorito Synchronicity. In this week's episode, we interview our first guest, author Tony Vigorito, and go ape on thoughts about the nature of synchronicity — are we just making this stuff up?

Tony's work has been praised repeatedly and effusively by literary greats Explicit 2 - Cairos Time as Feeling. As Alan Wolfe says, "Religion can lead people out of cycles of poverty and dependency just as it led Moses out of Egypt". There is much for religion lovers to be proud of in their traditions, and much for all of us to be grateful for. The fact that so many people love their religions as much as, or more than, anything else in their lives is a weighty fact indeed.

I am inclined to think that nothing could matter more than what people love. At any rate, I can think of no value that I would place higher. I would not want to live in a world without love. Would a world with peace, but without love, be a better world? Not if the peace was achieved by drugging the love and hate out of us, or by suppression. Would a world with justice and freedom, but without love, be a better world? Not if it was achieved by somehow turning us all into loveless law-abiders with none of the yearnings or envies or hatreds that are wellsprings of injustice and subjugation.

It is hard to consider such hypotheticals, and I doubt if we should trust our first intuitions about them, but, for what it is worth, I surmise that we almost all want a world in which love, justice, freedom, and peace are all present, as much as possible, but if we had to give up one of these, it wouldn't — and shouldn't — be love. But, sad to say, even if it is true that nothing could matter more than love, it wouldn't follow from this that we don't have reason to question the things that we, and others, love.

Love is blind, as they say, and because love is blind, it often leads to tragedy: Love one another, but make not a bond of love: Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls. Give one another of your bread, but eat not from the same loaf. Sing and dance together and be joyous, but let each of you be alone, Even as the strings of a lute are alone though they quiver with the same music. For only the hand of Life can contain your hearts. And stand together yet not too near together: There's nothing you can do that can't be done Nothing you can sing that can't be sung Nothing you can say but you can learn how to play the game It's easy.

We all been playing those mind games forever Some kinda druid dudes lifting the veil. Doing the mind guerrilla, Some call it magic — the search for the grail. Love is the answer and you know that for sure. Love is a flower, you got to let it — you got to let it grow. We have come by curious ways To the Light that holds the days; We have sought in haunts of fear For that all-enfolding sphere: Deep in every heart it lies With its untranscended skies; For what heaven should bend above Hearts that own the heaven of love?

If you believe in peace , act peacefully; if you believe in love, acting lovingly; if you believe every which way, then act every which way, that's perfectly valid — but don't go out trying to sell your beliefs to the system. You end up contradicting what you profess to believe in, and you set a bum example. If you want to change the world , change yourself. There are three lessons I would write, — Three words — as with a burning pen, In tracings of eternal light Upon the hearts of men. Though clouds environ now, And gladness hides her face in scorn, Put thou the shadow from thy brow, — No night but hath its morn.

Where'er thy bark is driven, — The calm's disport, the tempest's mirth, — Know this: God rules the hosts of heaven, The habitants of earth. Not love alone for one, But men, as man, thy brothers call; And scatter, like the circling sun, Thy charities on all. Thus grave these lessons on thy soul, — Hope, Faith, and Love, — and thou shalt find Strength when life's surges rudest roll, Light when thou else wert blind.

Far above the golden clouds, the darkness vibrates. The earth is blue. And everything about it is a love song. Before our lives divide for ever, While time is with us and hands are free , Time, swift to fasten and swift to sever Hand from hand, as we stand by the sea I will say no word that a man might say Whose whole life's love goes down in a day; For this could never have been; and never, Though the gods and the years relent, shall be.

Is it worth a tear, is it worth an hour, To think of things that are well outworn? Of fruitless husk and fugitive flower, The dream foregone and the deed forborne? Though joy be done with and grief be vain, Time shall not sever us wholly in twain; Earth is not spoilt for a single shower; But the rain has ruined the ungrown corn. I had grown pure as the dawn and the dew, You had grown strong as the sun or the sea.

But none shall triumph a whole life through: For death is one, and the fates are three. At the door of life, by the gate of breath, There are worse things waiting for men than death; Death could not sever my soul and you, As these have severed your soul from me. You have chosen and clung to the chance they sent you, Life sweet as perfume and pure as prayer.

But will it not one day in heaven repent you? Will they solace you wholly, the days that were? Will you lift up your eyes between sadness and bliss, Meet mine, and see where the great love is, And tremble and turn and be changed?


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Content you; The gate is strait; I shall not be there. The pulse of war and passion of wonder, The heavens that murmur, the sounds that shine, The stars that sing and the loves that thunder, The music burning at heart like wine, An armed archangel whose hands raise up All senses mixed in the spirit's cup Till flesh and spirit are molten in sunder — These things are over, and no more mine.