Wednesday, September 9, 2020

Via Lion's Roar / Quantum Potential: A Pathway to Peace

 


Is there a Scientific Basis for World Peace?
 

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Quantum Potential: A Pathway to Peace

Sunday, September 20, 2020 at 3 PM PT

Mystics have known about it for millennia. Modern science is catching up. The first to theorize about the Quantum Potential, a nonlocal field of being that “informs” everything in the universe, was a little-known scientist named David Bohm, who H.H. the Dalai Lama refers to as his “science guru.” Einstein called him his “spiritual son.”  But the scientific orthodoxy was threatened by Bohm's radical ideas and his work was largely dismissed. Until now.

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Via White Crane Institute // PAUL GOODMAN

 This Day in Gay History

September 09

Born
Paul Goodman
1911 -

PAUL GOODMAN, American sociologist, poet, writer, and public intellectual born (d: 1972); He described his politics as anarchist, his loves as bisexual, and his profession as that of "man of letters." Goodman is now mainly remembered as the author of Growing up Absurd and for having been, during the 1960s, an activist on the pacifist Left and an inspiration to the counterculture of that era. He is less remembered as a co-founder of Gestalt Therapy in the 1940s and 50s. 

The freedom with which he revealed, in print and in public, his homosexual life and loves (notably in a late essay, "The Politics of Being Queer" (1969)), proved to be one of the many important cultural springboards for the emerging Gay Liberation Movement of the early 1970s. In an interview with Studs Terkel, Goodman said "I might seem to have a number of divergent interests — community planning, psychotherapy, education, politics — but they are all one concern: how to make it possible to grow up as a human being into a culture without losing nature. I simply refuse to acknowledge that a sensible and honorable community does not exist."

Whether you agree or disagree with the late, great Paul Goodman's cheerfully, rigorously radical ideas, it's clear that very, very few public figures -- really, of any ideological stripe -- since his 1960s-1970s prominence as author/speaker/television guest have attained nearly the richness of thought or the lively way of expressing it that Goodman had.