The Lindisfarne Tapes
A podcast by The Schumacher Center for a New Economics
Categories:
27 Episodes
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Gregory Bateson: How We Know What We Know
Published: 14/02/2021 -
E.F. Schumacher: Moving from Cleverness to Wisdom
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Kathleen Raine: Spirituality in William Blake
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Stewart Brand: How Could We Possibly Get a Photograph of the Whole Earth?
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Thomas Banyacya: The Prophecy of 1948
Published: 14/02/2021 -
David Spangler: Co-Creating our Future in the New Age
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Rosabeth Kanter: What Makes or Breaks an Alternative Community?
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Gary Snyder: Songs of the Life Cycle
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Nechung Rinpoche: Development of Compassion in Buddhist Thought
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Sean Wellesley-Miller: The Bioshelter, The Home, and The Community
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Gil Friend: Local Action for Global Transformation
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Alice Tepper Marlin: The Competitive Advantage of Better Business
Published: 14/02/2021 -
David Ehrenfeld: Ecological Wisdom in Jewish Thought
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Wendell Berry: Sexual Capitalism and the Preservation of Wilderness
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Seyyed Hossein Nasr: The Metaphysical and Cosmological Roots of the Ecological Crisis
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Janet McCloud: The Struggle for Indigenous Sovereignty
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Francisco Varela: The Logic of Paradise
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Elise Boulding: A Historical Account of Women in Community
Published: 14/02/2021 -
John Todd: Ecological Design and New Alchemy
Published: 14/02/2021 -
Russell Schweickart: Discovering a New Planetary Culture from Outer Space
Published: 14/02/2021
On a rocky outcropping off the northeastern coast of England, the monastery of Lindisfarne once stood as an outpost of religious, philosophic, and intellectual study against the “dark” times of early medieval Europe. Inspired by the foresight and dogged determination of these medieval monks, William Irwin Thompson founded the Lindisfarne Association in 1972 to gather together bold scientists, scholars, artists, and contemplatives to realize a new planetary culture in the face of the political, cultural, and environmental crises of the twentieth century. Brought to you by the Schumacher Center for a New Economics, The Lindisfarne Tapes podcast represents some of the most visionary thinking of the time, drawing connections between culture, economics, society, and technology. While the germs of new ideas contained in these tapes are now beginning to take root, they remain an invaluable source of speculative thinking that will continue to inspire our visions of a more just and regenerative future.