Comments - Occupy Love, Part 2: Charles Eisenstein and Sacred Economics - Transition Whatcom2024-03-28T15:38:08Zhttps://transitionwhatcom.ning.com/profiles/comment/feed?attachedTo=2723460%3ABlogPost%3A90492&xn_auth=noMonica,
I had a chance to pre…tag:transitionwhatcom.ning.com,2013-05-23:2723460:Comment:908592013-05-23T23:08:36.798ZDavid MacLeodhttps://transitionwhatcom.ning.com/profile/DavidMacLeod
<p>Monica,</p>
<p>I had a chance to preview the movie, and I was able to hit pause and transcribe my favorite quotes. Anyone can email me if they're interested in receiving a copy of my notes.</p>
<p>Monica,</p>
<p>I had a chance to preview the movie, and I was able to hit pause and transcribe my favorite quotes. Anyone can email me if they're interested in receiving a copy of my notes.</p> Garrett, thanks for the comme…tag:transitionwhatcom.ning.com,2013-05-22:2723460:Comment:908462013-05-22T13:12:38.120ZDavid MacLeodhttps://transitionwhatcom.ning.com/profile/DavidMacLeod
<p>Garrett, thanks for the comment. Interesting distinction there between revolution and rebellion.</p>
<p>Monica, yes, Elisabet Sathouris is an inspiration. I think she played an important role in shaping David Korten's thoughts about The Great Turning. Here's what she said in Occupy Love:</p>
<p>"Crises are always the starting points for revolution. I'm a post-Darwinian evolutionary biologist, and I see a cycle in evolution where species go through a juvenile phase where they're very feisty…</p>
<p>Garrett, thanks for the comment. Interesting distinction there between revolution and rebellion.</p>
<p>Monica, yes, Elisabet Sathouris is an inspiration. I think she played an important role in shaping David Korten's thoughts about The Great Turning. Here's what she said in Occupy Love:</p>
<p>"Crises are always the starting points for revolution. I'm a post-Darwinian evolutionary biologist, and I see a cycle in evolution where species go through a juvenile phase where they're very feisty and creative and acquisitive, and they reproduce like crazy and take all the resources they can get to do it. And of course, bump off anyone who gets in the way. And when you have individuals, you always start to get some tensions and conflicts. And that's the Darwinian part of the story. Eventually you bump into the others so much that you start some conversations, some negotiations. And those negotiations can lead into cooperative schemes that become so tightly interwoven that you can build a whole new unity at the next larger size level. A pioneer ecosystem is made of species that are feisty and competitive and bumping each other off. And a climax ecosystem is made up of species that are tightly interwoven and all feeding each other, like a mature rainforest, and coral reefs, and prairies with many, many species inter-dependent in a dance of love and interchange of all kinds." - Elisabet Sahtouris</p> Currently showing just 17 tic…tag:transitionwhatcom.ning.com,2013-05-10:2723460:Comment:902572013-05-10T04:20:27.530ZDavid MacLeodhttps://transitionwhatcom.ning.com/profile/DavidMacLeod
<p>Currently showing just 17 tickets left for the May 21 showing, as of May 9th, 9:00pm.</p>
<p>Currently showing just 17 tickets left for the May 21 showing, as of May 9th, 9:00pm.</p>