Bloom Quote in my thesis

I am writing a paper about science and psychotherapy. This weblog is just full of references I want ! That is the whole idea of course. Here is one that poped up after a Google search, out of my own thesis: THE GROUP AND ITS PROTAGONIST

Between the sensory and the intellectual world, sages have always experienced an intermediate realm, one akin to what we call the imaginings of poets. If you are a religious believer, whether normative or heterodox, this middle world is perceived as the presence of the divine in our every day world. If you are more skeptical, such presence is primarily aesthetic or perhaps a kind of perspectivism.

Harold Bloom, Omens of the Millennium 1996.

Connie Zweig

Insight & Outlook – An Interview with Connie Zweig

Scott London: Of all the metaphors that have been used to illustrate the shadow in recent years, my favorite is Robert Bly’s image of the big bag that we drag behind us.

Connie Zweig: Yes, he said that we spend the first half of our lives putting everything into the bag and the second half pulling it out.

London: What did Carl Jung have in mind when he formulated this idea?

Zweig: He believed that everything that is in our conscious awareness is in the light. But everything of substance which stands in the light — whether it’s a tree or an idea — also casts a shadow. And that which stands in the darkness is outside of our awareness.

Insight & Outlook aired on National Public Radio

Scott London’s Interviews
Ages ago I posted about to this interview with James Hillman. There are many more delights where that came from. Scott London has interviewed some great people, Howard Rheingold, Connie Swieg… and there are also links to audio, streaming only unfortunatly. So what is all this? Strange how we see just a fragment on the net. All became clear when I clicked Home and discovered it is a PBA radio program:

The radio series Insight & Outlook ceased production in 1999 after almost five years on the American airwaves. Hosted by Scott London, the weekly cultural affairs program offered a trenchant look at the ideas and trends shaping our future. It also spotlighted provocative social thinkers and visionaries — men and women charting new directions in science, education, technology, health, psychology and other fields.

The program featured some of the most outstanding minds of our time — people like James Hillman, Neil Postman, Marion Woodman,Robert Thurman, Vandana Shiva, Huston Smith, Riane Eisler, Robert Coles, Sam Keen, and Warren Bennis.

Insight & Outlook has been called “one of the most refreshing interview programs available on public radio” and “a thought-provoking and enlightening contribution to the airwaves.” “More than any other single source of information,” one critic observed, Insight and Outlook “defines a certain humanistic slice of our intellectual zeitgeist, and most probably, the zeitgeist of the coming decade.”

Insight & Outlook aired on National Public Radio stations across the United States and on Radio For Peace International. The series was produced at KCBX in San Luis Obispo, California.

Stanley Richards on boundaries!

Magic Circle

Why is it so inadvisable to have two people from the same family as your individual clients in psychotherapy? This person ‘X’ comes along who is the mother/daughter/father/son/brother etc of your existing client ‘A’. Everything in your training tells you not to take on this new client ‘X’ because it will contaminate your relationship with your existing client ‘A’. Of course, we are not rule-bound robots and situational ethics have a place – but one is alert and wary!

This magic circle idea, or crucible is very important in my work. Yet at this moment I am thinking of breaking such a container (not exactly drasticall by doing therapy, but by having some familiy discussions to hold it.) Where does that fit in? In this context this item is worth looking at again.

Leaf, prevented from leafing

NetFuture #153

Steve Talbot on the limits of predictability. I am quoting this passage, about an experiment on a leaf in a vacuum chamber, because it is similar about how experimentation on psychotherapy leads to “therapy, prevented from being therapeutic”.

It’s a remarkable achievement, but it comes at a cost. What appeals about the evacuated chamber is that it makes the entire event appear to be almost nothing but a predictable manifestation of the law of gravity. This is what the apparatus has been designed to do. But it achieves this by putting the leaf largely out of sight. It removes the leaf from its natural context and excludes from view most of what we would normally expect to see as leafy behavior. The leaf, you could say, must be prevented from leafing in order to show off just a single aspect of the lawfulness it always respects. We highlight the single aspect by training ourselves to ignore what it is an aspect of.

Poem – The Journey – Mary Oliver

The Journey

One day you finally knew
what you had to do, and began,
though the voices around you
kept shouting
their bad advice–
though the whole house
began to tremble
and you felt the old tug
at your ankles.
“Mend my life!”
each voice cried.
But you didn’t stop.
You knew what you had to do,
though the wind pried
with its stiff fingers
at the very foundations,
though their melancholy
was terrible.
It was already late
enough, and a wild night,
and the road full of fallen
branches and stones.
But little by little,
as you left their voices behind,
the stars began to burn
through the sheets of clouds,
and there was a new voice
which you slowly
recognized as your own,
that kept you company
as you strode deeper and deeper
into the world,
determined to do
the only thing you could do–
determined to save
the only life you could save.

Mary Oliver.

http://www.english.uiuc.edu

The most important election of our lifetime – spot the difference quiz game!

Got this from Josh, thanks Josh it looks great!

~

The Most Important Election of our Lifetime
~ Spot the Difference Quiz Game! ~

http://www.theyrule.net/mostimportantelection

It is common knowledge that this is ‘the most important election
ever’ – but can you tell the
difference between the two main candidates?

This quiz is intended to question just how significant the
difference between Bush and Kerry really
is. I hope that people find it provocative as well as
thoughtful. Please follow the link at the end
of the quiz for some more serious examinations of the question.

I sent this to a bunch of people whom I haven’t spoken to in a
while – hi! – please use this as an
opportunity to reconnect!

Bring the Troops Home Now!

Josh On

Sociocorpus

Sociocorpus

Dan Randow’s Sociocorpus is the current amalgamation of several blogs about online groups and knowledge management. Sociocorpus is a great concept. I Googled it and it went straight to Dan’s Blog. Original! I am not sure if Dan has explained it somewhere, but I see it like this: Socius is an element in the collective psyche, as Jung might called it, or the sociometric matrix in Moreno’s language. This collective stratum consists of groups which have a life of their own more than the sum of their parts, socii. Each socius is embodied somewhere, hence corpus. And the sociocorpus has taken an evolutionary leap in the last couple of decades, it incorporates in new ways as new media evolve.

Here is a nice post Online Collaboration has Two Humps to get over… I have some comments to make & will do that Dan’s blog.

There are two barriers to be crossed before Online Collaboration can gain momentum: an “Access Hump” and a “Participation Hump”.

The Access Hump has to be crossed by each individual by learning to use a new technology, remembering the location, user name and password and rules of a new place. Some people refer to this as achieving ‘social presence’. Hand-holding works well here.

Once the Access hump is crossed, the group has to cross the Participation Hump. This occurs as people begin to contribute and others respond. The benefits emerge from the participation and the participation occurs when people expect benefits. Structured group spaces work well here.

There is a third stage in which the participation pattern becomes complex. The back-channel and links to other groups and individuals form a self-organising and wide-ranging system. Blogs work well here.