Everything Only Looks Like a Thing

Video with

Neil Theise is Professor of Pathology and of Medicine at Mount Sinai and a leader in the fields of liver diseases, liver stem cells, and adult stem cell plasticity. In this interview he talks about complexity theory’s applications to biology and explains how the self-organizing principle depends on randomness. He advances the dialogue between science and spirituality, reminding us that non-duality implies duality, and that nothing is independent or permanent.

On Refugia: Kathleen Dean Moore

Article by

"Refugia": places of safety where life endures

Wrinkled Time

Article by

The Persistence of Past Worlds on Earth Excerpts from a recent essay in Emergence Magazine Marcia Bjornerud is a professor of environmental studies and geosciences at Lawrence University

#112 Ayurvedic Longevity

Podcast with

What can the ancient science of Ayurvedic Medicine teach us about living longer, healthier lives?

Ultimate Truth & Our Purpose on Earth

Video with

Tiokasin ruminates on the indigenous view of consciousness and our connection as Earth herself.

#34 Conversations on Complexity

Podcast with

A discussion of Neil's new book "Notes on Complexity"

The Way is Awkward

Article by

By the river it is cool and gray at last after a night of longed-for rain, however intermittent

Fungal Brains

Article by

A new study claims that fungi possess great intelligence to the point that they can make decisions

A New Tribal National Marine Sanctuary

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The waters off Central California are now part of the Chumash Heritage National Marine Sanctuary, the result of a decades-long campaign by local Indigenous leaders

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