The Kainos Podcast

Alexander Beiner

Kainos tells stories that help people make sense of the world and imagine new futures. beiner.substack.com

  1. 1 OTT

    Hold Infinity: William Blake and Visioning the Future

    I recently recorded a conversation with writer and philosopher Mark Vernon about his new book Awake!: William Blake and the Power of the Imagination. I enjoyed the book and our conversation a lot, coming away from both with new ideas on how we can imbue culture with visionary imagination, and why Blake’s genius is more important than ever. Mark holds a PhD in ancient philosophy, and our conversation covered a lot of ground, including Gnosticism, non-duality and the confused state of spirituality today. You can watch it here on Substack, on the Kainos YouTube, or listen to the audio on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Mark has also provided a short excerpt from Awake! below, which ties Blake’s ideas together with some of the themes we’ve surfaced on Kainos, pointing to a surprising synthesis between animism and individualism. As Kainos grows, we’re going to start using different channels for different types of content, including video essays and interviews which you’ll only find on our YouTube and Instagram. We’ll use Substack primarily for written pieces, so subscribe on our other channels to stay up to date. If you want to support Kainos so we can host more conversations like this, and unlock lots of exclusive content, consider joining as a paid subscriber on Substack. This is an edited excerpt from Awake! William Blake and the Power of the Imagination by Mark Vernon (Hurst). Find out more here. Indigenous ways of knowing are today growing in appeal as a way of supplementing or transforming an alienated western worldview with a wisdom of mutuality. However, Indigenous epistemologies also present challenges because they developed before the modern sense of freedom that brings goods, such as the liberty of the individual. The question, then, is whether older ways of knowing can marry newer understandings of the self in order to bring transformed possibilities for the future. William Blake, who knew of Indigenous epistemologies that were discussed in Georgian England, can aid us in this imaginative task. “Indigenous peoples live in relational worldviews,” Melissa Nelson told me. A professor at Arizona State University, whose heritage includes Anishinaabe, Cree, Métis and Norwegian, she researches and preserves the rituals and myths around which Indigenous ways of life are structured. These patterns of organisation are partly practical but hold intelligence, too, joining skills with a lived awareness of the more-than-human. “There is a nurturing quality to the universe that is for us like a natural law, a universal principle that we can tap into: this field of love that is the matrix of the universe,” Nelson continues. Indigenous knowledge therefore invites us to consider the possibility of participating in the world not from assumptions of difference and isolation, but difference and communion. The poetry and insights of William Blake can help us in that imaginative task, which is necessarily not one of adoption but adaption and transformation. For he takes the insights a step further. His aim is to incorporate the freedoms inherent in the western worldview, too. When learning again to discourse with Nature’s powers, a new revelation might become clear. The restored sacred aspect not only re-enchants the world but, when conversing with the subjectivities of “Each rock & each hill, Each fountain & rill, Each herb & each tree, Mountain, hill, Earth & Sea,” as Blake put it, there can be detected something else. Speaking, too, is the eternal source of all transient things: a third, eternal divine dimension. We can be alerted not just to other presences but a shared ground of being and source of all vitality. To recall Blake’s famous phrase: when the doors of perception are cleansed, everything appears not myriad but infinite—the infinite being the one fount of “Each grain of Sand, Every Stone on the Land, Cloud, Meteor & Star.” Heaven is indeed in a wildflower, eternity is indeed in love with the productions of time, because heaven is in the flower, eternity is in the events of time. Blake advises us to enter the transcendent dimension within the immanent world via our imaginations, with words, through the arts, in the sciences. He shows how to make these disciplines a “Fiery Chariot of Contemplative Thought” that can enable us to make “a Friend & Companion of one of these Images of wonder.” In short, Mother Nature does not treat the natural world as her personal fiefdom because what she tends exists at a threshold to the All. “The Vegetable Universe,” Blake explains, meaning the world as seen biologically, “opens like a flower from the Earth’s center: In which is Eternity. It expands in Stars to the Mundane Shell [the sky’s dome]; And there it meets Eternity again, both within and without.” Any finite thing reflects, in some manner or mode, an aspect of the infinite and Blake invites us to consider how Nature always displays more than a kaleidoscope of colour and tumble of activity. When imaginatively speaking with “Rock, Cloud, Mountain”, there can also be felt moving “the Spirit which Lives Eternally.” The divine aspect, implicit in every exchange or encounter, helps foster the shift from possessing to participating, from grasping to communion, because with that larger awareness we are freed from feeling self-concerned, knowing that our life too is held. Thereby, the modern sense of individual liberty is valued and also transformed: the right to personal choice becomes a virtue of mutual self-giving generosity. That awakening might be said to happen in two stages. First, our reception of the world around us is transformed from self-centredness to other-centredness. An example might be what happens when, say, at dusk, a shadowy shape on the roadside turns out to be not a threat but a shrub. In that moment, there is release from self-concerned fear, enabled by self-forgetting attention. Then, that relief might prompt a second stage: a realisation. The shrub shares my path literally and metaphorically, having embarked on a life course, too, and also shares a common wellspring: in a word, God. The awakening is one reason Blake remarked, “A fool sees not the same tree that a wise man sees.” The unfolding liberty maintains one of the great gains of the western worldview, the chance to develop one’s individuality, now known around a divine core, whilst also inspiring a totally changed attitude to transient life. Blake expressed this in the beautiful quatrain entitled “Eternity”. “He who binds to himself a joyDoes the winged life destroy;He who kisses the joy as it fliesLives in eternity’s sun rise.” “Kissing the joy as it flies” is a selfless but individual stance of attention. It takes delight in what passes because that participates with us in the timelessness of all things. The result is that, when enjoyed without possessiveness, the All becomes present. Each becomes part of the one, reflecting the whole in as many refractions. This vision is Blake’s promise. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit beiner.substack.com/subscribe

    1 h
  2. Team Light Can Save the World: Ari Kuschnir on the Power of AI Art

    27 AGO

    Team Light Can Save the World: Ari Kuschnir on the Power of AI Art

    Join Alexander and Ari on 28 August at 6pm London time for a private community session on AI filmmaking, the aesthetics of the future and the role of art in shifting culture by signing up as a founding member. Each month, we host group sensemaking sessions, invite guests like Iain McGilchrist and Nora Bateson, and learn new practices together. A year ago, my friend Ari Kuschnir produced an AI film of Donald Trump drinking Ayahuasca. He sent it to me and it blew me away. It was funny, nuanced and beautifully crafted, and we teamed up to promote it. It hit a million views in less than a week, and that was just the beginning. Since then, Ari's AI experiments have been viewed by millions of people around the world, and pioneered a hopeful, imaginative art form that presents political realities we know aren't real, but feel in our hearts could be. He’s also collaborated closely with his partner Schuyler Brown and with writer David Sauvage (who also helped me to develop the early Leviathan scripts) to bring these to life. Ari’s films have been played at concerts by the band James, endorsed by actors like Mark Ruffalo and single-handedly toppled corrupt regimes around the world. OK that last bit was made up... …but maybe if we all imagine hard enough...In our recent Substack Live session, Ari and I talked about why we need art that moves beyond postmodern cynicism and toward hope, beauty and helps us imagine the new. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit beiner.substack.com/subscribe

    55 min
  3. What If We’re All Right? with Stephanie Lepp

    8 AGO

    What If We’re All Right? with Stephanie Lepp

    Stephanie Lepp is an award-winning producer, storyteller, and speaker, whose work strives to expand hearts and minds. She’s the former Executive Director at the Institute for Cultural Evolution, a non-profit think tank that addresses political polarization at its cultural roots. Before that, she was the Executive Producer at the Center for Humane Technology, the organization at the heart of the Netflix documentary The Social Dilemma. Today, she leads Synthesis Media, a non-profit production studio devoted to expanding hearts and minds. Stephanie recently delivered a TED Talk about her project Faces of X, which uses a ‘thesis, antithesis, synthesis’ model to help people have better conversations about polarising topics like gender, race and class. We did a Substack Live together to discuss what she’s learned from the project, and how to find new territory together without falling into a mushy middle ground. Stephanie will be hosting a participatory Anti-Debate session for Founding Members on Thursday 21 August at 6pm UK time. We’re in the process of finalising our schedule of guests and facilitators for the rest of the year, with a lot of great people coming in from September. Sign up today if you’d like to join in, participate and skill up. Next up I’m having a conversation with creative producer Ari Kuschnir who’s coming on to discuss how he’s pioneering a new kind of hope-centred AI art. Ari’s films have racked up millions of views over the last year, multiple celebrity endorsements and most importantly, thousands of comments from people sharing how they’ve inspired them to imagine new possibilities. We’ll be discussing the role of art after post-modern cynicism, tensions around AI art, and the power of art to help us imagine new realities in a time of chaos. Check out his most recent viral hit which came out just a few days ago. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit beiner.substack.com/subscribe

    40 min
  4. Imagining Local Futures with Helena Norberg-Hodge

    10 GIU

    Imagining Local Futures with Helena Norberg-Hodge

    Join Helena Norberg-Hodge, Douglas Rushkoff, John Vervaeke, Nora Bateson, Josh Schrei and more in Sensemaking 102. Navigate complexity and embody new narratives around Tech, Economics, Myth, Power, Systems and Meaning. The live cohort begins on Wednesday, June 11 and the content only option is available throughout the course. McDonalds in the desert. Coca-Cola in the mountains. The International Monetary Fund. The World Bank. The same clothes, the same thoughts, the same ideas recycled through different cultures again and again. Anger at globalisation is one of those rare forces that unites people across the political spectrum. As modern life fractures and frays, it’s become one of the fundamental issues of the era. It lies at the heart of our debates around tariffs, immigration and identity.But what’s the alternative, and is it worth it? Are our lives better when we come back to local community? What do we gain, and what do we lose? Helena Norberg-Hodge is an author and film-maker. She’s one of the leading voices in the localisation movement, and the founder of Local Futures, which is committed to the revitalisation of cultural and biological diversity and the strengthening of local communities and economies worldwide. In 1975, having studied linguistics with Noam Chomsky at MIT, she was invited to accompany a film team to the remote region of Ladakh, or ‘Little Tibet’, which had been sealed off from the outside world and had only recently been opened. Helena became the first Westerner in modern times to master the Ladakhi language, and gained deep insights into the workings of one of the few cultures that remained untouched by the modern world. She went on to write ‘Ancient Futures’ arguing for the importance of localisation, and of rejecting the homogenising forces of global capital. Five decades and several books later, the question of how we come back to ourselves and to local land and culture is more pressing than ever. Leviathan Screenings If you’re looking to find the others and watch our first feature-length documentary Leviathan in real life before our online premiere on the 26th, we have a growing list of screenings happening around the world. You can find the first ones below, with many more to come.Official London Premiere on Thursday, 26 June hosted by Alexander BeinerBerlin Screening on Tuesday, 24 June hosted by WeSpace (with Alexander in person for Q&A) Cape Town Screening on Sunday, 23 June hosted by Daniel Shaw Buckfastleigh Screening on Sunday, 23 June hosted by The Moor Imagination Collective Available Soon: Stockholm Screening on Thursday, 26 June hosted by Nora Bateson and Pella Thiel (with Alexander on virtual Q&A) Toronto Screening on Thursday, 26 June hosted by Peter Limberg Tel Aviv Screening on Saturday, 21 June hosted by Michael Fine / Fermata Berlin Screening on Saturday, 21 June hosted by Lovers and Leaders Singapore Screening on Saturday, 21 June hosted by Ryan Cheng Capetown Screening on Sunday, 22 June hosted by Inet Strydom / Grabouw This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit beiner.substack.com/subscribe

    1 h 12 min
  5. 18 MAG

    What Truly Matters? Iain McGilchrist, Un-Social Experiments and The Leviathan

    Journey into the deep code of culture in our new online course: Sensemaking 102. Expand your view on what’s happening and why with the help of an amazing faculty and new practices. Connect with like-minded travellers to inquire, question, and embody. Myth. Power. Economics. Tech. Systems. Meaning. Register on studiokainos.com/sensemaking-102 What matters most, what we do or how we do it? Which is more real, a relationship or a rock? Our focus at Kainos throughout the spring has been on the polarities driving our cultural, political and spiritual upheaval. Our recent conversation with psychiatrist, philosopher and author Iain McGilchrist was a high point. We discussed Iain’s thoughts on the political and social shifts of recent months, whether AI can become conscious, how to relate authentically to nature, and why constraints create meaning. Kainos Community Members shared scintillating questions and insights, and we left the session buzzing. You can watch it on Substack, or listen to it as a podcast on Spotify or Apple. The conversation helped me develop my recent piece Ocean of Elephants, which turned out to be one of my most polarising in years. I had a feeling it might be, as I was taking a more fixed philosophical position than I normally do. Thanks to everyone who wrote or commented; it’s helped me to hone my thinking and consider new angles.Specifically, I’ve been chewing on the paradox that our capacity for abstraction frees us and traps us at the same time. Imagining new worlds and thinking up new ideas is exactly what we need to respond to the polycrisis. But spending thirty years on the internet has blurred the boundaries between theory and reality, leading many to confuse the two. We’re still figuring out how to balance hyper-abstraction with grounded social action. If we can collectively crack that, we’ll open up a wellspring of creativity and collaboration.We have a community session to discuss this polarity on Monday, 19 May. You can join that, and many sessions like it, by becoming a Kainos Community Member, or you can choose a regular subscription to gain early access to these films and exclusive pieces. It’s About to Get WeirdIt’s probably best I tell you up here that this is a weird piece. It’s been a while since I shared a recommended reading list, and you’ll find that below along with a list of events I think are worth checking out. I’ll also reveal why I’ve decided to limit my Instagram account to exactly 69,000 followers, and then you’ll see various world leaders having cathartic breakdowns. There’s also a cat with a calculator. But before all that, here’s the first teaser poster for our upcoming documentary. The working title was ‘Crossroads’, but as we’ve moved toward completion the right name became clear. It’s now called Leviathan, and the first trailer drops next week, ahead of our online premiere on Substack on 26 June. You might be able to watch it before then. We put out a call a few weeks ago to see who wanted to host a private or public screening, and I was overwhelmed by the response. I’m really grateful for your interest and support, thanks to the 50+ people around the world who have been in touch. We now have plans for screenings in 45 cities around the world. They range from living rooms to theatres, and in a few cases we had people from the same city get in touch and they’ll hopefully be joining forces. We’ll be sharing a list of the larger public screenings soon (and any smaller ones who are open to guests) so you can check if something’s happening near you. Our London premiere will be on the night of the 26th of June and we’ll open tickets for that soon. If you want to host a screening, there’s still time. It can be as small as five people or as large as a few hundred and we’ll provide you with promotional materials and a starter pack with conversation topics and some practices if you want to use them. If you’re interested, just fill out this short form. Josh Schrei of The Emerald is heading to the UK and we’re doing a talk together. Josh is also a guest in Leviathan so the timing worked out beautifully. Two thirds of tickets have been sold already and we’ve still got a month to go, so book here if you’d like to come. Steady State Social Media I recently hit 69,000 followers on Instagram and decided to stop. I’m sick of feeding the technofeudal machine and the more my account grows, the more money Mark Zuckerberg has to buy luxury perms, yachts and the occasional cup of recreational vacation coffee. Since my Reel went out, several people have tried to insinuate I chose the number 69 out of lewdness. I want to take this opportunity to reassure everyone that I am above that kind of puerile humour, and committed to the very serious work of cultural sensemaking and systems change. With that out of the way, here’s why I’m actually doing it. You might be familiar with the concept of a steady state economy, based on the insight that endless growth on a planet with limited resources is unsustainable. One famous model is Kate Raworth’s Doughnut Economics, which focuses on containing economic activity within the planetary boundaries so that we don’t exceed what the earth can sustain. I was researching it recently for the Mastery of Systems Leadership and I started to wonder whether there’s such a thing as an attentional boundary within the cultural body. If there is, I think we’re already exceeding it. The internet is flooded with content, and the Big Tech companies that rely on commodified attention always want more. More growth, more content, more money for recreational vacation coffee. What if we subvert their endless, predatory hunger by staying within attentional boundaries and focusing on quality instead of quantity? That point for me is exactly 69,000 followers. I arrived at the number through a complex mathematical process I won’t bore you with here. What matters to me is who’s in the 69k, and ensuring everyone is giving as much as they get. In the last week I’ve gone up to 69.1k, which isn’t ideal, so we’re now in the process of bouncing people who aren’t doing anything. If it dips under we’ll have to attract new people. It’s a lot of things to remember at once but we’re getting there. Love Force One Speaking of Instagram, check out Ari Kuschnir’s new AI piece imagining world leaders going through psychological and spiritual awakenings. It’s struck a chord and hit 300k views in a few days. Ari is one of the best AI video artists in the world, and though these pieces are often funny and entertaining, they are also a powerful form of art. He’s described them as a response to post-modern cynicism, because they imagine beautiful but implausible futures without hiding behind irony. I see them as a reminder that the implausible can become real, and that transformation seems impossible until it doesn’t.Recommended Books and Articles There’s an interesting horseshoe effect happening on political spectrum around the topic of bureaucracy. N.S Lyons wrote another good piece on this recently called Managerial Democracy’s Threat to Democracy and Humanity. I read it while reading Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson’s new book Abundance, in which they argue that a history of well-meaning but misguided liberal policies have created a situation in the US where regulations are strangling production and halting the progressive project. Lyons, Klein and Thompson come from very different political tribes, and it’s striking how much energy this issue has right now. They all point to the broken incentives that drive modern democracies. The more bureaucratic a society becomes, the more managers, lawyers, and consultants it needs to keep the system going. In turn, these managers are all incentivised to create more red tape, more convoluted processes and more confusion so that there are more problems to manage.Deconstructing government bureaucracy is central to the Trump White House, and it was a core election issue. This AI edited clip that went around in late 2024 is a good indication of how democracy and excessive bureaucracy have become synonymous to many voters. Setting aside the tactics and perverse incentives of DOGE and the technofeudal partnership of Musk and Trump, I think disassembling excessive bureaucracy is essential for healthy systems change. On one level it just helps us get stuff done. In 2023, Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro rebuilt the collapsed I-95 bridge in just 12 days by declaring an emergency in order to circumvent red tape and restrictive regulations. On a deeper level, a rejection of technocratic processes is a rejection of a disconnected way of seeing the world. I’m curious both about bureaucracy as an addiction to abstraction, and a form of spiritual domination. It literally sucks the life out of us; the structural equivalent of a vampire. In fact, the energy vampire Colin Robinson in What We Do In the Shadows has an amazing scene where he feeds by boring people half to death at a city council meeting. I’m working on a piece around this topic, and next on my reading list is David Graeber’s Utopia of Rules, in which he argues that we live in an age of “total bureaucratisation”. I’m also revisiting Franz Kafka’s The Trial and Foucault’s Governmentality. Unrelated to the above but worth reading: Katherine Dee’s excellent piece on the IVF clinic bombing in the US and the ‘Efilist’ movement the bomber belonged to. The Mastery of Systems Leadership In September, Small Giants Academy is launching an 8 month course called Mastery of Systems Leadership. MSL offers a toolkit for a new era, bringing together systems thinking frameworks and real-world case studies of systemic change across sectors, cultures, and forms of capital. It integrates applied philosophy to sharpen our judgment, cognitive flexibility to help us adapt, and embo

    1 h 21 min
  6. The Rise of the Woke Right

    19 MAR

    The Rise of the Woke Right

    I’m on my way to Australia for a tour hosted by Small Giants Academy! We’re kicking off with a preview screening of the upcoming Kainos documentary ‘Crossroads’ and a talk at the Byron Bay Theatre on Saturday 22nd of March - get your tickets here. Having been ‘woke critical’ since 2016, in recent years I’ve felt increasingly vindicated as mainstream culture has pushed back against the institutionalisation of social justice theory. The publication of the Cass Report in 2024 felt like the straw that broke the camel’s back here in the UK, and I wrote a piece about its implications which I think has stood the test of time. However, I’ve felt increasingly uncomfortable with the recent pushback against DEI and other initiatives in the US. Not because I disagree with the need for reform, but because it feels like a new form of authoritarianism that throws the baby out with the bathwater. So I was relieved to read Helen Pluckrose’s recent articles about the rise of the Woke Right, in which she points out that ‘…a stark division is revealed between those who opposed wokeness primarily because it was authoritarian and being institutionalised and those who opposed it because it was the wrong kind of authoritarian and wanted to institutionalise something else…" As a Classical Liberal and one of the masterminds behind the Grievance Studies Affair, Helen is uniquely placed to make these critiques, and we had a great conversation on Substack Live delving into this topic. You can join conversations like this and participate in the Q&A by signing up as a Founding Member, or get early access as a paid member. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit beiner.substack.com/subscribe

    42 min

Descrizione

Kainos tells stories that help people make sense of the world and imagine new futures. beiner.substack.com

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