Inner Life, Talks and Thoughts

Mark Vernon

Reflections from Mark Vernon on soulful matters including spirituality and psychotherapy, science and religion, consciousness and the divine. For more on see www.markvernon.com

  1. 5 DAYS AGO

    Rouze Up Souls of the New Age! A conversation with Malcolm Guite on William Blake

    “Man has no Body distinct from his Soul,” declared William Blake. “Nature is imagination itself!” The human face is the “countenance divine”. Inspiring, yes. But what can we make of his sayings? Mark Vernon sat down with poet Malcolm Guite to discuss how Blake’s ideas about the imagination challenge modern ways of perceiving the world.  They stress that dismissing Blake’s converse with angels dismisses the radicality of what he has to offer. They explore how the division between the subjective and objective, which Guite calls “epistemological apartheid”, is false and has terrible consequences for human beings, personally and politically. They argue that theology needs a revival of the imagination as the way we apprehend truths that put the fire into rational comprehension. For more on Mark’s book, “Awake! William Blake and the Power of the Imagination” see www.markvernon.com For more on Malcolm Guite see https://malcolmguite.wordpress.com 0:00 Ways of knowing 01:46 Don't medicalise Blake! 3:30 The senses are inlets of soul 5:25 A fundamental, false division 12:07 Imagination makes real not makes up 16:35 Demystifying the imagination 20:48 Eternity in the present and particular 26:58 Reason the bound of energy: Geoffrey Hill on Blake 32:09 Blake's aphoristic philosophy 33:20 The renewal of Christianity 42:56 The generative teaching of Jesus  44:46 Energy and the Holy Spirit: Barfield on Blake 48:17 Albion crucifies the imagination 54:21 Contraries that create not conflict 58:29 Selfless perception

    1h 2m
  2. 15 JUL

    Awake! William Blake and the Power of Imagination. A conversation with Jane Clark and Nikos Yiangou

    In my book, I want to draw out two facets of William Blake, which I think get routinely sidelined now. My conversation with Jane Clark and Nikos Yiangou enabled us to explore these dimensions. One is that Blake was a very sharp thinker. He had a very accurate and clear critique of the ideas that were beginning to bed down in his time and have really shaped our times in the modern Christian West.  A second is that he is a religious figure, which gets sidelined in two ways. He lived daily with perceptions of angels and other entities: the divine, the dead. I don't explain that away by pathologising Blake.  He is also a clear Christian mystic, a very important voice in Western Christianity since the Reformation - connecting us back to a mystical core, which again is very often sidelined. For more about my book, Awake! William Blake and the Power of the Imagination see - https://www.markvernon.com/books/awake-william-blake-and-the-power-of-the-imagination For more about Beshara Magazine see - https://besharamagazine.org A transcript is online here - https://besharamagazine.org/podcast/mark-vernon-awake-william-blake-and-the-power-of-imagination/ 0:00 Introductions 1:57 Blake as thinker and mystic 5:20 The power of the imagination 14:40 Blake and science 21:12 The interconnection of music and poetry 26:04 Innocence and wisdom 32:29 Blake's Christianity 39:57 Blake the philosopher

    43 min

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Reflections from Mark Vernon on soulful matters including spirituality and psychotherapy, science and religion, consciousness and the divine. For more on see www.markvernon.com

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