12 episodi

How far can we go in our thinking, our imagination, our love? This show is about transgressing the limits of our minds and dissolving the boundaries of our hearts. While exploring diverse topics in literature, philosophy, culture, social theory, politics, and spirituality, Infinite Conversations is ultimately a show about art as life, and life as art.

Infinite Conversations Marco V Morelli

    • Cultura e società

How far can we go in our thinking, our imagination, our love? This show is about transgressing the limits of our minds and dissolving the boundaries of our hearts. While exploring diverse topics in literature, philosophy, culture, social theory, politics, and spirituality, Infinite Conversations is ultimately a show about art as life, and life as art.

    Stealing Flow: Using Audio Brainwave Technology for Writing and Art, with Douglas Prater

    Stealing Flow: Using Audio Brainwave Technology for Writing and Art, with Douglas Prater

    Douglas Prater is an author, musician, media engineer, and designer of audio tracks that offer support for meditation, flow states, and personal development. In this episode, we discuss how audio brainwave entrainment technology can be used to cultivate consciousness, creativity, and mental health, especially when used in the context of a holistic or integral practice.



    We specifically discuss Doug’s latest creation, Stealing Flow*, a suite of tracks designed to support the creative cycle by inducing phase-appropriate flow states. The conversation includes an overview of the major brainwave states and their correlates in inner experience, and how Stealing Flow works with these states.



    Doug and Marco share notes on how they’ve personally used meditation and brainwave tech as part of their creative process, and Doug talks about his recent sci-fi and romance writing, as well as his upcoming book about Harry Potter and Buddhism!



    Also mentioned in this show:



    “A Trauma-Sensitive Approach to Meditation,” by Mark Foreman



    See also:



    Integral Life Practice: A 21st-Century Blueprint for Physical Health, Emotional Balance, Mental Clarity, and Spiritual Awakening

    • 59 min
    Greg Thomas on Albert Murray, Philosopher of Jazz and the Blues

    Greg Thomas on Albert Murray, Philosopher of Jazz and the Blues

    Greg Thomas and Ed Mahood talk about the life and literary legacy of Albert Murray, whose Collected Essays & Memoirs were published by the Library of America in 2016. We discuss Murray's ideas on Omni-American identity, culture and race, and his conception of "antagonistic cooperation," which gives us the Blues Hero, who faces adversity with improvisation, artfulness, and affirmation of life. We also explore how Murray's thought is especially relevant in our political moment, and how leaders in business and other areas can learn from the example of the "Jazz break," where the performers slay the dragon of entropy and chaos with superior style.



    Music includes Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, playing "Bird's Blues," and a recording of "Cherokee" by Clifford Brown.



    Ed Mahood also joins for the latter part of the discussion, and we listen to some music!



    Niven Jazz Collection: Charlie Parker Tape 1 (1940-1945)
    https://archive.org/details/Charlie_Parker_Tape_1A_1945-1946



    Clifford Brown and Max Roach, "Cherokee"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M283JFxesic



    Participants:



    Marco V Morelli (host)
    Greg Thomas
    Ed Mahood



    Read Greg's piece, "Reading Albert Murray in the Age of Trump" on Metapsychosis.

    • 1h 21 min
    You Are Any Body: A Response to Secularizing Buddhist Ethics, with Caroline Savery – Part 2

    You Are Any Body: A Response to Secularizing Buddhist Ethics, with Caroline Savery – Part 2

    In Part 2 of their talk, Caroline and Marco continue exploring the relation between meditation and the body. Can meditation help transmute the karma that comes with the development of abstract thinking and the rise of civilization as such? Caroline argues that the expansion of the notion of the individual I, which may have once conferred advantage, is now massively maladaptive on a planetary scale. The two also discuss art and artists and how a sensitivity to raw experience is needed to hear the voices drowned out by our hyper-development. How might we enter into a more indigenous relationship with the Earth? Caroline proposes that sustainability is a crisis of how we organize concepts and project them onto the world, and that a more conceptually elegant and empathetic orientation, which can be cultivated through Buddhist practice, is essential to restoring health and clarity.



    See Part 1 for more background on this episode: https://cosmos.coop/podcast/you-are-any-body-a-response-to-secularizing-buddhist-ethics-with-caroline-savery-part-1

    • 47 min
    You Are Any Body: A Response to Secularizing Buddhist Ethics, with Caroline Savery – Part 1

    You Are Any Body: A Response to Secularizing Buddhist Ethics, with Caroline Savery – Part 1

    In this episode, Marco and Caroline formulate their responses to the Buddhist Geeks podcast episode "Secularizing Buddhist Ethics" with Vincent Horn and Stephen Batchelor. Caroline explains how her understanding of the ways consciousness materially evolves in complex systems—via Douglas Hofstadter of Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid and Maturana/Varela's Santiago School Theory of Cognition—intersects profoundly with her understanding of Buddhism. Caroline has been practicing and studying Buddhism since having a discrete transcendental experience in 2010. In this lively "inter-view," Marco and Caroline explore the notion of treating any and every body as though they are you; the problematic aspects of the "you are not your body" teaching in Eastern mystic tradition; and the potential for realizing "heaven on Earth" through particular actionable frameworks of relating to one another.



    Part 2: https://cosmos.coop/podcast/you-are-any-body-a-response-to-secularizing-buddhist-ethics-with-caroline-savery-part-2/



    Here is the original Buddhist Geeks episode Caroline and Marco are responding to:



    https://podtail.com/en/podcast/buddhist-geeks/secularizing-buddhist-ethics/



    Caroline also references her film project, The Sust-Enable Meta-mentary (2014).





    Episode music by Chris Zabriskie. (CC) BY 4.0. http://www.chriszabriskie.com.

    • 39 min
    Clean Language for Writers and Artists, with John Davis

    Clean Language for Writers and Artists, with John Davis

    John Davis and Marco V Morelli discuss who could benefit from Clean Language training, and John attempts to help Marco understand how Clean Language could help writers and artists develop richer metaphorical landscapes. John also relates his experiences as a counselor and activist during the AIDS crisis, and touches on how psychic and paranormal experiences have informed his creative writing.



    During this talk, John also discusses the relationship between trauma and transcendence. In a later conversation on the forum at infiniteconversations.com, John added the following notes.




    We have discussed this Clean Language philosophy, Marco, before and I am open to further developments as I believe it can be used in this process we are in the midst of to articulate desired outcomes and to purify the speech of our tribe. Fiction, story telling, and the language arts are crucial for the Generative Self to arise from the ashes. So I will elaborate further some notes that I'm making that reference some of our previous conversations. Please appreciate the impromptu nature of these comments and I hope they are of use for they reference those previous discussions on Clean Language and how I believe it can be employed to train the Imaginal Intelligence and turn trauma into transcendence; indeed there is an element of trauma that may be necessary to activate this intelligence. I'm working out this perhaps controversial idea in the following notes. Patience is required!



    Some people have one trauma and can be served best with developing a metaphor for that traumatic episode.



    Persons who have had multiple traumas, especially as children, have learned how to use hypnotic skills to dissociate (go somewhere else). This can be triggered at the mere hint of another traumatic episode about to happen.



    Dissociation as a strategy for coping with multiple traumas is a great survival strategy; you can float up to the corner of the room and watch it from there. Often this talent can also be developed in non-traumatic experiences: in art, theater, fiction, we use the same processes to deconstruct and reconstruct identities creatively. We can go into other worlds.



    Working with dissociation was one of David Groves' keen interests, and when he worked with me he used a lot of Clean Space. I have found the interplay of Clean Space and Clean Language has worked best for me.



    I strongly resist the notion that experts know best. I worked with experts without Clean Language and they are often terrible with trauma. After working with an expert I developed a Tourette's-like syndrome that lasted for a decade.



    I found that a good CL practitioner with a beginner's mind and an open curiosity can work wonders with traumatic events. Luckily, I have had the good luck to train someone in using CL and after he worked with me once a week for three months my symptoms disappeared. I have been free of symptoms for over a year. I much favor peer to peer relationships than the more traditional ways of working. Someone with an arts background and CL is much better than anyone who has immersed themselves in the Diagnostic Statistical Manual.



    So having reviewed these notes in public I see I have a lot of work to do as I move through the personal multiple traumas I have struggled with, cultivating good trances and finding reserves. And how does that learning become knowledge that can serve the groups I am a member of? Not sure. Thanks for this forum and may we continue to bring our Best Self to this Mandala of Generative Selves in the making....



    [Source: https://www.infiniteconversations.com/t/on-the-politics-and-ethics-of-empowerment/864/24]






    Episode music by Chris Zabriskie. (CC) BY 4.0. http://www.chriszabriskie.com.

    • 1h 3 min
    Multiple Delicacies Awaiting Discovery: The Poetry of Jenn Zahrt

    Multiple Delicacies Awaiting Discovery: The Poetry of Jenn Zahrt

    Jenn Zahrt and host Marco V Morelli discuss a series of Jenn's poems recently published in Metapsychosis journal under the titles “Dialogues with the Inscrutable” and “There is a Hydrogen Bomb on Your Raspberry Eyelid.”



    Jenn reads the following poem during our talk....



    Hesitation



    polish in the squalor
    harbor resting making
    festive nesting in between
    the wave caressing
    the possessive grave infesting
    active action proton turning
    with a burning fervent feeling
    growing sky go forth abide
    along a blow torch thigh inside
    a scorching flyer in
    the blaring sound completion
    mound retrieval fairy ovum
    life deletion in cohesion
    holding restive festing evil

    • 59 min

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