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April 30, 2007

chandigarh - the next IT hub

bcm has been operating out of Chandigarh for over 4 years.  It looks like people are starting to catch on (CNN):

"The IT industry is excited about Chandigarh's potential as an emerging IT destination," said Kiran Karnik, president of the National Association of Software and Service Companies (NASSCOM), India's top trade body for the IT industry. "Already, many IT companies have begun operations there or have plans of doing so, making it one of the new 'hot spots' for the IT industry," he told Reuters by email.

Current investment in the park, located on the outskirts of the city, is 7 billion rupees ($165 million) and in two years it is expected to touch 30 billion rupees ($711 million), Brar said.

"There is no doubt that a lot of people are trying hard to sell Chandigarh as the next Silicon Valley in India," said Simran Aujla, an IT professional.

Chandigarh is one of India's most well-planned cities.  Unfortunately, that plan maxes out at around 500,000 people.   Wikipedia on the the architect's initial vision:

Le Corbusier divided the city into units called 'sectors', each representing a theoretically self-sufficient entity with space for living, working and leisure. The sectors were linked to each other by a road and path network developed along the line of the 7 Vs, or a hierarchy of seven types of circulation patterns.
Because of this well-executed plan, Chandigarh has always been my favorite city in India.  After having worked with a few firms in helter-skelter Bangalore, moving our main office to Chandigarh felt like relocating to a day spa.

For better or worse, this is all about to change.  Over the next two years, a massive influx of large companies, employees, and Marutis with custom horn sounds is going to begin a fast, loud transition.  I am happy for Chandigarh.  But, it makes me think.  Time to relocate to Goa?

Posted by Sandeep Sood at 11:07 PM | Comments (4)

Making Connections

It'll take 22.5 hours – not counting the 10 hour layover in London – to get to Swaziland. That's a lot of air miles. But the point of the trip is to lessen the distance between (RED) shoppers around the world and the (RED) shareholders in Africa. Like most businesses, (RED) exists to generate returns and create value. Our dividends are a bit non-traditional, however, as we measure them in number of "lives saved."

I fly to Swaziland today to meet some of the moms and kids that have been saved since inspired, empowered people started purchasing (RED) items from our brand partners – Gap, Motorola, Converse, Emporio Armani, Apple, and American Express – generating $25 million for the Global Fund to invest in HIV/AIDS programs in Africa. We may only have launched last year, but already (RED) shoppers have helped make us one of the top 15 contributors to the Global Fund. And 100% of (RED) funds go directly into the field to activate efforts that represent the best performing and neediest programs in the Global Fund's portfolio.

Swaziland was chosen as the second country, after Rwanda, to receive a (RED) grant through the Global Fund. With a population of 1.1 million, Swaziland's HIV prevalence is 33 percent, and life expectency is 42. Among pregnant women, HIV prevalence is at 39 percent. More than 70,000 children have been orphaned by this treatable, preventable disease. These data may seem daunting but (RED) consumer power is already making an impact. With an initial disbursement of $5.3 million, (RED) funding has already provided the medicine needed to keep 17,000 people with HIV/AIDS alive, in addition to providing the medicine to ensure that the children of HIV positive moms are born healty, and providing support for over 59,000 vulnerable children.

But numbers only tell part of a story…usually the dry part….so over the next week we are going to share the pictures and words and feelings that make the fine connection, which is the poetry of understanding. I want to bring each and everyone of you with us virtually on this journey because understanding is a two-way street or, maybe a better way to say it, is that understanding is "linked hearts" like the West African Akoma Ntoso symbol featured on some of the (GAP) RED shirts.

We want (RED)'s shareholders in Swaziland to feel connected to the (RED) consumer community, just as we want the (RED) community to feel connected to the people we'll be meeting in Swaziland. We know it's important to "show the money," so all can see that (RED) is working. But showing the money, we hope, will also make clear that these connections are real in a much deeper sense. Central to (RED) is the idea that all participants in the value chain get embraced ( ) – the purchaser, the corporate partner, and those impacted by HIV/AIDS in Africa. This world needs more embraces.

More from the Manzini, after meeting up with my travel companions: Christy Turlington (RED) ambassador; Adele Sulcas from the Global Fund, and Julie Cordua (RED). Nicole Hahn, who was with us on a May '06 trip to Rwanda and Lesotho will also be joining to help us gather this chapter on film. Stay tuned…Christy and I will be posting frequently here as our trip progresses.

Posted by Tamsin Smith at 09:01 PM | Comments (8)

BUDDHA: A STORY OF ENLIGHTENMENT

Dear Friends,

Available on May 1.

Love,
Carolyn

BUDDHA: A STORY OF ENLIGHTENMENT

CLICK HERE TO READ REVIEWS OF BUDDHA

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Eastern philosophy popularizer and mind-body pioneer Chopra has done novels before, and critics have not found fiction his long suit. That should change with this tale of how the Indian prince Siddhartha came to be the enlightened one, the Buddha. The subject is tailor-made for Chopra. He can draw on what he's familiar with: the ancient Indian culture that shaped the historic personage of the Buddha, and the powers of mind that meditation harnesses. Although the novel begins a little slowly with exposition and character introduction, once the character of the Buddha is old enough to occupy center stage, Chopra simply portrays the natural internal conflict experienced by any human seeking spiritual wisdom and transformation. Centered on a single character, the narrative moves forward simply and inexorably. Especially imaginative and intriguing is the low-key nature of the Buddha's enlightenment experience. In case Chopra's fans want something more direct, an epilogue and concluding "practical guide" offer nonfiction commentary and teaching on core Buddhist principles. Chopra thanks a film director friend for sparking the project, and the novel has clear cinematic potential. This fast and easy-to-read book teaches without being didactic. Chopra scores a fiction winner. (May)


WHAT OTHERS ARE SAYING ABOUT BUDDHA

Outstanding! Deepak's creative and dramatic retelling of Buddha’s life is proof, that, when it comes to conveying spiritual verities, fiction can be more true than fact.

--Arvind Sharma, Birks Professor of Comparative Religion
McGill University

"BUDDHA is unlike anything Deepak has ever written before. A timeless story retold by one of the most inspiring spiritual guides of our era, it is essential reading for anyone curious about the foundations of Buddhism."

-- Brian Grazer, Oscar Award Winning Producer of "A Beautiful Mind," Emmy Winning Producer, "24"

Deepak Chopra crafts his “BUDDHA” in an astonishing narrative, a veritable literary feast engaging every color of the bouquet of human experience. With dramatic precision and inspired literary artistry he transports us on an adventure in enlightenment with all the twists and turns of a great movie.”

-- Peter Guber, Chairman of Mandalay Entertainment, Producer of Batman, Rainman and Color Purple, and host of AMC’s Sunday Morning Shootout

From prince to fully awakened being we enter the mythic life of the Great Lord Buddha painted in primary colors on a canvas so fresh and unpretentious that we can sit and contemplate the essence of this ultimate spiritual adventure. Bravo Deepak!”

--James O’Dea
President, Institute of Noetic Sciences

A page turning masterpiece. To me, this is Deepak’s story telling at its best. The telling of one of the greatest stories ever lived, in a fashion that will make the Buddha come alive for the reader. I couldn’t put it down. I now feel as if I have met the Buddha and he is in all of us who search for our own greatest. This book is destined to become a classic, I guarantee it.

--Wayne Dyer, Author
The Power of Intention

BUDDHA offers us a most extraordinary opportunity to look at the road to enlightenment taken by one man. Deepak’s insightful re-imagining of the life journey of one of the world’s greatest spiritual leaders is a captivating read and a road map to personal spiritual growth from one of the most respected and inspiring leaders of our time.

---Terry Semel
Chairman and CEO, Yahoo!

Book Tour Dates

May 1 New York City, Barnes and Noble, Fifth Avenue
May 11 New York City, Open Center and Oxonian Society
May 14 San Francisco,Stacey's
May 15 Seattle, Elliott Bay
May 16 Marin, CA, Jewish Community Center
May 18 Los Angeles, Borders
May 19 Los Angeles, Learning Annex, location TBD
May 21 Denver, Tattered Cover
May 22 Boulder, Boulder Books
May 28 Toronto, Harborfront
May 29 Chicago, Transitions

Posted by Deepak Chopra at 06:55 PM | Comments (53)

Silence of the Guns

In the aftermath of the Virginia Tech shootings, editorials in Europe repeated a familiar theme, that America is gun happy. Current estimates hold that 1 in 3 households has a gun. Laws to control gun ownership have weakened over the years, as witness the lifting of the ban on assault weapons. To outsiders, U.S. politics is bizarre. You would think that no one could get elected to Congress without a Bible in one hand and a rifle in the other. The NRA and the Christian right want that image to continue, and together they claim to have swung the 2000 presidential campaign, not to mention many others on the congressional and senatorial level.

Where does this leave gun control? Silent, apparently. After the 1999 Columbine shootings, there was at least an outcry for sane gun policy. This time, despite the fact that Cho, the gunman in the Virginia Tech massacre, easily circumvented federal gun laws, any attempt to limit access to hand guns, automatic weapons, and assault rifles appears to be a lost cause. This is a case where expediency has trumped morality. We witness the mockery of presidential candidates going through the ritual of a hunting trip for the benefit of TV cameras even when a person like Al Gore and John Kerry either has no use for guns or is outright against them.

In this country we are resigned to a level of crime that far outstrips any other developed country. It's assumed in Europe that a criminal can't get hold of a gun without going to extraordinary lengths. It's assumed in America that if you want to kill or rob on Monday, you can drop in and buy a gun over the weekend. Cho bought his in fifteen minutes. The right wing uses the slippery slope argument to preserve the status quo. They know perfectly well that hand guns have no place in hunting. Neither do assault rifles and semi-automatic weapons. But such is the fear of losing their hunting rifles (or of weakening the now fictitious civilian militia guaranteed in the Constitution as a protection against King George's army) that the gun lobby will destroy any politician who proposes the hint of a gun control bill.

Leaving aside the morality of the issue, to have gun ownership be the deciding factor in American elections is as bizarrely irrelevant as having abortion be the swing issue. The challenges facing America have nothing to do with guns and abortions. It's totally unreal to force candidates to focus on firearms and fetuses. The net result has been dire on both sides of the coin. The best potential candidates have exited politics en masse, while those who are willing to kowtow to right-wing ideology have been drawn in. The recent Democratic takeover in both houses required the party to enlist conservatives who in many cases are just Republicans in disguise.

We let the NRA decide elections at our own peril. If they want credit for the 2000 presidential election, they must accept credit also for the Iraq war, a crippling deficit, no forward motion on health care or Social Security, the loss of American prestige around the world, and this country's increasing militarism and isolation. Silence on gun control has had far-reaching implications. People who remain silent on the issue of guns should realize one thing: They are paying a high price every day to a lobby that strangles progress on every front.

Posted by Deepak Chopra at 08:27 AM | Comments (80)

April 29, 2007

Leung: China's Confucian Harmony with Nature

We are grateful to Andrew Leung for "China's Confucian Harmony with Nature: Timeless Wisdom and Boundless Opportunities."

Confucius-thumb.jpg
Confucius (circa 551-479 BC)

Dear ATCA Colleagues

[Please note that the views presented by individual contributors are not necessarily representative of the views of ATCA, which is neutral. ATCA conducts collective Socratic dialogue on global opportunities and threats.]

We are grateful to:

. Andrew Leung for "China's Confucian Harmony with Nature: Timeless Wisdom and Boundless Opportunities"

in response to The Lord Alton of Liverpool's submission to ATCA of HRH's Roscoe Lecture, "The Prince of Wales calls for greater Harmony between Man and Nature."

Andrew Leung has over 40 years of experience in a number of senior positions working closely with mainland China, including Hong Kong, with a focus on commerce, industry, finance, banking, transport, social welfare and diplomatic representation. He has addressed numerous local and international business and strategic fora, groups and organisations on China, including making regular television appearances. He has written many key commentaries on China for various organisations including ATCA. His target audience includes finance and investment houses, institutional investors, large businesses, think tanks, senior officials and business schools. Andrew was twice sponsored personally by the US Government on briefing visits to the United States, including a month-long visit to brief Chairmen and CEOs of multi-nationals in regard to China, post-Tiananmen Square. He was also sponsored by the Economist as a speaker at the China conference in Berlin with the German Foreign Affairs Institute. He was invited to brief personally the Duke of York and the Lord Mayor of London prior to their China visits.

Andrew is on the Governing Council of King's College London; the Advisory Board of Nottingham University's China Policy Institute; and the Executive Committee of the 48 Group Club with historical and working links with the Chinese leadership. He has been appointed as a Global Representative for Changsha City, China. He chairs the China Interest Group of the Institute of Directors' City Branch. He is a Visiting Professor of the International MBA Programmes of China's Sun Yat-Sen and Lingnan Universities. He will shortly begin lecturing as a Visiting Professor at NIMBAS University, Utrecht, Holland. Andrew is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (FRSA). He was awarded the Silver Bauhinia Star (SBS) in the 2005 Hong Kong's Honours List. He has qualifications from the University of London, Cambridge University, The Law Society and Harvard Business School. He speaks Cantonese and Mandarin and practices Chinese calligraphy as well as fine art. He writes:

Dear DK and Colleagues

Re: China's Confucian Harmony with Nature: Timeless Wisdom and Boundless Opportunities

His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales's thought-provoking and epochal Roscoe Lecture as circulated on ATCA came hot at the heels of the overwhelming scientific consensus in the latest Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. It was aired as Climate Chaos becomes high on the political agenda on both sides of the Atlantic and is recently being flagged up as a global security concern in the United Nations.

Interestingly though, instead of the language of divisiveness, of what and who have led to this global challenge and how the burden of response should be shared, HRH's intellectual plea is imbued with the vital concepts of Holism, Balance, Unity, Diversity and Cooperation, and of working with, rather than against, the grain of Nature.

It is also interesting that HRH used the words 'Harmony' and 'harmonic' no less than seventeen times. It is perhaps not so churlish to imagine that the Lecture should resonate well with China's recently revived political direction, and indeed national strategy, of 'Harmony', of 'building a harmonious society' and a 'harmonious world'. This ancient Confucian concept has long embodied the concept of harmony within the self, harmony in the family, harmony in the society and in the nation, harmony between nations, and harmony between Man and Nature.

But there is a major difference. For China and the rest of the developing world, the challenge is not just ultimate environmental security, but immediate and medium-term survival. It is therefore paradoxical that the West still seems to be leading much of the international debate.

As China's State Environmental Protection Administration Vice Minister Pan Yue points out, while China may have achieved economically in 20 years what has taken the West a hundred years, she is now facing all at once the environmental consequences equivalent to 100 years of industrial growth.

China is already the world's largest SO2 emitter and is feared to overtake the US as the largest CO2 emitter by 2009, if not earlier. All her seven main rivers and 25 of her 27 main lakes have become polluted. 90% of her cities have pollution problems and 500 million people do not have ready access to safe drinking water. 25% of her land is suffering from desertification. The Yellow River is running dry (as most of the world's largest rivers) due to increased irrigation, urbanisation, silting and climate chaos (Fred Pearce, When the Rivers Run Dry, 2006, Random House).

China is now very upfront with her environmental challenges. Her first-ever National Assessment Report on Climate Chaos (a 400-page multi-departmental meticulous research) was released on 26th December 2006. China's average temperature is expected to rise 1.3 -2.1 degrees Centigrade by 2020. Glaciers on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, a main freshwater source for China and a large part of neighbouring countries, are shrinking by 131.4 sq km per annum. Those in Western China are melting down by 27.2% by 2050. Extreme weather conditions including floods and draughts, are likely to lead to diseases, water and food scarcity. The Report calls for a dramatic transformation of China's development model.

Notwithstanding continuing local recalcitrance and initial disappointing performance, the Chinese leadership remains adamant that China's new-found drive in her latest 11th Five Year Plan (2006-2010) for balanced and sustainable development should succeed, including the energy saving (4% pa) and emission reduction (2% pa) targets per unit GDP. At a recent international press conference at the Fifth Session of the 10th National People's Congress on 16th March, Premier Wen categorically stated that despite China's impressive growth, he remained deeply concerned about the risks that China's current development is becoming 'unstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated, and unsustainable'. The recent shelving of a long awaited national 'action plan' on Climate Chaos may be intended to allow for a major re-think of strategies, policies and priorities in the wake of China's latest appointment of new cabinet ministers for land and water resources and for science and technology. This may also be intended to provide more room for manoeuvre in face of the recent elevation of the topic as a security issue in the United Nations.

Meanwhile, China is pushing ahead with her efforts in cleaner and renewable energies. She is building two nuclear power stations every year for the next 15 years. Her hydro-electric power is scheduled to grow form 108 GW to 290 GW by 2020, with a full potential in the region of 400 GW. Wind power, especially in Inner Mongolia, is planned to increase from 1GW to 30 GW by 2020 for up to 30 million households by 2020.There are some 30 million households using solar power, largely in Tibet, representing 60% of the world total. Photovoltaic energy is expected to increase from 65 MW to 2GW by 2020, to displace 40 million tonnes of coal every year. The NYSE-listed Chinese solar energy corporation Suntech has already made its founder China's 4th richest man with a wealth of USD 1.4 billion.

In addition, SASOL from South Africa has been signed up to build Coal to Liquid plants in Ningxia and Shaanxi at a total cost of USD 10 billion, designed to produce 10 million tonnes of crude oil by 2010 and 30 million tonnes by 2020, representing 16% of China's output.

China is already the world's 3rd largest ethanol producer, at 1 billion gallons per annum, from Heilongjiang, Jilin, Liaoning, Anhui and Henan provinces, where the use of gasohol is mandated. She is providing financial incentives for energy from non-food crops (including genetically-modified crops), waste and biomass.

China's green energy initiatives form part of a surge in green investments worldwide, totalling USD 63 billion in 2006. This compares with USD 49 billion in 2005 and USD 30 billion in 2004. The growth has been 20-30% per annum and could provide the biggest job and wealth creation opportunity in the 21st Century [Economist, 18th November 2006]. Perhaps it is no coincidence that the United Nations is setting up a world carbon trading exchange in Beijing [Financial Times, 5 Feb, 2007].

Already the sands are shifting to promise a whole new concept of cars, if not to revolutionize the entire world's car industry. Toyota is developing a new generation of the cleaner-energy Prius. BMW is pioneering with hydrogen fuel cars. GM has announced plans to sell hydrogen-cell vehicles by 2010. Japan is planning a target of 50,000 fuel-cell vehicles by the same year. China has been financing R&D at USD 200 million per annum for the past few years to stoke her ambition of becoming a world leader in hydrogen-fuel-cell cars. A total of 172 prototypes and 87 hydrogen filling stations have already been created worldwide.

What is more, China is on track to open the world's first sizeable eco-city at Dongtan on Chiongming Island in time for the Shanghai Expo 2010. Other similar brand-new city and urban planning projects including eco-friendly transport systems are set to follow.

However, as more and more developing countries (China included) have to engage in water or energy intensive activities to generate income and employment and to continue lifting their millions out of poverty, boreholes are driven deeper and deeper into depleting or contaminated ancient aquifers and vast dams are constructed to appropriate water for irrigation for water-hungry cotton plantations for the textile industries or for the insatiable demands of burgeoning urbanisation. On the demand side, modern consumer capitalism reveals a never-ending hunger for the next fad or fashion. Mass-produced garments are getting cheap enough for ordinary urbanites to throw away after their first use for a new look of the next month. A recent business school study extols the commercial exploits of someone creating a small fortune making a new-style electric toothbrush. But look deeper and many needed jobs, livelihoods and economies are at stake. For many communities struggling to develop from the bottom, there may be no alternative to this form of market capitalism.

Western Enlightenment led to the birth of Capitalism. Questions are being asked whether we need a new form of Enlightenment, that of Harmony with Nature, if only for our own self-interested economic and ecological survival. The birth of a new Eco-Industrial Revolution in the 21st Century has already been mooted [21st C Management, Dr Matthew Kiernan, 1996]. There is increasing realisation of the validity of the Gaia Theory [The Revenge of Gaia, James Lovelock, 2006, Penguin Books], that Gaia selects her own balance, not dictated by Man. There is even suggestion of the need for a new Ecological Civilisation [Pan Yue, Vice Minister, China's State Environmental Protection Administration, February 2007].

I happened to be an invited Speaker on the subject of Climate Security at two different forums at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) on 24th April and at the Indian High Commission in London on 26th April respectively. I outlined aspects of energy geopolitics and their attendant environmental risks. I highlighted the fact that apart from fuel, water remained at the heart of regional conflicts including those over the Golan Heights and the West Bank as well as over Kashmir. I mentioned that dams created problems to other regions downstream and were liable to disrupt productive river ecosystems, such as the Mekong basin, on which the livelihood of millions in neighbouring regions depended. They also caused or aggravated floods in extreme weather conditions. I mentioned, by way of example, the recent revival of the simple ancient art of rainwater collection, which could alleviate water demand by say 30%. I explained that in the final analysis, it is more than a question of security. It is a question of development according to the particular needs and circumstances of different countries and regions. And there should be no one-size-fits-all formula that can be imposed. Above all, 'Three Billion New Capitalists' [Clyde Prestowitz, 2006, Perseus Books Group] are now industrialising at the same time in a new Global Industrial Revolution of the 21st Century. In an inter-dependent but increasingly resource-stretched world, cooperation (rather than coercion) is the key. In the Gandhi Room I was inspired to suggest that both the eminent Indian sage and China's Confucius extolled Harmony, including harmony between peoples and working with Nature.

When I spoke, I was ignorant of the wisdom of HRH's Roscoe Lecture. Had I read his speech, I would have been able to make my points with greater intellectual force. Indeed, as China continues to face increasing international unease if not mistrust with her avowed 'Peaceful Rise', she may well benefit from HRH's intellectual wisdom in refining her intentions in embracing Harmony with Nature. This should help her strategy resonate even better in both Western and Eastern civilisations.

What is more, the stage is now set for a paradigm shift towards more eco-friendly philosophies, economies and lifestyles calling for more cooperation in combating Climate Chaos in our Global Village. As ventured in my recent article 'China and the Middle East: an Eastern Alchemy for Global Harmony' [ATCA, 17th February, 2007], China could well benefit technologically, financially, and geopolitically by investing part of her huge foreign currency reserve in global responses to Climate Chaos in partnership with countries with the relevant technologies and business expertise including Japan, the EU and the US. Additionally, she could set an example of cooperation with the Middle East in tackling global issues by partnering with the Petrodollars.

HRH's exposition of the importance of Harmony with Nature cannot be more timely. In this new Century, it is becoming ever more urgent to embrace this timeless wisdom as much as its boundless opportunities.

Andrew KP Leung, SBS, FRSA

[ENDS]

-----Original Message-----
From: Intelligence Unit
Sent: 28 April 2007 00:57
To: 'atca.members@mi2g.com'
Subject: ATCA: His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales calls for greater Harmony between Man and Nature -- The Lord Alton of Liverpool

Dear ATCA Colleagues

[Please note that the views presented by individual contributors are not necessarily representative of the views of ATCA, which is neutral. ATCA conducts collective Socratic dialogue on global opportunities and threats.]

Re: His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales calls for greater Harmony between Man and Nature -- Lord Alton of Liverpool

We are grateful to our long standing and distinguished member, The Lord Alton of Liverpool, for submitting the 67th Roscoe Lecture to ATCA, delivered at St George's Hall Liverpool, by HRH The Prince of Wales. The Roscoe lecture is named after one of Liverpool's most famous sons, William Roscoe (1753-1831), whose heritage lives on through the work of Liverpool John Moores University's Foundation for Citizenship chaired by The Lord Alton.

David Alton (Lord Alton of Liverpool) began his career as a teacher and, in 1972, he was elected to Liverpool City Council as Britain's youngest City Councillor. He served for 18 years in the House of Commons. David was made a Life Peer in 1997. He has sat for the past 10 years as a Crossbencher in the House of Lords and is Professor of Citizenship at Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU). A Fellow of St Andrew's University his books include "Citizen Virtues" and "Faith In Britain." He was one of the founders of the British Human Rights Organisation, Jubilee Campaign. During his oration Professor Lord (David) Alton said:

"Roscoe is often hailed as the 'father of Liverpool culture' and like him, The Prince of Wales has been brave enough to develop seemingly unconventional ideas and provide opportunities for those with the drive to succeed. Independence of mind, tolerance and respect are all qualities which the University wishes to cultivate through the Foundation. These virtues are attributes for which The Prince of Wales is famed and for this we applaud him."

HRH Prince Charles echoed these sentiments by praising Roscoe for having the courage to challenge the 'status quo' by campaigning for the abolition of slavery. HRH's lecture was a thought-provoking exploration of The Prince's views on 'modernism' and society's perilous alienation from nature. Science and technology had, he said, brought great benefits but also some painful and destructive costs. In order to address the immense challenges facing mankind today, it was imperative that we rethink our approach to life and ask whether modernism, and its materialistic view of life was 'fit for purpose' in the 21st century. Rather than trying to simplify, standardise and sanitise the natural world, we should instead embrace complexity as the key to life. True sustainability, he continued, depended on us accepting that we cannot engineer our way out of every problem. Instead we needed to shift our perception of our place in the world and embrace the sacred duty of stewardship of the natural order of things. The Prince concluded by calling on society to embrace scientific and technological advances that worked in harmony with nature rather than trying to master it. Such an enlightened approach would take courage but was one that he believes needs to be adopted with some urgency.

The Roscoe Lecture by His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales delivered at St George's Hall, Liverpool on 23rd April 2007

It is a great honour to receive this honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University and, indeed to give this Roscoe Lecture, especially in the year in which we mark the eight hundredth anniversary of King John granting your city its charter. The city fathers who received that charter could not have imagined what a vibrant, cosmopolitan city it would become. It has been a special pleasure for me today to open the splendidly restored St George's Hall on St George's Day.

It is a miracle of co-ordination that you have managed to achieve this! I was shown around the building some 15 years ago on a private visit and was told that it was due to be demolished. I remember encouraging those I met to do all they could to save it and so you can imagine what a delight it is for me today to see the whole building revealed in all its glory. If I may, I just wanted to congratulate everyone whose tireless efforts have made it possible, for St George's Hall is surely one of the finest examples of neo-classical architecture in Europe; a jewel in a city where conscience and philanthropy have constantly challenged the prevailing world view.

William Roscoe, of course, did just that. He was a poet and a scholar, a passionate educationalist and a vigorous patron of the arts. He founded the School of Arts that has since flowered into this increasingly influential University which has not only developed an internationally renowned programme of research, but also established such a successful and innovative approach to management. I am more than intrigued by the fact that you have abolished all of your "decision-making committees." That sounds too good to be true! And, of course, I am delighted and honoured that you have decided to give my Prince's Trust your prestigious Corporate Award for its work helping young people into business.

But William Roscoe also pursued his belief in "freedom for all" by adding his considerable voice to a then unpopular movement that eventually achieved the abolition of the slave trade in this country two hundred years ago. Sadly, even today, we have not fully eradicated slavery, but there are some remarkable people, like Baroness Cox who struggle courageously in places like the Sudan.

In company with others engaged in that struggle, both here and abroad, Roscoe was considered a fool by many to challenge the received wisdom of his day. Indeed, here in Liverpool there were strong economic arguments for keeping things the way they were. And yet, against the odds, such figures managed to persuade people and Parliament to widen and deepen their focus and to challenge and change the status quo. And so society developed a new and more enlightened perspective.

Ladies and Gentlemen, as you have been rash enough to invite me here to indulge in a spot of "meddling" in Liverpool, I can confess to knowing a little bit here and there about putting my head above the odd conventional parapet from time to time. In my case, it has been to suggest that in the last 50 or so years, perhaps with the best of intentions, we may have "thrown out the baby with the bath water," and that, therefore, we need to consider anew the timeless principles which underpinned so much of civilization before industrialization took such a comprehensive hold on the world. These principles have always crossed all cultural boundaries. They have never belonged to one particular school of thought. Rather, they might be called "shared insights" that belong to humanity as a whole and I would suggest that they are key to the maintenance of Harmony, Balance and Unity in life.

It is these principles that I would like to explore in this lecture today, in relation to some of the main areas with which I happen to have long been concerned: architecture, medicine, agriculture, environment and education. These are all areas of our life which, it seems to me, have been adversely affected by the neglect of a particular kind of wisdom that guided our forebears for generations, and its almost complete replacement in the past century by an entirely different way of seeing ourselves in relation to others and, indeed, in expressing Mankind's relationship with Nature.

The trouble, of course, in suggesting, as I have done, that the balance needs to be righted, is that I seem to have ended up being "pigeon-holed" as "anti-progress" or "anti-science." I am not "anti-science" - I am anti the kind of science that fails to see the whole picture; the kind of science that has for some reason eliminated what we might call commonsense. So I will now reiterate to those who actually listen that of course technology and progress have changed our lives for the better -- certainly in the West and not least in terms of health, universal education, improved housing and greater mobility and prosperity. But I would argue that while we have undeniably made great gains we have also lost something very precious and that is an understanding of our interconnectedness with Nature and a world beyond the material.

My thesis is that in order to cope with the alarming challenges that increasingly confront us in the form of the disturbing side-effects of that very progress we have made, and to ensure that others in developing countries and, indeed, our children and grandchildren, can have a worthwhile future, we urgently need to re-think the way we perceive the world and our place in it. It is not, therefore, a question of "either, or"; but one of the re-integration of the lost half of our humanity that has been, I contend, so rashly discarded in the rush towards the concept of linear progress.

For, it is Ladies and Gentlemen, that we now live in an extremely literalized world. A world which has little place for the symbolic or recognition of the levels of existence that lie beyond the material. We have been persuaded that what we see is all we get; that there is nothing more than the material exterior of things.

This new perspective, which some have called "Modern-ism," offers us an unrelenting emphasis upon a material and mechanistic view of the world. To quote from the Victoria and Albert Museum's foreword to its recent exhibition on Modernism, "Modernists had a Utopian desire to create a better world. They believed in technology as the key means to achieve social improvement and in the machine as a symbol of that aspiration." Generally speaking, we can say that it has focussed its attention upon the parts and not the whole -- to the point of deconstructing the world around us -- and has dismissed as unreal anything that cannot be objectively measured and tested. It is, if you like, a "world of quantities."

As I said earlier, this approach has, of course, brought us great benefits. But I would argue, however, there have also been costs and, as we are finding out, increasingly painful and destructive ones. Implicit in the ideology of "Modernism" was the notion that we could somehow disconnect ourselves from the wisdom of the past; that we no longer needed the knowledge offered to us by traditional approaches in everything from education to agriculture, in the arts and crafts and that spiritual practice is no more than outdated superstition -- but "super-stition", of course, means something much more profound than what we have been led to believe. It reflects the heightened sense of our participation in the living organism of Nature that actively, "unconsciously," seeks balance at all times. And it is, I suggest, by replacing rather than working with that other and timeless wisdom to which I have referred that we have created at the heart of our present world view a worrying imbalance.

We see it, for instance, reflected in much of our urban development, in certain approaches to medicine, in our agri-industries and most especially in what some refer to as "the environmental crisis". To such an extent that I feel it has become an imperative of our time to question whether, with today's immense challenges and today's knowledge, it is an approach to life which, on its own, is enough; is actually "fit for purpose" in the 21st century?

This approach has sought, as a matter of principle, to simplify or standardize the world and make things more industrialized and convenient. That is why, for example, we have sought to straighten curved streets and group buildings into single-use zones. Thus we have too often imposed a simplistic and empty geometry on the form of our cities which has drastically reduced the rich complexity of many of our urban environments. It is also why we have lost an understanding of the unity of mind, body and spirit in relation to healthcare. And all this has turned out to be something of a problem, because what those who drove this 20th century ideology did not seem to understand is what today's intricate studies of biology now shout out loud and clear -- that complexity is key to life.

We now know from biology that in the natural world every healthy organism is a complex system of interrelated and interdependent parts that work together in a coherent way to produce a harmonic whole. There is no waste and no one part operates beyond the limits of the whole. Bees in a hive are a perfect example of this. It is the hive which is the organism and its healthy survival depends upon each bee helping to maintain the balance and harmony of the unified whole. They do this by following the patterns and laws of Nature. They do not exceed their limits nor do they put the individual first. Each bee operates in harmony with the environment which sustains it. As George Herbert wrote "Each creature hath a wisdom for his good." His celebration of the bee in his poem Providence sums up the point beautifully:

"Bees work for man; and yet they never bruise
Their master's flower, but leave it, having done,
As fair as ever, and as fit to use;
So both the flower doth stay, and honey run."

Contrast this for a moment with our convenience-based, throw away consumerist society, dominated as it is by the increasing demands of individualism -- at whatever cost, it often seems, to society or the environment. Every aspect of human activity and interaction in the Western world is now required to be so simplified and standardized that nothing must be complex. Even Nature is presented as a simplified and sanitized arm's-length experience; something to watch on television programmes, but something separate from what we are. In short, whether or not it intends to do so, this attitude of mind seems to disconnect us from the rest of creation.

It does so, moreover, by actively denying that, at root, we are spiritual creatures; that we have real spiritual needs -- call them "intuitive, heartfelt feelings" if you like -- which must be nourished if we are to achieve our full potential. To express such needs requires the perspectives of the philosophical and the spiritual, but where are they in this present Modernistic paradigm? The creative force in the universe has been so rendered down that it would seem it is now nothing more than a disposable idea, allowing us to see Nature as a sort of giant laboratory where we can experiment and manipulate its separate parts, testing them to destruction if we like, without worrying about the impact that this has on the whole.

No longer is "Mother Nature" the guiding principle that it was for generations of our forebears. Just think of Wordsworth's "sense sublime of something far more interfused. a motion and a spirit that impels all thinking things, all objects of thought and rolls through all things."

How that jars with the mechanistic, empirically rational way in which reality is so often portrayed. The rational is thought to be the only sensible way of looking at the world. Whereas living within the limits of what Nature can sustain, trusting our intuition and, ultimately, seeing the world as sacred presence are all considered to be of little or no value, if not figments of romantic fantasy.

And yet, Ladies and Gentlemen, one of the greatest scientific minds of the 20th Century, Albert Einstein, was very clear about the manner in which we have got things the wrong way round. As he put it "the intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. But we have created a society that honours the servant and has forgotten the gift."

What is worrying, I fear, is that we are fast running out of time to reconnect with that sacred gift. We are in danger of being like the analogy of the poor frog. Had he been thrown into a pot of boiling water he would have jumped straight out again. But he was put into a pot of lukewarm water and the heat was only slowly increased so that, without noticing it, he slowly boiled to death.

What I am trying to describe to you here, then, is what I consider to be a fundamental "crisis of perception." By positioning ourselves outside Nature we have abstracted life. In secularizing Nature and rejecting outright our innate sense of the sacred, we have disconnected ourselves completely from the rhythms of the natural world. And, as a consequence, we have become increasingly out of joint with the natural order. And there is order. Everything depends upon everything else. The bee to the flower, the bird to the tree and the man to the soil. Nature is rooted in wholeness.

I believe that true "sustainability", to use a now common word, depends fundamentally upon us shifting our perception and widening our focus, so that we understand, again, that we have a sacred -- yes, a sacred -- duty of stewardship of the natural order of things. In some of our actions we now behave as if we were "masters of Nature" and, in others, as mere bystanders. If we could rediscover that "sense of harmony"; that sense of being a part of, rather than apart from Nature, we would perhaps be less likely to see the world as some sort of gigantic production system, capable of ever-increasing outputs for our benefit -- at no cost. To rediscover these insights -- this "commonsense", if you like -- we have to modify the Modernistic ideology inherent in education before true sustainability can be comprehended.

For it cannot be achieved solely by relying upon ever more innovative forms of technology. We cannot simply hope to engineer our way out of the problems we have created for ourselves. The crisis is far deeper and to ignore this will only perpetuate the problems we now face.

We need to realize that human nature is innately spiritual and desires to know the origin and purpose of all things. After all, "sustainability" presupposes a "sustainer." I would suggest that this means regaining a proper understanding and an active appreciation of the harmony inherent in all life. And, dare I say it, restoring to the mainstream something of the lost spiritual dimension.

For the imbalance is both outward and inward. Our disconnection from an abstracted Nature is matched by a disconnection from the Transcendent. The present, dominant view of life, with its unrelenting emphasis on the quantitative view of reality, limits and distorts the true nature of the Real and our perception of it. It has certainly brought us material benefits, but it has also prevented us from knowing what I would refer to as "the knowledge of the heart" -- our God-given intuitive sense which enables us to be balanced human beings.

This is because, despite all of its undeniable benefits, in the end materialist science does not have the language to consider what, ultimately, is the purpose of intelligence and knowledge. Contrary to appearances and despite how easy it is to click a mouse, the answer is not to replace wisdom with information! Quite the opposite in fact. Indeed, I am reminded of those prophetic lines from T S Eliot:

"Where is the life we have lost in living?
Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?
The cycles of Heaven in twenty centuries
Bring us farther from God and nearer to the Dust."

It is perhaps worth considering how we arrived at this situation where so much fragmentation and "dis-ease" abound. I find it a rather curious aberration that the great advances in technology which engineered the European Industrial Age simultaneously undermined so much understanding of the principles of Harmony when, up until that point, they had been so central to teaching throughout the entire history of Mankind. If one studies the symbolism and mythologies of any of the ancient civilizations that underpin our own, one finds the same central characters signifying the same central principles of Balance and Harmony. All the great civilizations sought to express through their mythology and symbolism the same idea: that the cosmic order, the natural order and the human moral order are interrelated and interdependent and that the natural tendency is towards Balance and Harmony. Now is this superstition or a fundamental law of Nature? From what those at the cutting edge of theoretical physics are now telling us, the Ancients were right to recognize that the mathematics of harmony are universal principles.

I was interested to learn recently that the physicist Werner Heisenberg, who gave his name to the Uncertainty Principle in quantum physics, would tell his students not to see the world as being made of matter. It was, he said, made of music. He recognized what Pythagoras knew well, that chaos is ordered by number and that Nature is made up of precise numerical patterns. We have learned from Heisenberg that the physical world is not made up of individual parts, but is essentially "process and movement." Particles "dance" from order to disorder and back again. They express diverse movement, but always within the defining boundaries of Unity so that there is, even at the very heart of matter, a deep-seated interconnectivity that takes note of an overarching sense of unity. It demonstrates the need for order and an integration that is balanced and harmonic. It holds together the very fabric of Nature.

When we consider this recent development in physics, we begin to see why the Ancients also saw that these patterns and codes are similarly symbolic of the inner realm. They are the key to understanding the subtle structure of awareness, which is the ultimate sacred wonder. That is why every traditional civilization saw these harmonic patterns as essential to the education of the soul. It is why they are woven into the designs of all our great cathedrals, mosques, temples and synagogues -- everywhere stating that the grand agents of Nature are actually immutable and inextricably linked to the ground of our being.

One still finds that this is so in the world's spiritual traditions. In Islam, for instance, there is no separation between the Divine and the Natural world. It is all one harmonic song, a "Uni-verse." And in Christian theology it was the same up until around the thirteenth century, when a curious shift occurred in Europe which is worth considering.

If one reads the works of the great thirteenth century Christian scholar, Thomas Aquinas, one discovers that he held firm to the principle that everything exists within the mind of God. In other words, that the principle of Divinity is disclosed in the world. This saw the world as "sacred presence" with Man "participating" in creation. But what has fascinated me for some time now is the discovery that such universal participation in the sacred began to be overshadowed during Aquinas's own lifetime by the notion that God was outside creation and acted upon Nature through Divine Will, rather than through real presence. And so a separation emerged between Nature and God, and between Man and Nature. The world became regarded as an effect of the Divine Will and Man was the instrument of that Will.

I do not want to labour this point, but let us consider the consequence of this shift. In a very short space of time that all-important and timeless principle of "participation in the Being of things" was eliminated from mainstream Western thinking. With God separate from His Creation, Human nature likewise became separate from Nature and began pursuing a mastery of the will over things. So it was a very dramatic shift indeed. It effectively shattered the organic unity of the Western view of reality, and it seems to me that this is where the trouble began. Because, if the whole is forgotten, then fragmentation emerges everywhere and there is no ground for a common vision.

Its legacy was certainly visible by the seventeenth century when those new scientists of their day like Francis Bacon could write that Nature was independent, mechanical and subject to Man's purpose. In Bacon's New Organum, for instance, he calls for the "exercise of the full power over Nature granted to us by divine bequest."

As I have already suggested, many now accept that this shift in the West away from that principle of participation in Nature and in favour of a claim of mastery over Nature, is reaping a bitter harvest, not least in the way we produce our food.

Industrialized agriculture sees Nature simply as a mechanical process, somehow ever capable of producing yet more at no long term cost. And yet, it is a mind-boggling fact that in one pinch of soil there are more microbes than there are people on the planet. In one pinch of soil... So what irreversible damage do we do to the delicate, complex balance of such a fragile ecosystem as the top soil by our industrialized manipulation of the natural order? It is the top soil which sustains all life on Earth. So its health is our health. We erode it and poison it at our peril. To do so ignores entirely how profoundly "health" depends upon organisms operating in harmony with their surroundings and within the cyclical rhythms of Nature. This is neither a debating point nor a coincidence. It is a fundamental law of Nature. All organisms depend upon a state of harmony to be healthy.

Of course, I am well aware of the argument that without industrialized agriculture we could not feed the world. But perhaps we should consider more seriously whether industrialized agriculture can feed the world in the way that the self-sustaining, organic system has done for the last ten thousand years. After all, the industrial process operates on a diminishing return. As natural components are eroded by intensive farming, so more chemical fertilizers are used to replace them. But the more that they are applied, the less balanced and sustainable the ecosystem becomes - to the extent that, since the 1950's, "feeding the world" using this industrialized approach has succeeded in eroding one third of the world's farmable soil. So how likely is it that such an approach will keep us going for the next ten thousand years? Once again, we must recognize that farming is not independent of everything else; that it cannot be run in a sustainable way by reductionist science alone. If we do not embrace this fact of Nature, I fear She will rebel and we will remain dangerously disconnected and vulnerable.

There are, of course, scientists who realize the limitations of a purely rational approach and are working with the grain of Nature. I wonder if you have heard of a new branch of engineering called Biomimetics or Biomimicry? It takes designs from Nature that have been perfected by millions of years of evolution to the point where they are much more efficient than those of our industrialized world - for example, in Nature there are no wastes; everything is recycled and is part of a whole. Biomimetics applies such natural designs to human problems. There are some wonderful examples:

A man called George de Mestrel, for instance, studied the way the hooked seeds of the burdock plant stick to the fur of a dog and he came up with the concept of Velcro. Others have questioned how lotus leaves manage to keep so polished and clean when pond water is so muddy. They discovered that the leaves have microscopic structures that stop water droplets from getting a grip. They roll across the leaf rather than slide, collecting the dust as they go and depositing it on the edge of the leaf. So now we have a paint called Lotusan which replicates the surface of the leaf on man-made structures so that when it rains the surface cleans itself at no cost to the environment.

Zoologists have also studied a beetle which uses the same microscopic structure to collect very scarce water from desert fogs in the Namib Desert, the hottest and driest place on earth. And with that knowledge engineers have designed sheets with a surface that replicates that structure to create air conditioning units that do not use oil-powered machinery. This 'fog-harvesting' also offers huge promise in countries where water is scarce.

You can see the point, I am sure. These examples are "good" examples. They are benign and operate within the realm of human values, within the limits of Nature's law. But how do we know them to be good? What is the sense that tells us this is so? Could it, perhaps, be that much maligned of senses, our intuition?

I think we forget that our intuition is deeply rooted in the natural order. It is "the sacred gift" as Einstein called it. The word itself is a clue to what it truly is. Our "in born tutor" is the voice of the soul; the link between the body and mind and therefore the link between the particular and the universal. If we were to recognize this, we would, perhaps, once again, begin to see our existence in its proper place within Creation - not in some specially protected and privileged category of our own making. I often wonder, for instance, how many people in today's world feel a niggling sense of instinctive unease at what they are called upon to do in their working lives, or as a result of the pressures of conventional custom and outlook? If they do, but dare not express it for fear of being thought old-fashioned or out of touch, then they are experiencing the inner resonance of what I have been referring to as universal principles - or even "perennial wisdom". This is because the physical world is not the whole of reality. Another element of "reality" exists and they are, perhaps unknowingly, responding to the mysterious fact that each one of us mirrors its nature. The fact that this is so is surely, and ever has been, the mark of what it means to be truly civilized and to be part of "a civilization".

Ever since I saw the appalling devastation of the Tsunami in Sri Lanka, I have been fascinated by the approach taken by the tribal peoples of the tiny Andaman and Nicobar Islands which sit in the middle of the Bay of Bengal, 800 miles east of Sri Lanka and 340 miles to the north of Sumatra. They were closest to the epicentre of the earthquake and bore the brunt of the devastation, and yet, by using their instinctive powers of participation, they saved nearly all of their people. Coastal tribes like the Onge and Jarawa on South and Little Andaman noticed subtle changes in the behaviour of birds and fish. These warning signs were woven so explicitly into their folklore - passed down from one generation to another - that they responded immediately, wasting no time in moving quickly to higher ground and the shelter of the forest. In this way, they survived.

Such people, Ladies and Gentlemen, do not observe the world from the outside. They consider themselves to be participants in it, and they define life on Earth as "sacred presence." They are sensitive to the importance of the innate Harmony that I have been describing to you today and they do something about it when it starts to fragment. As I have said, their sensibility to their environment and society is founded upon both experience and a canon of wisdom stories passed down through the generations. This folk "lore" reinforces their aptitude and their experience.

So maybe there are lessons for us here: firstly, that to ignore all the God-given senses, save the rational, may be the quickest way for mankind to head for extinction; and, secondly, that we, too, should consider where our "lore" may be taking us.

Indeed, as I hinted at earlier on, it may be worth us considering whether we need to look towards an education system which balances the rational approach to life with intuitive learning. One which does less to eradicate our intuitive, instinctive attributes. It does concern me that, although young children are encouraged to use all their senses as they learn about the world, including their sense of beauty, as students progress to a more senior level there is decreasing emphasis on an overall view and appreciation of the world and an increasing emphasis on specialization. But what if we attempted to reintegrate our intuitive response in such fields of education? Would it encourage a healthier approach to Nature - one that would develop an appreciation of the natural world at a more profound level? For surely, that is the proper aim of education: to give to each a deeper understanding of how we relate to the world around us and the order of things. It may even restore wholeness to people, in that seeing organisms as coherent wholes enables us to recognize just how much a part of that coherent whole we are too? After all, if one feels no connection to a limb, it is easier to let damage be done to it. But if you know that it is your own arm - well, you might just think twice about it!

Ladies and Gentlemen, I have tried to suggest that the denial of our microcosmic and real relationship with the universal truths and the laws of Nature is engendering within us a dangerous alienation. In denying and forgetting that invisible "geometry" of Harmony that was always recognized and sanctified by our forebears by the means of spiritual practice and lore, we create cacophony and dissonance.

The question then is how, within a contemporary framework, we can reintegrate the best parts of this abandoned and ancient understanding, this Harmony, with the best of modern technology and science. Many will say that this is impossible, but it seems to me that a good start would be to take a long, hard look at ourselves and question very seriously whether the dominant attitude of our day will do, whether it really enables us to see things as they truly are. We need, I suggest, to reconfigure our view of the world and heal the crisis in our perception to which I have referred. And that can be done if we begin to treasure diversity; if we encourage and reward collaboration; if we build skills and learn to encompass complexity; if we nurture and maintain all those subtle checks and balances that keep any economy, community or eco-system, vibrant and healthy. We need to learn all that we can from the Natural world and its rhythms while at the same time developing the kinds of innovative and more benign forms of technology that work with the grain of Nature. It is a shift in perception that we can all work to create. It is a shift, dare I say it, from Modernism to Holism.

Ladies and Gentlemen, here in Liverpool you are in the midst of anniversaries that look back - two hundred years to the abolition of the slave trade and eight hundred years to the granting of your charter. But what of the view, two or eight hundred years from now? What will our descendants think of our present endeavours? Will they see the efforts of enlightened people who, at such a critical moment, introduced a profound shift in their thinking? Will they see, as a result, a more participative, integrated way of living; one that placed greater value on coherence and the limits of Nature? I pray and hope that they will, and that they will see that we were not misguided after all.

We do face seemingly intractable worldwide problems at the present time, but there is still a chance - just - that we can turn the tide, if we have the confidence again to look at the world aright; to see it from the inside out and to allow ourselves to be guided by a proper appreciation of those timeless principles of Balance, Harmony and Unity that I have tried to share with you today. All we need is the courage to start, the wisdom to change and that sense of real urgency that escaped the senses of the unfortunate boiled frog.

[ENDS]

We look forward to your further thoughts, observations and views. Thank you.

Best wishes


For and on behalf of DK Matai, Chairman, Asymmetric Threats Contingency Alliance (ATCA)
____________________________________________________________________________

ATCA: The Asymmetric Threats Contingency Alliance is a philanthropic expert initiative founded in 2001 to resolve complex global challenges through collective Socratic dialogue and joint executive action to build a wisdom based global economy. Adhering to the doctrine of non-violence, ATCA addresses asymmetric threats and social opportunities arising from climate chaos and the environment; radical poverty and microfinance; geo-politics and energy; organised crime & extremism; advanced technologies -- bio, info, nano, robo & AI; demographic skews and resource shortages; pandemics; financial systems and systemic risk; as well as transhumanism and ethics. Present membership of ATCA is by invitation only and has over 5,000 distinguished members from over 100 countries: including several from the House of Lords, House of Commons, EU Parliament, US Congress & Senate, G10's Senior Government officials and over 1,500 CEOs from financial institutions, scientific corporates and voluntary organisations as well as over 750 Professors from academic centres of excellence worldwide.

The views presented by individual contributors are not necessarily representative of the views of ATCA, which is neutral. Please do not forward or use the material circulated without permission and full attribution.
____________________________________________________________________________
Intelligence Unit | mi2g ATCA The Philanthropia Φ

Posted by ATCA at 03:25 PM | Comments (6)

Weekly Intent - Dr. Parmjit Singh

parmjit.jpg

Our Hidden Mahabharata
Before violence spills on to ground, it simmers in the inner corridors of human mind.

Desire for violence with all its hideousness and tyranny is born in the crevice of our dark thoughts and emotional alleyways populated by egocentric desires, perceived disenfranchisement and reckless disregard for human suffering.

Even when people are not fighting on a visible battleground, they are battling it out silently, within their homes, with their own wives and husbands and kids and friends. Outer violence is just an amplified version of inner battles and dissatisfactions. Any person taking to violence and killings must have lost the inner peace.

A recent case in point is Virginia Tech University where a student butchered students and Profs. What a terrible waste of life and potential! And how did it come to that? Why would a student resort to such a thing where blood is spilt like water and countless lives are snuffed and others maimed psychologically?

Does it say something about the times we live in or is it a reflection of our general attitude toward life—if what you want is not gettable through patience, it is ok to use force? Either way, the answers are disturbing and disheartening. Are we doing something to drive people over edge?

Whatever the reasons, it is all disturbing and deeply painful. What has gone wrong with our civilization, I was asking myself? Why are our kids playing with guns instead of other friendlier things?

Out of various reasons, one is that we are not allowing students to flourish as a human being. The whole educational system is geared toward packing mind with useful rational information so that they can compete in the job market and the emphasis is on making them marketable. There is no room for any mental and spiritual growth. Students are not encouraged to take a step back and see where education fits into the larger scheme of their life.

When we can not cope up with life and its demands or have no hopes of doing that, our inner dormant Mahabharata stirs up. This is where something goes wrong. We do not have anything in place, especially integrated within the curriculum, where students can learn ‘how not to be depressed, angry etc.’ Even if some venues are available through student services, students do not want to go there because of the fear of being labeled a ‘sissy’; or those venues simply cater to symptoms once they have developed. There are not many avenues for cultivation of positive emotions of mental states.

In order to deal with their hidden Mahabharata, we need to teach our kids the merits of constant cultivation of positive qualities and offer them a hope. It is not sufficient to visit temples or churches or just reading morally edifying literature; we need to offer them appropriate methods, integrated within the school system, so that they can deal with their negative emotions and mind-sets before it bursts open in the form of violence and killing.
Death is scary in itself and when one chooses to kill himself after killing so many others, we need to sit up and ask: what wrong have we done to our kids that they choose a life of violence and death?

If it takes a village to raise a kid, then the same village should sit up and look deep within their educational process if they did something unintentionally that unleashed what we saw in Virginia Tech.

=================
Parmjit Singh, PhD

Dr. Parmjit Singh has a PhD in Psychology and Post Doctoral training from Australia and Canada. Currently, he is teaching in the BHSc Honors and MD Programs in the Faculty of Health Sciences at McMaster University, Canada. He is currently working on a ‘positive emotions curriculum’, a project designed to provide a platform for university students to cultivate nurturing emotions and positive mental states integrated within the standard curriculum. He also publishes a monthly newsletter ‘The Health Q’ (International Standard Serial Number, 1715-6165) and an online magazine, ‘Healing Matrix’ http://www.HealingMatrix.ca (International Standard Serial Number, 1710-9787), edited by his wife, Dr Manjit Handa.

http://www.ParmjitSingh.org

Posted by Intent at 03:30 AM | Comments (62)

April 28, 2007

Weekly Yoga Session - Earth Pose

Earth Pose

Instructions:

Come onto your hands and knees. Sit back on your heels in Child’s Pose. Breath in and out through your nostrils 5-7 breaths.

Extend your left leg back. Rest the weight of your upper body on your right thigh. Relax your head in between your arms. Breath in and out of your nostrils 6-9 times.

Repeat earth pose with the right leg extended back behind you.

Come back into Child’s Pose. Relax all the muscles in your face, rest and enjoy.

Repeat this sequence 2-3 times. Rest in Child’s Pose for 2-3 minutes before getting up.

Benefits

Lengthens and the muscles around the spine.
Lengthens the thigh and hip muscles.
Nourishes and tones the intestines.
Increases blood flow around the head.

Safety Tips

If you have knee discomfort, perform these poses lying on your back.

If you have a head cold or sinus condition elevate your head by placing one hand on top of the other, then rest your forehead on your hands.

Always notice how your body feels and chooses the most nourishing choice.

If you have Knee situations place a blanket or towel under your knees.

This Week’s Mantra

Om Kriyam Namah

Pronunciation: Om Kree-yum Nah-Mah

“My Actions are Aligned with the Universe”

This week:

Witness each choice you make.

Ask “will this choice bring happiness to me and all those involved in the choice?”

If You Have Any Questions or to Order Claire’s DVD’s and Books Contact Me

Claire@Chopra.com

www.ClaireDiab.com

Have a Wonderful Week!

Namaste!

Posted by Claire Diab at 10:34 AM | Comments (1)

April 27, 2007

Now that everyone has exponential information on global events, where is the wisdom in the accumulating knowledge?

From an economic perspective, DK Matai asks the above Question for IntentBlog in the wake of 9/11, Iraq and Virginia Tech.

Posted by Intent at 09:40 PM | Comments (35)

Answers to Some Key Questions relating Science & Spirituality

As part of my previous post – “Quantum Mechanics vs. Consciousness”, some key questions were raised that could be important to a scientific understanding of spirituality. These questions are also the heart and soul of the current Cosmological Conundrum that includes paradoxes of quantum mechanics and its unexplained weirdness. Potential answers are provided based on Holistic Relativity (HR) theory.

The following questions are sincere and require some background knowledge of science to absorb the potential unexpected (out-of-the-box) answers based on Holistic Relativity (HR). These questions and answers involve integration of experience from the wisdom of the ages beyond the theory and experiment based approach of the mainstream science. I am providing the answers below with a well-realized risk of being mis-interpreted or pre-maturely judged to be inadequate since many of them may not be consistent with the current mainstream understanding and most of us are unable to clear our minds of the mainstream claims howsoever full of mysteries, unresolved paradoxes, inconsistencies, inaccuracies, unverifiable artifacts (muti-universes, multi-dimensions etc) not far from pseudo-science or metaphysics.

I humbly request to have patience and an open mind, and evaluate these answers free from the biases of the mainstream. Only then, one may be able to comprehend them and hopefully benefit spiritually as well.

Below are the answers as I best can answer from the Holistic Relativity perspective (For further details please refer to my book – The Hidden Factor):

Q1. What are the most fundamental entities that our Reality made is made of? Is it what you call Consciousness? If so is it quantized?

Mass/energy/space/time continuum is the fundamental entity of Reality. The various degrees of consciousness of the various observers see various specific quantized combinations of these four entities as their perceived relative realities/truths.

Q2. Is HR approach a background independent theory?
Is it fundamentally relational, spaceless and timeless. If so I am sure Newton, Einstein, Mach and Einstein will be proud in for the share of their victory.

HR is no different than the theory of relativity. HR equations are derivatives of the simplified specific and general relativity equations. HR maintains all mathematical features of relativity; hence all existing and new tests and observations to verify relativity equally apply to HR.

Q3. Is HR approach like the Loop Quantum Gravity approach take the Einstein’s general relativity as its vantage point to go down to integrate QM?..... My question is: Do you see a hope in Quantum loop gravity (Roger Penrose) approach which has a long way to go in it's development..?

I am not intimately familiar with the detailed formulations of the Loop Quantum Gravity. All I can say it is not needed and redundant to explain the observed universe.
Further, I see no hope in quantum approach because of its fundamental fragmentation of the wholesome continuum of reality into isolated fragmented pieces - particles, strings etc. The sum of parts can never be the whole. A pile of fragmented bricks of Taj mahal is not Taj Mahal. A pile of all the physical constituents of human body is not a human being. Any evolution of fragmented reality is diverging by nature into greater and greater complexity due to an increase in entropy. Quantum reality by its very definition is “Discrete” and hence fragmented reality; so it will always be evolving with divergence with increasing chaos, complexity, and uncertainty without converging.

Q4. In HR, is entropy quantized also?

Each different state of relative mass/energy/space/time as perceived by various levels of consciousness of the observer has its own quantized entropy. However, for a fully conscious observer (the frame of reference V=C) representing the state of the zero-point energy, mass, space and time are fully dilated to zero dissolving all boundaries between matter, space, and time. With no boundaries and no mass/energy transfer across a boundary, there is no entropy increase. Such a state is fully isentropic zero entropy state of being of the universe as experienced by the fully conscious observer.

Q5. Does HR support a holographic universe (although speculative has strong indications)? String Theory is shown to naturally incorporate the holographic universe. A hypothetical Universe was shown mathematically to agree with string Theory.

No. Holograms are mere artifacts of the extrapolations of incomplete abstract mathematical constructs of fragmented realities. Just like an elephant is an illusory hologram to the blind touches of the blind observers, a holographic universe is an illusion of the peepholes of the incomplete theories (Quantum) of the fragmented pieces of reality.

Q6. Is Free-Will not illusory? An interesting question: Is Time Travel Possible in HR approach? If so how?

If there is any eternal reality or truth in the universe, that is free will or consciousness. The very existence of the universe and its natural laws are nothing but free will, they exist at their own without ant external cause. If there was no free will, there would be no universe, no scientists, and no science.

Time, as explained by relativity, is a relative reality in the frame of reference of matter alone. Similar to the relativity theory, HR explains the observations of the universe without any explicit consideration of an absolute time or clock in the wholesome universe. The mainstream science imposes or forces this constraint based upon its hypothetical extrapolation of the time measured in the matter domain to the entire universe, a big blunder that has no scientific basis. To date, no experiment has verified the existence of a universal time or clock that could specify a unique time –beginning, evolution, or ending for the whole universe.

Hence, time travel is only a relative reality or an illusion since there is no absolute time. Time travel in this material world seems to be a reality, and the very ego of us human beings tries to impose it on the universe and nature – an old habit not easy to get rid of.

“TIME as such is the most understood and misinterpreted and misapplied concept in the mainstream science.” A BRIEF HISTORY OF TIME is the most unscientific characterization that a genuine scientist will never make, but (ironically) a mainstream scientist thrives upon.

Q7. How do you define the term 'Consciousness' and 'spirituality' in you approach?

I have already described consciousness in answers above.
Spirituality is the essence of the wisdom of the ages as experienced by and relayed by the great spiritual masters. In a nutshell, it is a complete dissolution of the ego or mind (mass) and merging into the One Wholesome zero-point energy – the consciousness. It is only experience-able but not measurable.

Q8. What is the Cosmology approach in HR? What scenario does it paint? Is it a) Classical Big Bang? b) Inflationary Cosmology c) Cyclical universe.

In HR cosmology, the universe is one single wholesome continuum of infinite number of specific mass/energy/ space/time states as perceived by various observers of varying degree of consciousness. As I explained earlier, there is one unique time in the wholesome continuum universe, hence it is eternal with no Big Bang beginning, inflation, evolution, cycling, or ending etc. The super luminous inflation is nothing but a desperate and incredible attempt of the mainstream cosmology to diffuse the Big ban singularity under the rug and forward a twisted, unverifiable, and relativity-violating concept to explain the uniformity of the observed microwave background radiation. HR eliminates the need for such a superstitious song and dance, which is no more than a pseudo-science in itself violating relativity.

Q9. Does HR resemble a scientific theory? Does it speculate on some possibilities that can be tested?

My book – The Hidden Factor includes comparison of HR predictions against several key observations of the universe. I recently submitted a paper to Physics Review showing good agreement with the recent supernova data exhibiting the accelerated expansion of the universe.
HR is more of a scientific theory than the String Theory, which has been now called by its very own originators – “NOT EVEN WRONG.” HR is more of a scientific theory than Quantum Mechanics (QM) because it provides mechanistic understanding of the paradoxes that have paralyzed QM to its core such as the Observer’s or Measurement Paradox, Multiple Universes, Multiple Dimensions, Quantum Gravity, Super luminous Inflation, Inconsistencies with relativity, Quantum Cosmology Observations, Myriad of Unknown or Unverifiable particles, Anti-matter that is nowhere to be found in a measurable stable state, Dark matter, Dark Energy or vacuum energy or cosmological constant, Big Ban singularity, etc etc. etc. – the list goes on.

As I explained earlier, HR is simply a straightforward application of the relativity theory and as such needs no additional verifications. It simply recognizes and integrates the previously excluded phenomenon of the spontaneous decay from the relativity theory. This phenomenon represents the missing physics, which has thrown the mainstream on a wild-geese chase of QM and its artifact paradoxes that are expected to keep diverging in time with no sign of convergence. Moreover, inclusion of the missing physics simply resolves the outstanding paradoxes of QM, relativity, and cosmology – what else one can ask from a theory?

The unfortunate deadlock in modern science/cosmology turns out to be a blessing in disguise for the practicing mainstream science/cosmology reaping billions of dollars of research funding in high energy physics. I am not holding my breath waiting for a change in the status quo of ignorance and madness; that would be fundamental conflict of interest for the mainstream science – who would be such a fool to cut the branch he/she is standing on?

Posted by Avtar Singh at 08:11 PM | Comments (94)

HQR*: HRH: Greater Harmony between Man-Nature

His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales calls for greater Harmony between Man and Nature

Prince of Wales.jpg

His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales

We are grateful to our long standing friend and distinguished ATCA member, The Lord Alton of Liverpool, for submitting the 67th Roscoe Lecture, delivered at St George's Hall Liverpool, by HRH The Prince of Wales, as a welcome addition to the Holistic Quantum Relativity Socratic Dialogue.

The Roscoe lecture is named after one of Liverpool's most famous sons, William Roscoe (1753-1831), whose heritage lives on through the work of Liverpool John Moores University's Foundation for Citizenship chaired by The Lord Alton.

David Alton (Lord Alton of Liverpool) began his career as a teacher and, in 1972, he was elected to Liverpool City Council as Britain's youngest City Councillor. He served for 18 years in the House of Commons. David was made a Life Peer in 1997. He has sat for the past 10 years as a Crossbencher in the House of Lords and is Professor of Citizenship at Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU). A Fellow of St Andrew's University his books include "Citizen Virtues" and "Faith In Britain." He was one of the founders of the British Human Rights Organisation, Jubilee Campaign. During his oration Professor Lord (David) Alton said:

"Roscoe is often hailed as the 'father of Liverpool culture' and like him, The Prince of Wales has been brave enough to develop seemingly unconventional ideas and provide opportunities for those with the drive to succeed. Independence of mind, tolerance and respect are all qualities which the University wishes to cultivate through the Foundation. These virtues are attributes for which The Prince of Wales is famed and for this we applaud him."

HRH Prince Charles echoed these sentiments by praising Roscoe for having the courage to challenge the 'status quo' by campaigning for the abolition of slavery. HRH's lecture was a thought-provoking exploration of The Prince's views on 'modernism' and society's perilous alienation from nature. Science and technology had, he said, brought great benefits but also some painful and destructive costs. In order to address the immense challenges facing mankind today, it was imperative that we rethink our approach to life and ask whether modernism, and its materialistic view of life was 'fit for purpose' in the 21st century. Rather than trying to simplify, standardise and sanitise the natural world, we should instead embrace complexity as the key to life. True sustainability, he continued, depended on us accepting that we cannot engineer our way out of every problem. Instead we needed to shift our perception of our place in the world and embrace the sacred duty of stewardship of the natural order of things. The Prince concluded by calling on society to embrace scientific and technological advances that worked in harmony with nature rather than trying to master it. Such an enlightened approach would take courage but was one that he believes needs to be adopted with some urgency.

The Roscoe Lecture by His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales delivered at St George's Hall, Liverpool on 23rd April 2007

It is a great honour to receive this honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University and, indeed to give this Roscoe Lecture, especially in the year in which we mark the eight hundredth anniversary of King John granting your city its charter. The city fathers who received that charter could not have imagined what a vibrant, cosmopolitan city it would become. It has been a special pleasure for me today to open the splendidly restored St George's Hall on St George's Day.

It is a miracle of co-ordination that you have managed to achieve this! I was shown around the building some 15 years ago on a private visit and was told that it was due to be demolished. I remember encouraging those I met to do all they could to save it and so you can imagine what a delight it is for me today to see the whole building revealed in all its glory. If I may, I just wanted to congratulate everyone whose tireless efforts have made it possible, for St George's Hall is surely one of the finest examples of neo-classical architecture in Europe; a jewel in a city where conscience and philanthropy have constantly challenged the prevailing world view.

William Roscoe, of course, did just that. He was a poet and a scholar, a passionate educationalist and a vigorous patron of the arts. He founded the School of Arts that has since flowered into this increasingly influential University which has not only developed an internationally renowned programme of research, but also established such a successful and innovative approach to management. I am more than intrigued by the fact that you have abolished all of your "decision-making committees." That sounds too good to be true! And, of course, I am delighted and honoured that you have decided to give my Prince's Trust your prestigious Corporate Award for its work helping young people into business.

But William Roscoe also pursued his belief in "freedom for all" by adding his considerable voice to a then unpopular movement that eventually achieved the abolition of the slave trade in this country two hundred years ago. Sadly, even today, we have not fully eradicated slavery, but there are some remarkable people, like Baroness Cox who struggle courageously in places like the Sudan.

In company with others engaged in that struggle, both here and abroad, Roscoe was considered a fool by many to challenge the received wisdom of his day. Indeed, here in Liverpool there were strong economic arguments for keeping things the way they were. And yet, against the odds, such figures managed to persuade people and Parliament to widen and deepen their focus and to challenge and change the status quo. And so society developed a new and more enlightened perspective.

Ladies and Gentlemen, as you have been rash enough to invite me here to indulge in a spot of "meddling" in Liverpool, I can confess to knowing a little bit here and there about putting my head above the odd conventional parapet from time to time. In my case, it has been to suggest that in the last 50 or so years, perhaps with the best of intentions, we may have "thrown out the baby with the bath water," and that, therefore, we need to consider anew the timeless principles which underpinned so much of civilization before industrialization took such a comprehensive hold on the world. These principles have always crossed all cultural boundaries. They have never belonged to one particular school of thought. Rather, they might be called "shared insights" that belong to humanity as a whole and I would suggest that they are key to the maintenance of Harmony, Balance and Unity in life.

It is these principles that I would like to explore in this lecture today, in relation to some of the main areas with which I happen to have long been concerned: architecture, medicine, agriculture, environment and education. These are all areas of our life which, it seems to me, have been adversely affected by the neglect of a particular kind of wisdom that guided our forebears for generations, and its almost complete replacement in the past century by an entirely different way of seeing ourselves in relation to others and, indeed, in expressing Mankind's relationship with Nature.

The trouble, of course, in suggesting, as I have done, that the balance needs to be righted, is that I seem to have ended up being "pigeon-holed" as "anti-progress" or "anti-science." I am not "anti-science" - I am anti the kind of science that fails to see the whole picture; the kind of science that has for some reason eliminated what we might call commonsense. So I will now reiterate to those who actually listen that of course technology and progress have changed our lives for the better -- certainly in the West and not least in terms of health, universal education, improved housing and greater mobility and prosperity. But I would argue that while we have undeniably made great gains we have also lost something very precious and that is an understanding of our interconnectedness with Nature and a world beyond the material.

My thesis is that in order to cope with the alarming challenges that increasingly confront us in the form of the disturbing side-effects of that very progress we have made, and to ensure that others in developing countries and, indeed, our children and grandchildren, can have a worthwhile future, we urgently need to re-think the way we perceive the world and our place in it. It is not, therefore, a question of "either, or"; but one of the re-integration of the lost half of our humanity that has been, I contend, so rashly discarded in the rush towards the concept of linear progress.

For, it is Ladies and Gentlemen, that we now live in an extremely literalized world. A world which has little place for the symbolic or recognition of the levels of existence that lie beyond the material. We have been persuaded that what we see is all we get; that there is nothing more than the material exterior of things.

This new perspective, which some have called "Modern-ism," offers us an unrelenting emphasis upon a material and mechanistic view of the world. To quote from the Victoria and Albert Museum's foreword to its recent exhibition on Modernism, "Modernists had a Utopian desire to create a better world. They believed in technology as the key means to achieve social improvement and in the machine as a symbol of that aspiration." Generally speaking, we can say that it has focussed its attention upon the parts and not the whole -- to the point of deconstructing the world around us -- and has dismissed as unreal anything that cannot be objectively measured and tested. It is, if you like, a "world of quantities."

As I said earlier, this approach has, of course, brought us great benefits. But I would argue, however, there have also been costs and, as we are finding out, increasingly painful and destructive ones. Implicit in the ideology of "Modernism" was the notion that we could somehow disconnect ourselves from the wisdom of the past; that we no longer needed the knowledge offered to us by traditional approaches in everything from education to agriculture, in the arts and crafts and that spiritual practice is no more than outdated superstition -- but "super-stition", of course, means something much more profound than what we have been led to believe. It reflects the heightened sense of our participation in the living organism of Nature that actively, "unconsciously," seeks balance at all times. And it is, I suggest, by replacing rather than working with that other and timeless wisdom to which I have referred that we have created at the heart of our present world view a worrying imbalance.

We see it, for instance, reflected in much of our urban development, in certain approaches to medicine, in our agri-industries and most especially in what some refer to as "the environmental crisis". To such an extent that I feel it has become an imperative of our time to question whether, with today's immense challenges and today's knowledge, it is an approach to life which, on its own, is enough; is actually "fit for purpose" in the 21st century?

This approach has sought, as a matter of principle, to simplify or standardize the world and make things more industrialized and convenient. That is why, for example, we have sought to straighten curved streets and group buildings into single-use zones. Thus we have too often imposed a simplistic and empty geometry on the form of our cities which has drastically reduced the rich complexity of many of our urban environments. It is also why we have lost an understanding of the unity of mind, body and spirit in relation to healthcare. And all this has turned out to be something of a problem, because what those who drove this 20th century ideology did not seem to understand is what today's intricate studies of biology now shout out loud and clear -- that complexity is key to life.

We now know from biology that in the natural world every healthy organism is a complex system of interrelated and interdependent parts that work together in a coherent way to produce a harmonic whole. There is no waste and no one part operates beyond the limits of the whole. Bees in a hive are a perfect example of this. It is the hive which is the organism and its healthy survival depends upon each bee helping to maintain the balance and harmony of the unified whole. They do this by following the patterns and laws of Nature. They do not exceed their limits nor do they put the individual first. Each bee operates in harmony with the environment which sustains it. As George Herbert wrote "Each creature hath a wisdom for his good." His celebration of the bee in his poem Providence sums up the point beautifully:

"Bees work for man; and yet they never bruise
Their master's flower, but leave it, having done,
As fair as ever, and as fit to use;
So both the flower doth stay, and honey run."

Contrast this for a moment with our convenience-based, throw away consumerist society, dominated as it is by the increasing demands of individualism -- at whatever cost, it often seems, to society or the environment. Every aspect of human activity and interaction in the Western world is now required to be so simplified and standardized that nothing must be complex. Even Nature is presented as a simplified and sanitized arm's-length experience; something to watch on television programmes, but something separate from what we are. In short, whether or not it intends to do so, this attitude of mind seems to disconnect us from the rest of creation.

It does so, moreover, by actively denying that, at root, we are spiritual creatures; that we have real spiritual needs -- call them "intuitive, heartfelt feelings" if you like -- which must be nourished if we are to achieve our full potential. To express such needs requires the perspectives of the philosophical and the spiritual, but where are they in this present Modernistic paradigm? The creative force in the universe has been so rendered down that it would seem it is now nothing more than a disposable idea, allowing us to see Nature as a sort of giant laboratory where we can experiment and manipulate its separate parts, testing them to destruction if we like, without worrying about the impact that this has on the whole.

No longer is "Mother Nature" the guiding principle that it was for generations of our forebears. Just think of Wordsworth's "sense sublime of something far more interfused. a motion and a spirit that impels all thinking things, all objects of thought and rolls through all things."

How that jars with the mechanistic, empirically rational way in which reality is so often portrayed. The rational is thought to be the only sensible way of looking at the world. Whereas living within the limits of what Nature can sustain, trusting our intuition and, ultimately, seeing the world as sacred presence are all considered to be of little or no value, if not figments of romantic fantasy.

And yet, Ladies and Gentlemen, one of the greatest scientific minds of the 20th Century, Albert Einstein, was very clear about the manner in which we have got things the wrong way round. As he put it "the intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. But we have created a society that honours the servant and has forgotten the gift."

What is worrying, I fear, is that we are fast running out of time to reconnect with that sacred gift. We are in danger of being like the analogy of the poor frog. Had he been thrown into a pot of boiling water he would have jumped straight out again. But he was put into a pot of lukewarm water and the heat was only slowly increased so that, without noticing it, he slowly boiled to death.

What I am trying to describe to you here, then, is what I consider to be a fundamental "crisis of perception." By positioning ourselves outside Nature we have abstracted life. In secularizing Nature and rejecting outright our innate sense of the sacred, we have disconnected ourselves completely from the rhythms of the natural world. And, as a consequence, we have become increasingly out of joint with the natural order. And there is order. Everything depends upon everything else. The bee to the flower, the bird to the tree and the man to the soil. Nature is rooted in wholeness.

I believe that true "sustainability", to use a now common word, depends fundamentally upon us shifting our perception and widening our focus, so that we understand, again, that we have a sacred -- yes, a sacred -- duty of stewardship of the natural order of things. In some of our actions we now behave as if we were "masters of Nature" and, in others, as mere bystanders. If we could rediscover that "sense of harmony"; that sense of being a part of, rather than apart from Nature, we would perhaps be less likely to see the world as some sort of gigantic production system, capable of ever-increasing outputs for our benefit -- at no cost. To rediscover these insights -- this "commonsense", if you like -- we have to modify the Modernistic ideology inherent in education before true sustainability can be comprehended.

For it cannot be achieved solely by relying upon ever more innovative forms of technology. We cannot simply hope to engineer our way out of the problems we have created for ourselves. The crisis is far deeper and to ignore this will only perpetuate the problems we now face.

We need to realize that human nature is innately spiritual and desires to know the origin and purpose of all things. After all, "sustainability" presupposes a "sustainer." I would suggest that this means regaining a proper understanding and an active appreciation of the harmony inherent in all life. And, dare I say it, restoring to the mainstream something of the lost spiritual dimension.

For the imbalance is both outward and inward. Our disconnection from an abstracted Nature is matched by a disconnection from the Transcendent. The present, dominant view of life, with its unrelenting emphasis on the quantitative view of reality, limits and distorts the true nature of the Real and our perception of it. It has certainly brought us material benefits, but it has also prevented us from knowing what I would refer to as "the knowledge of the heart" -- our God-given intuitive sense which enables us to be balanced human beings.

This is because, despite all of its undeniable benefits, in the end materialist science does not have the language to consider what, ultimately, is the purpose of intelligence and knowledge. Contrary to appearances and despite how easy it is to click a mouse, the answer is not to replace wisdom with information! Quite the opposite in fact. Indeed, I am reminded of those prophetic lines from T S Eliot:

"Where is the life we have lost in living?
Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?
The cycles of Heaven in twenty centuries
Bring us farther from God and nearer to the Dust."

It is perhaps worth considering how we arrived at this situation where so much fragmentation and "dis-ease" abound. I find it a rather curious aberration that the great advances in technology which engineered the European Industrial Age simultaneously undermined so much understanding of the principles of Harmony when, up until that point, they had been so central to teaching throughout the entire history of Mankind. If one studies the symbolism and mythologies of any of the ancient civilizations that underpin our own, one finds the same central characters signifying the same central principles of Balance and Harmony. All the great civilizations sought to express through their mythology and symbolism the same idea: that the cosmic order, the natural order and the human moral order are interrelated and interdependent and that the natural tendency is towards Balance and Harmony. Now is this superstition or a fundamental law of Nature? From what those at the cutting edge of theoretical physics are now telling us, the Ancients were right to recognize that the mathematics of harmony are universal principles.

I was interested to learn recently that the physicist Werner Heisenberg, who gave his name to the Uncertainty Principle in quantum physics, would tell his students not to see the world as being made of matter. It was, he said, made of music. He recognized what Pythagoras knew well, that chaos is ordered by number and that Nature is made up of precise numerical patterns. We have learned from Heisenberg that the physical world is not made up of individual parts, but is essentially "process and movement." Particles "dance" from order to disorder and back again. They express diverse movement, but always within the defining boundaries of Unity so that there is, even at the very heart of matter, a deep-seated interconnectivity that takes note of an overarching sense of unity. It demonstrates the need for order and an integration that is balanced and harmonic. It holds together the very fabric of Nature.

When we consider this recent development in physics, we begin to see why the Ancients also saw that these patterns and codes are similarly symbolic of the inner realm. They are the key to understanding the subtle structure of awareness, which is the ultimate sacred wonder. That is why every traditional civilization saw these harmonic patterns as essential to the education of the soul. It is why they are woven into the designs of all our great cathedrals, mosques, temples and synagogues -- everywhere stating that the grand agents of Nature are actually immutable and inextricably linked to the ground of our being.

One still finds that this is so in the world's spiritual traditions. In Islam, for instance, there is no separation between the Divine and the Natural world. It is all one harmonic song, a "Uni-verse." And in Christian theology it was the same up until around the thirteenth century, when a curious shift occurred in Europe which is worth considering.

If one reads the works of the great thirteenth century Christian scholar, Thomas Aquinas, one discovers that he held firm to the principle that everything exists within the mind of God. In other words, that the principle of Divinity is disclosed in the world. This saw the world as "sacred presence" with Man "participating" in creation. But what has fascinated me for some time now is the discovery that such universal participation in the sacred began to be overshadowed during Aquinas's own lifetime by the notion that God was outside creation and acted upon Nature through Divine Will, rather than through real presence. And so a separation emerged between Nature and God, and between Man and Nature. The world became regarded as an effect of the Divine Will and Man was the instrument of that Will.

I do not want to labour this point, but let us consider the consequence of this shift. In a very short space of time that all-important and timeless principle of "participation in the Being of things" was eliminated from mainstream Western thinking. With God separate from His Creation, Human nature likewise became separate from Nature and began pursuing a mastery of the will over things. So it was a very dramatic shift indeed. It effectively shattered the organic unity of the Western view of reality, and it seems to me that this is where the trouble began. Because, if the whole is forgotten, then fragmentation emerges everywhere and there is no ground for a common vision.

Its legacy was certainly visible by the seventeenth century when those new scientists of their day like Francis Bacon could write that Nature was independent, mechanical and subject to Man's purpose. In Bacon's New Organum, for instance, he calls for the "exercise of the full power over Nature granted to us by divine bequest."

As I have already suggested, many now accept that this shift in the West away from that principle of participation in Nature and in favour of a claim of mastery over Nature, is reaping a bitter harvest, not least in the way we produce our food.

Industrialized agriculture sees Nature simply as a mechanical process, somehow ever capable of producing yet more at no long term cost. And yet, it is a mind-boggling fact that in one pinch of soil there are more microbes than there are people on the planet. In one pinch of soil... So what irreversible damage do we do to the delicate, complex balance of such a fragile ecosystem as the top soil by our industrialized manipulation of the natural order? It is the top soil which sustains all life on Earth. So its health is our health. We erode it and poison it at our peril. To do so ignores entirely how profoundly "health" depends upon organisms operating in harmony with their surroundings and within the cyclical rhythms of Nature. This is neither a debating point nor a coincidence. It is a fundamental law of Nature. All organisms depend upon a state of harmony to be healthy.

Of course, I am well aware of the argument that without industrialized agriculture we could not feed the world. But perhaps we should consider more seriously whether industrialized agriculture can feed the world in the way that the self-sustaining, organic system has done for the last ten thousand years. After all, the industrial process operates on a diminishing return. As natural components are eroded by intensive farming, so more chemical fertilizers are used to replace them. But the more that they are applied, the less balanced and sustainable the ecosystem becomes - to the extent that, since the 1950's, "feeding the world" using this industrialized approach has succeeded in eroding one third of the world's farmable soil. So how likely is it that such an approach will keep us going for the next ten thousand years? Once again, we must recognize that farming is not independent of everything else; that it cannot be run in a sustainable way by reductionist science alone. If we do not embrace this fact of Nature, I fear She will rebel and we will remain dangerously disconnected and vulnerable.

There are, of course, scientists who realize the limitations of a purely rational approach and are working with the grain of Nature. I wonder if you have heard of a new branch of engineering called Biomimetics or Biomimicry? It takes designs from Nature that have been perfected by millions of years of evolution to the point where they are much more efficient than those of our industrialized world - for example, in Nature there are no wastes; everything is recycled and is part of a whole. Biomimetics applies such natural designs to human problems. There are some wonderful examples:

A man called George de Mestrel, for instance, studied the way the hooked seeds of the burdock plant stick to the fur of a dog and he came up with the concept of Velcro. Others have questioned how lotus leaves manage to keep so polished and clean when pond water is so muddy. They discovered that the leaves have microscopic structures that stop water droplets from getting a grip. They roll across the leaf rather than slide, collecting the dust as they go and depositing it on the edge of the leaf. So now we have a paint called Lotusan which replicates the surface of the leaf on man-made structures so that when it rains the surface cleans itself at no cost to the environment.

Zoologists have also studied a beetle which uses the same microscopic structure to collect very scarce water from desert fogs in the Namib Desert, the hottest and driest place on earth. And with that knowledge engineers have designed sheets with a surface that replicates that structure to create air conditioning units that do not use oil-powered machinery. This 'fog-harvesting' also offers huge promise in countries where water is scarce.

You can see the point, I am sure. These examples are "good" examples. They are benign and operate within the realm of human values, within the limits of Nature's law. But how do we know them to be good? What is the sense that tells us this is so? Could it, perhaps, be that much maligned of senses, our intuition?

I think we forget that our intuition is deeply rooted in the natural order. It is "the sacred gift" as Einstein called it. The word itself is a clue to what it truly is. Our "in born tutor" is the voice of the soul; the link between the body and mind and therefore the link between the particular and the universal. If we were to recognize this, we would, perhaps, once again, begin to see our existence in its proper place within Creation - not in some specially protected and privileged category of our own making. I often wonder, for instance, how many people in today's world feel a niggling sense of instinctive unease at what they are called upon to do in their working lives, or as a result of the pressures of conventional custom and outlook? If they do, but dare not express it for fear of being thought old-fashioned or out of touch, then they are experiencing the inner resonance of what I have been referring to as universal principles - or even "perennial wisdom". This is because the physical world is not the whole of reality. Another element of "reality" exists and they are, perhaps unknowingly, responding to the mysterious fact that each one of us mirrors its nature. The fact that this is so is surely, and ever has been, the mark of what it means to be truly civilized and to be part of "a civilization".

Ever since I saw the appalling devastation of the Tsunami in Sri Lanka, I have been fascinated by the approach taken by the tribal peoples of the tiny Andaman and Nicobar Islands which sit in the middle of the Bay of Bengal, 800 miles east of Sri Lanka and 340 miles to the north of Sumatra. They were closest to the epicentre of the earthquake and bore the brunt of the devastation, and yet, by using their instinctive powers of participation, they saved nearly all of their people. Coastal tribes like the Onge and Jarawa on South and Little Andaman noticed subtle changes in the behaviour of birds and fish. These warning signs were woven so explicitly into their folklore - passed down from one generation to another - that they responded immediately, wasting no time in moving quickly to higher ground and the shelter of the forest. In this way, they survived.

Such people, Ladies and Gentlemen, do not observe the world from the outside. They consider themselves to be participants in it, and they define life on Earth as "sacred presence." They are sensitive to the importance of the innate Harmony that I have been describing to you today and they do something about it when it starts to fragment. As I have said, their sensibility to their environment and society is founded upon both experience and a canon of wisdom stories passed down through the generations. This folk "lore" reinforces their aptitude and their experience.

So maybe there are lessons for us here: firstly, that to ignore all the God-given senses, save the rational, may be the quickest way for mankind to head for extinction; and, secondly, that we, too, should consider where our "lore" may be taking us.

Indeed, as I hinted at earlier on, it may be worth us considering whether we need to look towards an education system which balances the rational approach to life with intuitive learning. One which does less to eradicate our intuitive, instinctive attributes. It does concern me that, although young children are encouraged to use all their senses as they learn about the world, including their sense of beauty, as students progress to a more senior level there is decreasing emphasis on an overall view and appreciation of the world and an increasing emphasis on specialization. But what if we attempted to reintegrate our intuitive response in such fields of education? Would it encourage a healthier approach to Nature - one that would develop an appreciation of the natural world at a more profound level? For surely, that is the proper aim of education: to give to each a deeper understanding of how we relate to the world around us and the order of things. It may even restore wholeness to people, in that seeing organisms as coherent wholes enables us to recognize just how much a part of that coherent whole we are too? After all, if one feels no connection to a limb, it is easier to let damage be done to it. But if you know that it is your own arm - well, you might just think twice about it!

Ladies and Gentlemen, I have tried to suggest that the denial of our microcosmic and real relationship with the universal truths and the laws of Nature is engendering within us a dangerous alienation. In denying and forgetting that invisible "geometry" of Harmony that was always recognized and sanctified by our forebears by the means of spiritual practice and lore, we create cacophony and dissonance.

The question then is how, within a contemporary framework, we can reintegrate the best parts of this abandoned and ancient understanding, this Harmony, with the best of modern technology and science. Many will say that this is impossible, but it seems to me that a good start would be to take a long, hard look at ourselves and question very seriously whether the dominant attitude of our day will do, whether it really enables us to see things as they truly are. We need, I suggest, to reconfigure our view of the world and heal the crisis in our perception to which I have referred. And that can be done if we begin to treasure diversity; if we encourage and reward collaboration; if we build skills and learn to encompass complexity; if we nurture and maintain all those subtle checks and balances that keep any economy, community or eco-system, vibrant and healthy. We need to learn all that we can from the Natural world and its rhythms while at the same time developing the kinds of innovative and more benign forms of technology that work with the grain of Nature. It is a shift in perception that we can all work to create. It is a shift, dare I say it, from Modernism to Holism.

Ladies and Gentlemen, here in Liverpool you are in the midst of anniversaries that look back - two hundred years to the abolition of the slave trade and eight hundred years to the granting of your charter. But what of the view, two or eight hundred years from now? What will our descendants think of our present endeavours? Will they see the efforts of enlightened people who, at such a critical moment, introduced a profound shift in their thinking? Will they see, as a result, a more participative, integrated way of living; one that placed greater value on coherence and the limits of Nature? I pray and hope that they will, and that they will see that we were not misguided after all.

We do face seemingly intractable worldwide problems at the present time, but there is still a chance - just - that we can turn the tide, if we have the confidence again to look at the world aright; to see it from the inside out and to allow ourselves to be guided by a proper appreciation of those timeless principles of Balance, Harmony and Unity that I have tried to share with you today. All we need is the courage to start, the wisdom to change and that sense of real urgency that escaped the senses of the unfortunate boiled frog.

[ENDS]

Holistic Quantum Relativity (HQR) Background

A. The HQR Project's Latest Glossary (v0.5) is available from here.

B. For those who wish to understand the genesis of the HQR Socratic Dialogue on IntentBlog in detail please visit the following strings in sequence:

1. Maulana Rumi: 2007 is his 800th Anniversary!

2. Unified Force, Sub-nuclear Physics & Love of Rumi

3. Holistics: Embracing Science, Art and Spirituality!

4. Complex Holistics: Hegel's Logic, Spirit and Mind

5. Simple Holistics: Hegel Triangles & Unified Pyramid

6. Holistic Pyramid, Sahasrara, Sri Yantra, Creation

7. Holistic Relativity: Spiritual Planes & Consciousness

8. Holistic Quantum Relativity: Spirituality and Science

9. Holistic Quantum Relativity Project: Glossary

10. Holistic Quantum Relativity Evolution on IntentBlog

11. HQR: Tagore Einstein: Science, Spirituality & Music

12. HQR: Albert Einstein Quotes on Spirituality

13. HQR: HH Master Kirpal -- Nature of Thought

14. HQR: HH Master Kirpal -- Indira Gandhi & Quotes

15. HQR: Quantum Physics -- The Holotropic State

16. HQR: Bringing All Together & Another Perspective

17. HQR: Quantum Computer, Einstein's Spooky Action

18. Holistic Quantum Relativity Project: Glossary v0.2

19. Holistic Quantum Relativity Project: Glossary v0.3

20. Holistic Quantum Relativity Project: Glossary v0.4

21. HQR: HH Master Kirpal: Consciousness & Free Will

22. HQR: Sir Karl Popper: Paradox of Science & Truth

23. HQR: Sir Tim Berners-Lee: The Future of The Web

24. HQR: Linking Ancient & Modern: WWW of Worship

25. HQR: Burden of Proof, Synchronicity & Applications

26. Holistic Quantum Relativity Project: Glossary v0.5

27.