The Web of Life

The Web of Life
Author: Robert Herrick
Publisher: Outlook Verlag
Total Pages: 222
Release: 2020-07-16
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 3752303379

Reproduction of the original: The Web of Life by Robert Herrick

Design in Crisis

Design in Crisis
Author: Tony Fry
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 395
Release: 2020-12-29
Genre: Design
ISBN: 100032009X

This book is an essential contribution to the transdisciplinary field of critical design studies. The essays in this collection locate design at the center of a series of interrelated planetary crises, from climate change, nuclear war, and racial and geopolitical violence to education, computational culture, and the loss of the commons. In doing so, the essays propose a range of needed interventions in order to transform design itself and its role within the shifting realities of a planetary crisis. It challenges the widely popular view that design can contribute to solving world problems by exposing how this attitude only intensifies the problems we currently face. In this way, the essays critique the dominant modes of framing the meaning and scope of design as a largely Anglo-European 'problem-solving' practice. By drawing on post-development theory, decolonial theory, black studies, continental philosophy, science and technology studies, and more, the contributions envision a critical and speculative practice that problematises both its engagement with planet and itself. The essays in this collection will appeal to design theorists and practitioners alike, but also to scholars and students generally concerned with how the past and future of design is implicated in the unfolding complexity of ecological devastation, racial and political violence, coloniality, technological futures, and the brutality of modern Western culture generally.

Jung and the Ancestors

Jung and the Ancestors
Author: Sandra Easter
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016
Genre: Ego (Psychology)
ISBN: 9781908995117

At a time when interest in family ancestry has never been greater, Sandra Easter's book introduces us to a powerful mode of psychological inquiry that engages the ancestors as living presences shaping who we are and the lives we live. Expanding the traditional focus of depth psychology beyond the realm of personal biography, the author finds evidence of the ancestors in dreams, visions, and symptoms of illness, and in nature and the land on which we live. Interweaving theory and practice, and drawing skillfully on C. G. Jung's work and personal reflections, the book is rich with real-life examples of women who, by establishing dialogues with the ancestors, have been able to work through personal and generational trauma and wounds, healing themselves and those in their ancestral lines. By exploring the unconscious psyche as the ancestral "land of the dead," Easter argues we can also find greater meaning for our lives and better understand our own personal myth. Jung and the Ancestors is an important contribution to depth psychology, focusing on an area of Jung's thought largely overlooked, yet rendered increasingly significant in the wake of the publication of The Red Book. Easter's work will change the way you understand yourself and your relationship to those in your past and your future.

Minding the Earth, Mending the World

Minding the Earth, Mending the World
Author: Susan Murphy
Publisher: Catapult
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2014-04-21
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1619023814

Shunryu Suzuki Roshi founded the San Francisco Zen Center in 1962, and after fifty years we have seen a fine group of Zen masters trained in the west take up the mantle and extend the practice of Zen in ways that might have been hard to imagine in those first early years. Susan Murphy, one of Robert Aitken's students and dharma heirs, is one of the finest in this group of young Zen teachers. She is also a fine writer, and following on the teaching of her Roshi she has engaged her spiritual work in the ordinary world, dealing with the practice of daily life and with the struggles of all beings. We know that our earth is in crisis, but is the situation beyond repair? Are we on a path of planetary disaster where the only proper response is to prepare for our melancholic dystopian future? Is there a way out of our suspicious cynicism? In the tradition of Thomas Berry, using this spiritual opportunity to change the very nature of our crisis, Susan Murphy offers a profound message, subtly presented with clarity and assurance, showing that engaged Buddhism provides a possible path to the necessary repair and healing.

A Lifes Journey

A Lifes Journey
Author: Connie Coleman
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 423
Release: 2015-08-19
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 1504932420

This poem book is very unique. The writer, Connie Coleman, is seventy years old and has been composing poems since age twelve. We have almost sixty years of poetry: that is sixty years with changes in life and thinking and, with this author, many changes of environments. Yes, this is a book to own and to read. It may help you or someone you know. Poetry has a reason. Some of the Bible is even poetic. Yes, this book is worth buying. What we have here is a gifted writer. A writer watched and often directed from above. That reason alone enables her poems to inspire!

The Web of Life

The Web of Life
Author: Carl Safford Patton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 72
Release: 1926
Genre: Congregational churches
ISBN: