Rev. Ms. Tippett: And, I sense, the theology, the story, the poetry that these traditions carry forward. So, together we’ve created this Impact Lab, which is really a space for us to try and go deeper. Who’s in, who’s out? You paraphrased Baldwin by saying, “Anybody who’s conscious — to be conscious is to be enraged.”. I find it very fortifying as an idea, to think about what is not evident, what’s not apparent. Written by Ms. Tippett: …what we lose by being able to look everything up or have Google deliver it directly to our brains. Merci, patron. And The On Being Project, I think, is so primed with just this extraordinary staff to reengage with our community in a new way and to deliver on this hospitality, to meet people in so many different places, and to just carry forth all of this beautiful work that started when you started this organization just a handful of years ago. Image by Bethany Birnie, © All Rights Reserved. She’s a National Humanities Medalist, and The New York Times bestselling author of Becoming Wise: An Inquiry into the Mystery and Art of Living. But it was just these lovely things you were saying about us, about being human. We explore the intersection of spiritual inquiry, science, social healing, community, poetry, and the arts. On Being was created at American Public Media. More news soon. Who will we be to each other? I think my ideal dialogue is two people saying — one person saying, “Well, I don’t know,” and the other person saying, “I don’t know.” And then the other person saying, “I don’t…” In the past couple of years, for sure my most-used emoji is… [shrugs]. In fact, when you speak in such terms, people say, “Well, then, you’re not being pragmatic enough, and we’ve got to make progress,” and all of that. Today, a live conversation with the writer and photographer Teju Cole. So, in the mid-’90s, late-’90s, having been a journalist, coming out of divinity school — so this was the Moral Majority — this was this moment where a lot of very loud, strident religiosity had claimed its place and was everywhere. I want to reduce the number of sparks. If we live in an environment where we take the “right” opinion for granted as a given — “Oh, everybody knows that” — maybe you’re called on to explore the ideas that not everybody knows. She is one of our wisest voices on social evolution and the spiritual aspect of social healing. I can’t believe it’s five years. Their encounter, “at the swell of the muddy Mississippi,” doesn’t have a fantasy ending, but instead finds strength and glory in bodies and myth. And that, itself, is a consolation. Ms. Tippett: Yes. And I think — Casper used the word “transformation.” Again, another way to talk about the place where we’re working — what we believe in, what we’re fostering is the human transformation that makes social transformation possible. You’ll also find special episodes in this feed, including Living the Questions — an occasional On Being segment where Krista muses on questions from our listening community. Mr. Cole: Exactly. Mr. ter Kuile: But it’s really an opportunity to do what Erinn was just saying, in terms of reflecting back to the community, the community itself in some way. And how can I be of service to you?”. People are rediscovering him. Ms. Tippett: Just think, one day it will be attached, and you will just be able to push a button and it will go straight into — yeah. Ms. Tippett: And a way of even being with strangers. I remember when he won the Nobel Prize, which was in 2011. And yet, this was a period in which all of humanity seemed intent on obliterating itself — just mass killing everywhere, at a frenetic pace, in the same period that gave us literature and jazz and painting and bold new moves and new things in poetry that were as powerful as the Iliad and the Mahabharata. Ms. Tippett: We got to be attentive, and I suspect that everyone here will notice, whether it’s ten minutes from now or tomorrow, when they have one of those flow moments and, perhaps, enjoy it for just a second longer. He was in the Twin Cities with the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra’s Liquid Music Series, together with the musician Vijay Iyer, for a presentation around his latest book of photography and text, Blind Spot. Ms. Tippett: Yes; we will co-create that. He was sort of set up for it: He was black, grew up poor. Casper is also the co-host of the totally addictive podcast Harry Potter and the Sacred Text, which explores the magic of that book chapter by chapter and what it can teach us about our own lives. This is incorrect. Craig Minowa started the band in 1995. This is the early 2000s? Humanity United, advancing human dignity at home and around the world. I’m certainly glad for it. Ms. Percy: That’s her voice, so you can distinguish it from the other woman talking, a.k.a. I like speaking; I like being — there’s something, of course, that’s amazing, to have a conversation that a million people are going to be listening in on at some point. I am curious how you — because I feel like his voice is rising up all over the place. This is bad. How did we get here? We’ve held our first big gathering. Ms. Tippett: In 2011, which was around the same year that we changed the name of the show, we had some extra funding from the Lilly Endowment to do some really deep audience engagement research.

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