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The Evolutionary Mind with Terence McKenna, Rupert Sheldrake & R
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Trialogues at the Edge of the Millenium with Terence McKenna, Rupert Sheldrake and Ralph Abraham

Part 1
Duration: 1:09:37
Audio: 128kbps
Dimensions: 640x480
Size: 500mb

Part 2
Duration: 1:07:46
Audio: 128kbps
Dimensions: 640x480
Size: 500mb

Part 3
Duration: 0:59:56
Audio: 128kbps
Dimensions: 640x480
Size: 477mb

Edited audio/video recordings of the three trialogues from the public event in Santa Cruz, June 6, 1998. 
- http://www.aerialpress.com/ 


--- MP3 Archive of Trialogues available here: http://www.matrixmasters.net/blogs/?cat=124 ---


Terence McKenna - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terence_McKenna 
Rupert Sheldrake - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rupert_Sheldrake
Ralph Abraham - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Abraham

[img=http://i971.photobucket.com/albums/ae194/geogaddi00/04.jpg]

The Evolutionary Mind: Trialogues at the Edge of the Unthinkable

Trialogues are a unique form of intellectual performance in which three people, optimally very different, discuss (or debate) a set topic for a fixed period of time.  Sheldrake, McKenna, and Abraham have been in trialogue as friends since 1982, in public since since 1989, and in print together since 1992, in Trialogues at the Edge of the West, available in French, German, Portuguese, and Dutch, as well as English. 

The Evolutionary Mind, Trialogues at the Edge of the Unthinkable is their second set of trialogues to be published, and cover new topics like grassroots sciences, visual math, biogeography, homing pigeons, the world wide web, psychic pets, fractals, the structure of time, the celestial sphere, the millennium, and the holistic vision. 
  
Ralph Abraham, Terence McKenna and Rupert Sheldrake are among the brightest and most thoughtful men alive on the planet today.  These thinkers quicken in each other a remembrance of things future as well as things past.  They evoke from one another a new treasure trove of ideas that could keep us all thinking for the next hundred years ... They have figured out how to achieve one of the best of all possible worlds the sharing of mental space and cosmic terrains over many years of deep friendship and profound dialogue. 
-Jean Houston 


Preface

We have been firm friends since we first met in 1982, in California, and have been meeting at regular intervals ever since, both in the United States and in England. We spend most of our time together talking, trying out ideas, arguing, speculating, and enjoying each others' company. Our professional interests and backgrounds are very different: Ralph is a chaos mathematician and pioneer in the field of computer graphics; Terence is a psychedelic explorer, ethnopharmacologist and theorist of time; and Rupert is a controversial biologist, best known for his hypothesis of morphic resonance, the idea that there is an inherent memory in nature. We also share many interests and enthusiasms in common, not least our affinity for India, where we have all lived at different times. 

We soon found that these three-way discussions were especially stimulating and fruitful, at least for ourselves. We had no thought of these being anything other than private meetings of friends. But after some six years of these informal conversations, we were asked by Nancy Lunney, of the Esalen Institute, in Big Sur, California, to lead a weekend workshop together. As a consequence our trialogues emerged into the public domain in September 1989. These discussions, together with others we held at Esalen in private over the next two years, formed the basis of our book Trialogues at the Edge of the West, published by Bear and Co. in 1992. 

This book has been translated into Dutch, French, German, Polish and Portuguese, and many people have told us that they found it stimulating, and that it has sparked off lively discussions among groups of friends. We have been encouraged to find that ideas and conversations can spread in this way, and hope that the present book will enable this process to go further. 

We have continued to meet as opportunities have presented themselves, and this book, The Evolutionary Mind, is based on discussions at Esalen in September 1992; in June 1993 in the West of England, at Hazelwood House, in the Devon countryside; and at Terence's rainforest retreat on the slopes of the volcano Mauna Loa, on the Big Island of Hawaii, in September 1994. 

We have called this book The Evolutionary Mind because this title best summarizes the common themes of our discussions. Most are strongly influenced by the idea of evolution--of life, science, technology, culture and indeed the entire cosmos; and also by the prospects for a greatly enlarged understanding of minds, expansion of experience, and transformations of consciousness beyond anything we can at present conceive.


Chapter 1: Grassroots Science  
The increasing predominance of big science and large institutions. Public alienation from science. The possibility of radical research on a budget of less than $50. How amateurs could help revitalize science. The role of computer networks. The continuing need for institutional science. A complementary relationship between grassroots and institutional research. Holistic medicine and low-cost medical research. Declining science budgets. The popularity of dinosaurs. Psychedelic explorations as an example of a grassroots research. Radical research by students. The revitalizing of scientific education. 

Chapter 2: Psychedelics, Computers and Visual Mathematics 
Nearly all innovators in computer graphics take psychedelics. Ralph's experiences in the 1960s. Visual mathematics and psychedelic imagination. The need for emotional involvement. Visual metaphors and the footprints of meaning. Psychedelic experience is made of mind but not just our minds. The language of patterns. The decline of literacy and the rise of visual intelligence. Television as an addictive drug. Computer graphics and the forms of flowers and beetles. Mathematical landscapes. Mathematics a marriage of heaven and earth. 

Chapter 3: Evolution in Hawaii 
These volcanic, mid-oceanic islands are a laboratory for evolution in isolation. On the islands themselves, ecosystems are divided up by lava flows. Comparison with evolution on other island systems and in the Amazon basin. The evolutionary importance of variety for its own sake. Hawaii as a microcosm of the Earth itself. Creative adaptation, morphic resonance and the evolution of habits. The movement of entire ecosystems. Spores, ducks' feet, and the colonization of Hawaii. How do migrant birds find new island systems? How did the Polynesians find Hawaii? Contemporary cultural evolution. 

Chapter 4: Homing Pigeons 
Many animals can home or migrate, but no one knows how. Research with pigeons has refuted all theories based on known scientific principles. Homing cannot be explained in terms of smell, the sun, landmarks or magnetism. An unknown sense or field seems to be involved. Pigeons linked to their home by a connection like an invisible elastic band. Can pigeons find their home if the home is taken away from the pigeons, rather than the pigeons from the home? Results of preliminary experiments with mobile lofts. Does homing depend on a sixth sense or an inherited map? How language inhibits our ability to imagine the mind of a pigeon. The different relationship of animal minds to time. Homing as a pulling from the future. Pigeons and their lofts linked by morphic fields. The nature of social bonds. The way shamans know the future. The connection of shamanic knowledge with the knowledge of animals. 

Chapter 5: The World Wide Web 
What the World Wide Web is and how it goes beyond the Internet. Worldwide browsing and creativity. The Web as the basis of the noosphere of the future. Boundary dissolution. But is it just for nerds? The absence of the feminine. A vast increase in the accessibility of information. Do we really need more information? Research on the quality of time using databases on sunspots, accident rates, etc. The Web's resemblance to psychedelic experience. Creativity and self-publishing. Who does the editing? Can the proliferation of special interest groups have any unifying effect? Could the Web improve our relationship to the environment or to local communities? A future telepathic collectivity. 

Chapter 6: Research with Psychic Pets 
Many pets seem to know in advance when their owners are coming home. Inexpensive research with pets an example of grassroots science. Is science too rigid to assimilate animal telepathy, even if the evidence were overwhelming. The ancient shamanic roots of communication with animals. How does telepathy work? Morphic fields as a basis of interconnection. Resonance, time and precognition. Fractal wavelengths. How language deceives us about the nature of time. The advantages of music. How animals respond to intentions. Hunting, shamanism and the evolution of consciousness. 
  
Chapter 7: Fractals 
The sandy beach and fractal boundaries.  Chaos and the Milky Way.  Fractal boundaries destroy determinism.  Multiple personalities and boundaries in the mind.  Dischaos in personal relationships.  Polytheistic psychology.  Fractalization and unity.  Dischaos therapy.  Drugs, journeys and the increasing permeability of boundaries.  Aboriginal cultures and openness to others.  Our obsession with privacy.  Walled fortress and fractal labyrinths. 

Chapter 8: Time 
The Big Bang as scientific orthodoxy's free miracle.  Cosmic evolution towards increasing complexity.  The pull of a transcendental attractor located in the future.  The Omega Point.  History as the shock wave of the end of time.  Myths of history.  Time is speeding up.  The Judeo-Christian tradition is inherently apocalyptic.  Will the end of history be confined to the Earth, or will it be some kind of cosmic tradition?  The impact of comets.  Hyperspace.  The dissolution of all things.  Terence's prediction of the end in 2012 AD.  Visions of the transcendent attractor. 
  
Chapter 9: The Heavens 
The rediscovery of the life of nature.  The ancient sense of the sacredness of the heavens and the Earth.  The secularization of the heavens since the seventeenth century.  Consciousness in stars and galaxies.  Heavenly bliss.  Modern ignorance of the heavens.  Astrologers find meaning in the sky, but don't look at it.  Angels.  SETI, the search for extra-terrestrial intelligence.  Journeys out of the body.  Are psychedelic visions localized?  The evolution of complexity.  The loss of interest in space exploration.  Contacting the intelligences of the stars in altered states of consciousness.  Elizabethan star magic.  Modern sun worship.  A new synthesis of astrology and astronomy. 
  
Chapter 10: Utopianism and Millenarianism 
The literal origins of utopia.  Utopians hope that the virtues of the past will be restored.  The Judeo-Christian roots of millenarianism.  Millenarians believe history is about to end.  Scientific utopianism and the ideology of progress.  New age utopias.  Terence as a psychedelic utopian.  And also as a prophet of the apocalypse.  The big bang and the irrational.  The acceleration of history.  The transcendental object at the end of time.  New models of time.  Chaotic transformation.  Millenarian visions and self-fulfilling prophecy.  The cosmic dimension.  The end in 2012? 
  
Chapter 11: Father Bede's Letter 
Father Bede Griffiths, an English Benedictine monk who lived in India, was Rupert's teacher.  His letter about our book Trialogues at the Edge of the West.  He found a lack of the sense of mystical, or of ultimate unity.  Terence puts this unity at the end of time.  Ralph connects it with the unity of the evolutionary process.  Rupert sees it in the Holy Trinity.  The Judeo-Christian faith in God's action in historical time, and at the end of time.  Evolutionary theology.  The cosmic attractor.  Indeterminacy and the structure of time.  Entelechy and the time wave.  Freud and Thanantos, the death principle.  Birth throughout the universe. 


The Evolutionary Mind is available here: http://www.monkfishpublishing.com/books/The%20Evolutionary%20Mind-info.htm