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To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Christa Weil talks about eating national dishes like putrefied shark meat and her curious experience eating blow fish in Japan.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Any of us could land on the unplugged side of the digital divide, all it would take is a natural disaster or civil conflict. But one group is building tools that make a cell phone connection all you'd need to share information during a crisis.

David Kobia is one of the founders of Ushahidi.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Carole Case wrote a history of New York’s Jockey Club, the elite cartel that controls the thoroughbred stud book.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Benedict Le Vay tells Jim Fleming that many customs still exist in England and are extremely important to the community, even though the reason for them is long forgotten.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Erin Clune brings us and her family to tour the garden of Izzy Fine and Mary Gray who've planted thousands of flowering bulbs on their property in Madison, Wisconsin. Their garden is so spectacular, all the neighbors drop by to wander around.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Clayton Eshleman is a poet who’s turned his poetic sensibility loose on the paleolithic cave drawings at Lascaux in France.  He talks about these drawings represent shamanic spirit journeys and rituals.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Pre-Modern hunter and gatherer cultures believed that dying was a kind of trial which didn't begin until you left your physical body and entered the supernatural world, according to sociologist Allan Kellehear. In these cultures, death is not the destruction of the body, but the annihilation of the personality and its transformation into something new.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Karen Armstrong is the author of nearly 20 books on religion. She tells Steve Paulson that traditions from Confucianism to Judaism emerged as responses to the rampant violence of their time. And she says our own time has a lot in common with that age.

 

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