Douglas Coupland says only twenty percent of people are hard-wired to “get” irony and the rest take everything at face value.
Douglas Coupland says only twenty percent of people are hard-wired to “get” irony and the rest take everything at face value.
American spiritual teacher Antoinette Varner - also known as Gangaji - says it's possible to transcend our stories about ourselves. She tells Steve Paulson that to truly know yourself, just drop who you think you are, and pay attention to the "I". You can also hear the UNCUT version of this interview here.
Anthony Shadid won two Pulitzer Prizes for his coverage of the war in Iraq. He knows the violence of war. As he told Steve Paulson, he also knows, that when the war ends, unintended consequences follow.
Dean Hamer tells Steve Paulson about the gene that regulates brain activity that we perceive as an affinity for spiritual matters.
Ginger Strand’s dangerous idea on recycling. Or, rather, not recycling. She is a novelist famous for her novel Flight.
Azadeh Moaveni talks about growing up Iranian in America and American in Iran.
Daniel Pink talks about the day he almost threw up on Al Gore, and gives examples of the new ways people are finding to work.
Elisabet Sahtouris has no truck with Biblical creationists but thinks the standard story of evolution has major problems.