Ian McGilchrist: Difference between revisions
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Key points - slowing down to observe beauty. Left vs right brain think. | Key points - slowing down to observe beauty. Left vs right brain think. | ||
* '''Two modes of knowing''' – | * '''Two modes of knowing''' – distinguishes between: | ||
** Right-hemisphere knowing: contextual, embodied, relational, grounded in lived reality | ** Right-hemisphere knowing: contextual, embodied, relational, grounded in lived reality | ||
** Left-hemisphere knowing: abstract, categorical, model-based, optimized for control | ** Left-hemisphere knowing: abstract, categorical, model-based, optimized for control | ||
Latest revision as of 15:40, 3 May 2026
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PQ9_FtLEeoc
Key points - slowing down to observe beauty. Left vs right brain think.
- Two modes of knowing – distinguishes between:
- Right-hemisphere knowing: contextual, embodied, relational, grounded in lived reality
- Left-hemisphere knowing: abstract, categorical, model-based, optimized for control
- Core problem – modern society over-privileges abstract representations (models, metrics, labels) and mistakes them for reality itself
- Loss of meaning – when representations detach from lived experience, words and concepts become unstable; the same thing can mean different things to different groups
- Disinformation is downstream – the deeper issue is not false information, but a weakened capacity to discern truth due to loss of context and integration
- Epistemic breakdown – truth becomes negotiable, narratives compete without resolution, and shared reality fragments into incompatible interpretations
- True knowing – requires participation in reality: embodied, relational, context-sensitive, and not fully reducible to symbols or abstractions
- Bottom line – meaning collapses when society replaces direct engagement with reality by abstract representations, leading to a condition where anything can be made to mean anything