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Thinking With Somebody Else's Head

Thinking With Somebody Else's Head

Richard Lloyd Jones

Podcast about Norberto Keppe’s Analytical Trilogy
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Welcome to Episode 6 of our Modern Relevance of God podcast series here on Thinking with Somebody Else’s Head. I’m Richard Lloyd Jones.

You might have noticed in our first few episodes, I've been mentioning the importance of the wisdom of the past to our understanding of the present. And especially in our understanding of God and spirituality.

That's not been by accident. There were some smart dudes back then, and Norberto Keppe's work has been in part about going back and rescuing the correct knowledge from these great thinkers and sages throughout history. That's really not a modern view, I know that. We tend to be much more of the mind today that what went before was interesting, perhaps as an archaic allegory, but hardly relevant anymore in our digital app for that, do all your banking online, superiority. We just threw away all those guys with a dismissive shrug and a raised eyebrow. What could Aquinas or Plato or the Divine Comedy possibly teach us about the important stuff in life, like creating passive income or lowering our toxic exposure or reducing our carbon footprint?

In Mrs. Kent's English Lit 12 class way back when — not quite Middle Ages but still a long time ago — we studied Milton's Paradise Lost. Studied the language and the rhythm, the poem's epic story and heroic nature. "Bloody long thing," I thought at the time. The poem tells the story of the war for heaven and of man's expulsion from paradise. Benjamin Ramm in his recent BBC article, Why You Should Reread Milton's Paradise Lost, declares it to be a powerful meditation on rebellion, longing and the desire for redemption.

But I think we're missing a point here. Paradise Lost is not just an allegory about non-conformist, anti-establishment rebellion. It's a real story, about what really went on. A real event with real people. A story that continues right up to this present moment.

And I know how that must sound here in the 21st century. Like I've just suggested there was no moon landing, right? Well, stay with me! In this episode, we'll introduce a scientific explanation of the Biblical story of the Fall of Man, and see if we can't rescue the story from the clutches of ancient mythology and restore it to its rightful place as the real story of Man that we ignore and banalize to our peril.

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Welcome to Episode five of our Modern Relevance of God podcast series here on Thinking with Somebody Else’s Head. I’m Richard Lloyd Jones.

In our last episode, we looked at some of the scientists responsible for modern science's turn to materialism. Something that sought to make God irrelevant in the creation of life. English biologist, Richard Dawkins, perhaps best epitomises that point of view, opining in The God Delusion that God is arguably the most unpleasant character in all of fiction. And then swinging from the heels with a brutal list of negative adjectives describing God that to my mind, simply substantiates the discoveries of the early explorers of the psyche who showed that sickness lies in projecting our evil qualities outward onto others.

That dismissive view of God is more than obvious in countless modern art, too, that looks at the mess in the world created by man as proof that God doesn't exist. Well, I'm struck hard by that modern conceit because ... well, I'm a product of it. Moving to Brazil 20 years ago with my wife at the time, Madalann, began a process of change inside me, a gradual opening to a theological reality that had simply not been part of my life ...the spirituality I delved into in the New Age movement, notwithstanding. That had been insufficient to feed this quest for truth I hungered for. It was the certainty of the existence of God that marks Brazil that began to turn the tide in me from disdain for God, picked up through modern science and art, to a budding belief in something concrete. A real God in place of that vague and simplistic notion of cosmic energy coming from New Age spirituality.

It was when I began to study Norberto Keppe's concept of inversion, which we talked about in our second episode, that I began to think, "Well, wait a minute! If we're inverted, we must be inverted from something. What would that be?" That's what we'll begin to explore in our podcast episode today with Claudia Bernhardt Pacheco: Who Is this God We’re Talking about Anyway?

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I'm Richard Lloyd Jones, and this is Episode 4 of our Modern Relevance of God special podcast series on Thinking with Somebody Else's Head.

In our last episode, we looked at some of the consequences of materializing science, the reverberations of which we are obviously still feeling today. From elevating the bean counters to the lofty perches of power to resolving pandemics with material products, we are far from any spiritual considerations in our modern science.

We can even put some names to that process, some of the most famous names in scientific history actually. All of whom, unknowingly, led us down this mathematized trail of inverted world views that is largely responsible for the myriad seemingly unresolvable problems facing us today.

And at the same time, Cesar Soós and I will explore the tremendous healing power in nature. All of which provides more evidence that a great Designer is at work behind all this.

Welcome to Episode 4 of the Modern Relevance of God special podcast series. Cesar Soós on some scientific anti-Christs.

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I'm Richard Lloyd Jones, and welcome back to our continuing series. This is Episode 3 of our special podcast series, The Modern Relevance of God.

This episode is the first of 2 parts exploring how science turned its back on God. Well, the dominant scientific view has actually never been tolerant of dissent, and we know the consequences of challenging authority, don't we? From burning at the stake to shunning to YouTube and Facebook removal to Cancel Culture, the repercussions of independent thinking can be quite drastic. The modern power structure frowns on whistleblowers, and bots and algorithms are programmed to control more and more the scientific and political discourse on our planet.

So today, we'll introduce some fundamental disagreement with the metaphysical basis of modern science, and science's part in removing considerations of God from our modern world.

Today on Thinking with Somebody Else's Head, our special podcast series, The Modern Relevance of God continues with Episode 3: Science Turns its Back on God.

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I'm Richard Lloyd Jones, and welcome to Episode 2 of our special podcast series, The Modern Relevance of God. One of the fundamental problems in doing a series on God is the branding that happens of anyone broaching the subject. "Modern? God? Oh my, how 13th century of you!" Well, religious nutters we are not. The Theology Department of the Keppe & Pacheco Trilogical College is a serious educational institution that discusses science and theology with the same weight, and while it may seem impossible for those two disciplines to live together, it is completely possible thanks to Norberto Keppe's science of Analytical Trilogy. This, then, is a scientific exploration of God and spirituality that is so very necessary in our modern world. Today on our special podcast series on Thinking with Somebody Else's Head, The Fatal Flaw of Inversion.Click here to listen to this episode.Click here to download the PDF.
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Thinking With Somebody Else's Head - Special Podcast Series: The Modern Relevance of God, Ep. 1: Why Even Do This?
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11/23/21 • -1 min

I'm Richard Lloyd Jones. Welcome to something new on Thinking with Somebody Else's Head. A podcast series on what I consider one of the most important subjects in our world today.

Spirituality. Finding meaning in this crazy, inverted world today. We could all use some of that, couldn't we?

So I've dug back through past Thinking with Somebody Else's Head podcasts and culled the best stuff I could find and put it into a 17-episode series called The Modern Relevance of God. Some deep conversations and reflections coming your way over the next 17 weeks. So ... let's get to it!

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Thinking With Somebody Else's Head - Vaccines, Energy and Freedom

Vaccines, Energy and Freedom

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01/25/21 • -1 min

If you were watching a TV series about the pandemic lockdown we are currently suffering through, you might look at it as a phantasmagorical kind of thing. "Oh, that could never happen," you might think. "It's too much."

And, of course, they do magnify and dramatize events for dramatic purposes in those series. Real-life dystopia proceeds more glacially.

But we're seeing the elements - neighbours peering through curtains, dissenting views being cancelled, and, most chillingly, dutiful acquiescence of the good people, something Martin Luther King warned us about.

Now this is not to denigrate in any way the "make the best of it" spirit that many display during these pandemic times, but it is perhaps an admonition to keep your eyes open while you're preparing that soothing cup of tea.

Perhaps it's never been more essential for Norberto Keppe's incisive science of psycho-socio pathology to be studied and understood, and we'll certainly employ that disinverted scientific view to our topic today.

Vaccines, Energy and Freedom, today on Thinking with Somebody Else's Head.

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Thinking With Somebody Else's Head - What's Behind the Great Reset

What's Behind the Great Reset

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01/04/21 • -1 min

As we turn the page on what was surely one of the most unprecedented years in modern history, we look forward to better times in 2021. It's natural to do that - greet the new with optimism. Hope, after all, springs eternal in the human breast as Alexander Pope noted almost 300 years ago.

But this New Year, there is trepidation present in the mix, and maybe even despair in some.

Fear not, however, the genius Board of Directors at the World Economic Forum are on the case.

That's supposed to allay the angst of uncertainty, but in some of us, is even great cause for concern. Will the cure be worse than the sickness? That's a great possibility, given that the way out they'll be proposing later this month is being elaborated by the very brain trust that is responsible for leading us into the crisis in the first place. And maybe they'll be interested only in protecting their assets.

Let's consider What's Behind the Great Reset, today on Thinking with Somebody Else's Head.

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Thinking With Somebody Else's Head - The Science of Freedom

The Science of Freedom

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09/21/20 • -1 min

It's as old as philosophy itself. Freedom. Free will. Free choice.

We've taken it for granted in our western world. "Of course we're free," we gloat when comparing ourselves to those in the world we consider unfree.

Until we're not free. To get together in groups, or sit tight to another table at a restaurant, or even go to a basketball game.

Which should cause us to howl in protest. Except it doesn't because we're scared or mandated.

And then there are the definitions of what it is to be free anyway. Is it free to do whatever we want? Is this choice really mine or am I unknowingly following some external programming?

You can see why it's been so much debated in schools of philosophy and religion. In our modern art of persuasion, the skill of the persuader lies in getting you to do what they want but thinking that it's your choice.

What a tangled web! Is there any point in wading into those waters yet again?

I unhesitatingly say yes, for we have a science here that can begin to put it to rights.

The Science of Freedom, today on Thinking with Somebody Else's Head.

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Welcome to Episode 7 of our Modern Relevance of God podcast series here on Thinking with Somebody Else’s Head. I’m Richard Lloyd Jones. I was struck in re-listening to our last episode that perhaps some more explanation of the story of man might be necessary. I also realize the challenge today of Biblical references. Religious life has often been equated with fanaticism, and that conjures up images of cults and Kool Aid and suicide vests, doesn't it? But let's be careful not to fall into that dismissive mindset too quickly, because after all, the story of man! Yeah, these are rich waters to navigate. Great minds have considered these questions of religion and belief and man's place in the cosmos, and simply brushing off these considerations as simplistic, superstitious and obsolete, would be a little hasty, I think. Evidence of what Viktor Frankel called “contemporary nihilism.” In his great book, Man's Search for Meaning, Frankel writes, “Man has suffered another loss in his more recent development inasmuch as the traditions which buttressed his behavior are now rapidly diminishing.” And one of the traditions we are collectively leaving far behind in the rearview mirror is the story of the Fall of Man, a story which is present in most, if not all, of the cultural traditions on our planet. There has to be something there. In fact, I propose that our greatest human documents, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Rights of Man, the constitutions of many countries, are actually reflections of this memory of a time in paradise when we lived in harmony with nature and God, when we fulfilled our purpose in the Creation. We remember these universal principles, these fingerprints of God in the human soul as Keppe calls them, and they're called forth from deep inside in moments of inspiration, like revelations. So, let's not shy away because of prejudices or dismissals of our religious traditions. Let's continue in our exploration of this spiritual life. As Jung inscribed over the door of his house, “Whether summoned or not, God will be present.” So, for this episode, an excerpt from an interview I did for our podcast, Thinking with Somebody Else's Head, with Claudia Bernhardt Pacheco about the Fall of Man and what this story is really about.Click here to listen to this episode.Click here to download the PDF.
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FAQ

How many episodes does Thinking With Somebody Else's Head have?

Thinking With Somebody Else's Head currently has 99 episodes available.

What topics does Thinking With Somebody Else's Head cover?

The podcast is about Health & Fitness, Society & Culture, Spirituality, Metaphysics, Alternative Health, Podcasts, Economics, Education, Consciousness, Philosophy and Physics.

What is the most popular episode on Thinking With Somebody Else's Head?

The episode title 'Suicide Watch - Therapy Online Series - Ep. 7' is the most popular.

How often are episodes of Thinking With Somebody Else's Head released?

Episodes of Thinking With Somebody Else's Head are typically released every 16 days.

When was the first episode of Thinking With Somebody Else's Head?

The first episode of Thinking With Somebody Else's Head was released on Jan 10, 2013.

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