It
seems that the talk by Graham Hancock that I posted the other day has
been censored and removed,so here is the talk reposted with a
response by Graham Hancock.
Graham Hancock - The War on Consciousness BANNED TED TALK
The
more I wade into the morass that is TED the more horrified I become
at the illusion of openness this organisation has wrapped around
itself, when the truth as I have now learned from direct experience
is so very different. TED talks a good talk about itself, its
nobility, its achievements. "We believe passionately," TED
boasts, "in the power of ideas to change attitudes, lives and
ultimately, the world. So we're building here a clearinghouse that
offers free knowledge and inspiration from the world's most inspired
thinkers, and also a community of curious souls to engage with ideas
and each other." (see here: http://www.ted.com/pages/about).
But
the truth is quite different. Over the matter of the censorship on
Youtube of my "War on Consciousness" presentation and
Rupert Sheldrake's "Science Delusion" presentation, TED is
closed minded, operates with an extremely limited view of what is
scientifically orthodox, wishes to stay safely within that orthodoxy,
and is patronising and disparaging about those who question their
policies. As TED Curator Chris Anderson
(http://www.ted.com/speakers/chris_and...)
writes here (http://blog.ted.com/2013/03/14/open-f...)
in response to comments criticising TED for censoring my
presentation: "Right now this comment section is over-run by the
hordes of supporters sent our way by Graham Hancock. It would be nice
for you to calm down and actually read some of the criticisms of his
work so that you can get a more balanced view point. And meanwhile,
we'll be reading the views of anyone who'll be patient enough to
express them in a reasoned way ...as opposed to throwing around
shrieks of censorship when nothing of the kind has happened."
Mr
Anderson seems to have plenty of time to pour scorn on those who
disagree with the way TED has handled this matter, but so far, more
than five hours after I posted them he has not found the time to
answer the four simple questions I asked him on page 1 of the public
forum he set up (http://blog.ted.com/2013/03/14/open-f...)
supposedly to foster open discussion of the presentations by myself
and Rupert.
Here
are those four simple questions again:
(1)
TED says of my "War on Consciousness" presentation: "...he
misrepresents what scientists actually think. He suggests, for
example, that no scientists are working on the problem of
consciousness."
I would like TED to identify where exactly
in my talk they believe I say that "no scientists are working on
the problem of consciousness"? Also in what other specific ways
does TED believe I misrepresent what scientists actually think?
TED
says of my presentation: "He states as fact that psychotropic
drug use is essential for an "emergence into consciousness,"
and that one can use psychotropic plants to connect directly with an
ancient mother culture."
I would like TED to identify where
exactly in my talk they believe I state as a fact that psychotropic
drug use is essential for an emergence into consciousness. I would
also like TED to identify where exactly in my talk I state that one
can use psychotropic plants to connect directly with an ancient
mother culture.
(3)
TED states that there are many inaccuracies in my presentation which
display a disrespect both for my audience and for my arguments.
I
would like TED to indentify where exactly in my talk these alleged
"many inaccuracies" occur.
(4)
TED says of my "War on Consciousness" presentation: "He
offers a one-note explanation for how culture arises (drugs), which
just doesn't hold up."
Again I would like TED to identify
the point in my talk where I state this. Do I not rather say that
some scientists in the last thirty years have raised an intriguing
possibility — emphasis on POSSIBILITY — which is that the
exploration of altered states of consciousness, in which psychedelic
plants have been implicated, was fundamental to the emergence into
fully symbolic consciousness witnessed by the great cave art? I can
cite a wide range of respectable peer-reviewed scientists who have
suggested this possibility and I do not see how reporting their work,
which I have every right to do, can be construed as offering "a
one-note explanation for how culture arises (drugs)." Besides is
every talk that touches on the origins of culture obliged to consider
all possible factors that might be involved in the origins of
culture? How could any speaker be expected to do that in one
18-minute talk?
"The
war for human consciousness is escalating and becoming more clearly
defined. On one side you have me, Graham Hancock, and Joe Rogan (and
many more like Vandana Shiva, Terrence McKenna, Gregg Braden and
every Gaian mf one of us).
"On
the other side you have TEDx.
"Make
your choice. But watch this video first. Way to go Joe. Fist bump."
---Mike
Ruppert
JRE:
Eddie Huang TED Conference Exposed
Joe
Rogan talks to Eddie Huang about his experience at the TED
conference.
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