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| Mind Body Seminar: November 1976
EDUCATING BOTH HALVES OF THE BRAIN A Weekend Symposium
The Institute for the Study of Human Knowledge In Cooperation with
EDUCATING BOTH HALVES OF THE BRAIN Our contemporary system of education teaches only half the brain. It is specialized for verbal-analysis, the process of examining, separately many aspects of a puzzle. What this process leaves out, of course, is an understanding of the relationship between things, the perception of whole systems. Yet many concerned people in diverse areas of contemporary life, from students of the mind to those concerned with energy policy, to those concerned with health and healing note the loss of this holistic mode of knowledge. Our students are not being offered the education they require to understand the complex nature of the world and themselves, an education for the whole brain. There is, however, a growing understanding among scientists and educators that the capacity to understand in a holistic manner can be educated, as the capacity for language can be trained. This symposium brings together the new scientific discoveries on the functions of the brain and consciousness, a knowledge of the differences in brain function between people, and innovative techniques in education in a new synthesis; we are now, perhaps for the first time able to draw methods and an understanding from both Western scientific and Eastern experiential traditions towards an education for the whole mind. This symposium is intended for teachers, educational administrators, parents, and all those concerned with education. The speakers are leading thinkers on education, brain research, the study of consciousness and of teaching and human development in the East. THE FACULTY PAUL BRANDWEIN, is a member of the National Humanities Faculty; Adjunct Professor at the University of Pittsburgh and Director of the School Department of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. He is author of PERMANENT AGENDA OF MAN, and of THE TEACHING OF SCIENCE. JEANNINE HERRON is a Research Associate at the Langley Porter Neuropsychiatric Institute, San Francisco. Her current research interest is in left-handedness and brain organization. She has written on the subject in PSYCHOLOGY TODAY and has also published a book documenting her transatlantic sail to Africa. ROBERT ORNSTEIN, is Associate Professor of Medical Psychology at the Langley Porter Neuropsychiatric Institute, University of California, San Francisco. His current research interests are the psychology of meditation, biofeedback, and the conscious functions of the two hemispheres of the brain. He is the author of THE PSYCHOLOGY OF CONSCIOUSNESS and the editor of THE NATURE OF HUMAN CONSCIOUSNESS. IDRIES SHAH is the leading exponent of Sufism and of a contemporary approach to mysticism in the world today. He currently resides in England where he is Director of Studies at the Institute for Cultural Research, and has traveled extensively in Europe, Asia, and Africa relating traditional thought to the modern world. He is the author of seventeen books on Sufi thought and action, travel, magic and the use of literature in spiritual schools. His books are used in university departments throughout the world. THE PROGRAM SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1976 9:00 to 11:15 TWO MODES OF KNOWLEDGE AND THE TWO HALVES OF THE BRAIN
11:30 to 12:15 EDUCATION AND LEFT HANDED PEOPLE
1:45 to 3:30 THE DUALITY OF MIND: IMPLICATIONS FOR EDUCATORS
3:45 to 5:00 TEACHERS OF THE EAST
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1976 9:00 to 10:15 NEW DISCOVERIES ON THE NATURE OF CONSCIOUSNESS
10:30 to 12:00 ON THE NATURE OF SUFI KNOWLEDGE
2:00 to 3:00 SMALL GROUPS: QUESTIONS AND COMMENTS
3:15 to 5:00 ARE THERE RIGHT AND LEFT BRAIN CURRICULA?
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