Monday, December 20, 2010

Ubuntu and Jeremy Rifkin's Empathic Cvilization

What is ubuntu, the African philosophy, one may ask? Different people have defined it as different things. However, Archbishop Desmond Tutu has defined it as almost like a peace that one can have within themselves. He says "a person with Ubuntu is open and available to others... [and] does not feel threatened that others are able and good, for he or she has a proper self-assurance that comes from knowing that he or she belongs in a greater whole and is diminished when others are humiliated or diminished."He then goes on to say "We think of ourselves far too frequently as just individuals, separated from one another, whereas you are connected and what you do affects the whole world. When you do well, it spreads out; it is for the whole of humanity." I think that he is entirely true, we have become a race that is entirely consumed by gaining our own tangible wealth. We have become so caught up in our own lives that we(including myself) often forget that we are apart of something bigger than ourselves. From reading a collective bunch of definitions on the ubuntu philosophy I have decided that to me it basically means that every link in the circle of life is important, no matter the size, color or shape because together we make up humanity and divided, well things might go downhill.
Now, currently Jeremy Rifkin has the idea of an empathic civilization, which is quite similar to this ubuntu philosophy. He has written a book called The Empathic civilization,and he has also created a short 10 minute video that includes him drawing and lecturing us on his idea and the origins of this empathic civilization, which you can watch here. Basically Rifkin is saying that humans are not wired for agressiona nd selfishness, but for empathy, love companionship and the feeling of belonging. We all have empathy for one another because we have one thing in common no matter race, gender, or age. We all know that we are born and we live for a limited period and then we die, this is how we are empathetic towards one another,because Empathy is grounded in the acknowledgment of death and th e celebration of life, and rooting for each other to flourish and be. Jeremy Rifkin believes that if we can extend our empathy to the entire human race,and our fellow creatures, and to our common community the earth. He believes that if we can imagine thta then we can save our species and the planet. This is so similar to the ubuntu principle in the fact that we just aren't meant to be alone no matter how much we want to beleive that we are. In fact Rifkin provides scientific evidence in about the way the neurons in our breains light up to what others around us are doing. We have to see that the only way to save our planet is to embrace  the ubuntu/ Rifki theory of unity an dcreaty a society based upong solidarity.
What i wanted to get out of the unit was to figure out what exactly is the human spirit and how does one obtain a strong human spirit when life has got you in the dumps. This ties into the unbuntu and empathic civilization philosophies because perhaps our fellow humans are what jeeps our spirits up when it seems like there is no hope. Maybe its because we know someone else has this same problem and together we can make it, possibly?

Below you can watch Jeremy Rifkin on "The Empathic Civilization"

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Internet: Blessing or A Curse To Lonely People?

All the Lonely People and A Meeting of Solitudes by Roger Ebert, and another article by Ezra Klein, immediately made me think of myself. Three years ago I was new to my school district and I was angry at my parents, the world and God for taking me away from a place where I was comfortable to a place where I was the foreigner. After a while my anger faded and I deluded myself into believing that I wouldn't make any friends in my new area for dumb reasons like: I'm not funny enough to have friends, and no one would ever like me because I'm just so different from all the other kids. So with that in mind I was set to not try to make any friends at all since i was so sure no one would ever want to be friends with me. I resolved I only had 5 years to spend in purgatory until I graduated and could go to college wherever I decided. Until then I figured I would just spend my total of 7 hours at school no more no less and come home to my computer and chat with my old friends on facebook and bebo or whatever social networking site was cool that month. After a while I had my annual check up at the pediatrician and the doctor asked me how many hours a day I spent on the computer/television total. I answered with more than 5 hours altogether and she was stunned and told my  mom I needed to go outside more often or I might develop depression. So my mother cut back computer time therefore cutting back my social time, and I was forced to wander the neighborhood alone, as my brother already made friends with all the neighborhood boys. As Ebert stated in his article "Just because you're afraid to go outside doesn't mean you're happy being inside," this is entirely true. I was most definitely not happy being inside no matter how much I lied and told myself that inside was better; because it's not. It is so much easier to be brave over the internet; to be bold and fearless and witty online is easy.Whatever you write can easily be edited before you send a message. Whereas in person you can't take wordds back, you say whatever you want in the spur of the moment. In person people know you for you; for the brash, or sarcastic witty you;but on the Internet people only know the polished and edited you, which is why I think the Internet can be blessing, and yet a curse.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Roger Ebert: The Essential Man

In my last post I explained what we're discussing in GT II right now. So in class we read an article called Roger Ebert: The Essential Man by Chris Jones, and it was in Esquire magazine Now chances are you have heard the term "two thumbs up," if you haven't well then usually people say two thumbs up when they like something. I have always wondered where the term came from and it just so happens, the article was about one of the guys who introduced two thumbs up to television. His name is Robert Ebert, and he is a movie critic. He currently has no lower jaw because of cancer, and has lost the ability to speak and eat.
When I was first handed my copy of the article I wanted to know what the relevance of it was. I wanted to know what this random movie critic had to do with anything regarding the human spirit. When I began reading the article I started to see Roger Ebert as more than just someone over coming cancer, but as a great man who just seemed fulfilled. The amazing part is he knows he has lost his ability to speak and he's dying but instead of wallowing in self pity he continues to critique movies and shares his wisdom on life with the followers of his blog.
By reading this I just realized how blessed I am to have a voice. I don't speak much to people, but can you just imagine having so many things to say and being forced to keep it all in. Maya Angelou once said "Words mean more than what is set down on paper. It takes the human voice to infuse them with deeper meaning." Imagine not ever being able to say I love you to the people you care about in your voice packed with emotion, but being reduced to simply writing down the words. Roger Ebert taught me to be thankful for the voice I've been given and to not waste time being upset with people because if I didn't have a voice my anger would be gone in the time it would take me to write it down.

Hope, Humanity, and the Human Spirit

I think the humanity/hope/human spirit" unit is supposed to get us to think about the role the human spirit plays in our lives and what makes us human. I think that we are trying to find out what keeps the human spirit going; Is it hope, love, faith? Soooo we are studying events that would lead people to need  hope and individuals who have or had a strong spirit so that we can figure out how we too can have stronger spirits and reach our highest potential.....at least that's what I understood we were trying to do. Personally I think that right now I would like to figure out what exactly is the human spirit and how does one obtain a strong human spirit when life has got you in the dumps. I want to know how people's spirits can be so loving and filled with hope and  faith when life constantly kicks them down.

Who Are You? And Why Are You Writing This Blog?

Those are both excellent questions that definently should be adressed before this blog gets started. My name is Nikki and I'm a sophmore (wise fool XD) in high school. I decided to take a class called gifted and talented or GT last year and found that it was a pretty cool class to take, that challenged me; so i took GTII. Are previous unit was about somehow finding a problem in our world and fixing it. Our class decided poor body image is a major problem in America so we decided to do something about it, starting in our school.With the guidance of our teachers we put together the I AM campaign. The point of the campaign is to make our middle schoolers know how great they are just the way they are and to get them thinking about the seriousness of bullying and putting others down. The unit we're doing now is hope and the human spirit, and basically we're blogging the things we learn in this unit... gotta love the learning of the future!!!!