- Details
- Written by: Kamran Mofid
- Hits: 1350
A World Guided by Wisdom is the sure path to a Life Full of Meaning.
"Where is the Life we have lost in living?
Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?"-T.S. Eliot
'Knowledge Comes But Wisdom Lingers.'
Lack of wisdom is the beginning of all evil and the downfall of all civilisations. We need wisdom in all we do in our entire life endeavors.
Wisdom enables and empowers us to imagine better, a better life, a better world.
Photo: The School of Life
The Key that Unlocks the Path to Enlightenment is Wisdom
‘We can distinguish between two different types of learning: knowledge and wisdom. Knowledge is akin to information: facts, figures, dates and theories. Wisdom, meanwhile, is a synthesis of information and experience that helps us understand the meaning and purpose of existence. If knowledge answers questions such as ‘When was the battle of Hastings?’ or ‘How do I make a cheese souffle?’, wisdom tackles those such as ‘What is the meaning of life?’ and ‘What exactly do I need to be happy?’
The key difference between the two comes down to time. It might take us a week to become knowledgeable in a certain subject, but a whole lifetime to become wise. Yet, though we frequently forget the knowledge we have learned, we never forget what we have gained through wisdom. Whereas knowledge is specific - relevant only within a particular context or discipline - wisdom is timeless. The understanding it provides has always been, and will always be, relevant, since it gives us nothing less than the secret of how to live.’- Continue to explore more: What Is Philosophy For?
Photo: Lawrence Lew Flickr
The Greek word ‘philosophy’, literally translated, means love of (philo) wisdom (sofia). This is why philosophy has always been central to all we do at the GCGI: its ethos and insights give us a timeless understanding of human life and how it should be lived.
See below a selection of the postings from our GCGI website to find out more, and read on philosophical ideas and great thinkers that can help you gain wisdom that can last a lifetime.
Composing a New Life: In Praise of Wisdom
In the World of Spiritual Hunger We Need Philosophy
What did great philosophers Mill, Bentham, Locke and Berkeley have in common?
Theology, Philosophy, Ethics, Spirituality and Economics: A Call to Dialogue
What if Universities Taught KINDNESS?
How Much is Enough? Money and the Good Life
Are You Still Searching for Happiness?
Why Happiness Should be Taught at Our Universities
In this troubled world let the beauty of nature and simple life be our greatest teachers
What is Money? Is it Money Money Money, Must be funny?
In these troubled times let us be ordinary and enjoy the simple pleasures of life
Why a Simple Life Matters: The Path to peace and happiness lies in the simple things in life
Simplicity: it’s our true guide to a better life
Time or Money: Which one is the path to a happier life?
Wouldn’t the world be a better place with a bit more kindness? Harnessing the Economics of Kindness
The beauty of living simply: the forgotten wisdom of William Morris
Finding sanctuary in poetry during lockdown
On the 250th Birthday of William Wordsworth Let Nature be our Wisest Teacher
Nature the Best Teacher: Re-Connecting the World’s Children with Nature
It’s All in The Mind: Focus on Mental Health
A Must Read Book about how Adam Smith can change your life for better
The Sweetness of Being Human: ‘We have all of us one human heart.’
The Damning Impact of a Toxic Philosophy on America: The Tragedy of Ayn Rand
Three Cheers for Moral Philosophy and Down with Economics as a Science
...And finally, lest we forget
This is the Path to Make the World Great Again: A Path Envisioned with Hope, Wisdom and Imagination
Illustration: Nathalie Lees/The Guardian
To reverse the current destructive path of valueless education, which values knowledge over wisdom, we need a different model of education and we need a different economic value and economy. However, these are not possible to achieve so long as The Fraudulent Ideology reins supreme. Full stop. Carpe Diem!
Why Love, Trust, Respect and Gratitude Trumps Economics
Nature the Best Teacher: Re-Connecting the World’s Children with Nature
On the 250th Birthday of William Wordsworth Let Nature be our Wisest Teacher …
And These are My Ten Steps to Make the World Great Again
And this can happen when education is all about knowledge and information and has nothing to do with wisdom!!
Brexit, Trump and the failure of our universities to pursue wisdom …
Britain today and the Bankruptcy of Ideas, Vision and Values-less Education
My recommended book of Wisdom that will change you and your understanding of what Education is or it should be forever.
Wisdom and the Well-Rounded Life: What Is a University?
'Reflecting on the pursuit of knowledge and wisdom in higher education and in life, this thoughtful treatise considers the roots and philosophical underpinnings of university education. Examining such subjects as philosophy, science, nature, art, religion, and finding one's place in the world, Peter Milward shares his sage thoughts on obtaining a well-rounded base of knowledge.'
Read the Foreword and more details about What is a University HERE
- Details
- Written by: Kamran Mofid
- Hits: 1327
Rethinking Our Approach to Economic, Social and Environmental Justice:
The Time is Now for a Visionary Leadership
“We need urgent action now, to recover better from Covid-19, to confront injustice and inequality, and address climate disruption.
We have seen young people on the front lines of climate action, showing us what bold leadership looks like.”-
UN secretary general, António Guterres.- Photo: UN News
UN calls on youth activists to advise on climate crisis and Covid-19 recovery*
Seven young people will take on roles to “provide perspectives, ideas and solutions”
- Details
- Written by: Kamran Mofid
- Hits: 1020
This should serve as a powerful message to Australia and others like them:
"Injustice flourishes in soil where empathy has been uprooted.”
Behrouz Boochani welcomed to freedom in New Zealand as he arrives at Auckland airport (14 November 2019).
Photo: The Guardian
The flight to freedom is long.
Behrouz Boochani: Refugee who wrote book- ‘No Friends But the Mountains’- using WhatsApp and became the voice of the victims of Australia’s punitive detention system granted a visa to stay in New Zealand and work towards full citizenship after seven-year horrific ordeal, suffering pain, anguish and inhumanity by Australia’s offshore processing regime.
Photo: Pan Macmillan Australia
N.B. ‘A Kurdish investigative journalist in his homeland, Iran, Boochani was persecuted for his reporting and his support for Kurdish rights, and fled for Australia in 2013. He arrived by boat on Christmas Island, an Australian territory in the Indian Ocean, on 23 July, the first place he reached where he could claim asylum. He was forcibly transferred to Manus Island just over a month later, to a detention facility that was later found to be illegal. He would spend 2,269 days held by Australia’s offshore processing regime...’
Behrouz Boochani granted refugee status in New Zealand*
Ben Doherty, Via The Guardian
Behrouz Boochani, the Kurdish Iranian exile and journalist who became the voice of those incarcerated on Manus Island, has had his refugee status formally recognised by New Zealand, and granted a visa to live there.
He said he finally felt secure “knowing that I have a future”.
“I am very happy to have some certainty about my future, I feel relieved and secure finally,” he told the Guardian from Christchurch.
“But, at the same time, I cannot fully celebrate this because so many people who were incarcerated with me are still struggling to get freedom, still in PNG, on Nauru, in detention in Australia. And even if they are released, Australia’s policy still exists.”
Boochani was officially notified by New Zealand’s government that his claim for asylum had been accepted on Thursday, exactly seven years to the day after his arrival in Australia in 2013.
The date – 23 July – is also Boochani’s birthday. He turned 37.
Over the course of six years held within Australia’s offshore processing regime in Papua New Guinea, Boochani emerged as the voice of the Manus Island detention centre and a tireless campaigner for the rights of those detained by Australia.
He has written extensively for the Guardian on life in detention and won Australia’s richest literary prize for his book, No Friend But the Mountains, which is being made into a film.
He secured a temporary visa to fly to New Zealand in November last year as a guest at a writers’ festival, and lodged a claim for protection when he arrived.
Boochani has now been granted a one-year work visa, and can apply for permanent residency in New Zealand, a pathway to citizenship. He has lived in Christchurch since leaving Papua New Guinea.
He says while some New Zealand politicians have sought to politicise his asylum claim – in the context of an election there this year – his reception in his new homeland has been overwhelmingly welcoming.
At the height of the pandemic, people left gifts and flowers at Boochani’s door. “People care about each other in New Zealand. They pushed back when some politicians tried to demonise me, they said ‘we don’t accept that hate speech’,” he said.
New Zealand hails Behrouz Boochani visa as a victory for 'fairness and compassion'
He is stopped in the street regularly by people who recognise him, and want to talk.
And Christchurch, he told the Guardian, suited him. He rides a bicycle around the city – “I feel free on my bike” – and hikes in the hills surrounding the city.
“This city is still traumatised,” Boochani said, in reference to the mosque shootings of March last year, “but this city is building itself, people are bringing life into this city, day by day, and there is a very peaceful community here.”
Boochani is working still: collaborating with Canterbury, Melbourne and New South Wales universities on projects about climate change and displacement, and writing another book, a collection of short stories.
He said he speaks to, and continues to advocate for, those he was incarcerated with who remain in detention. “I have a responsibility to those people, and to that six years of my life. That’s why I must work still. I cannot forget about those people, or ignore that time, that would be immoral.”
A Kurdish investigative journalist in his homeland, Iran, Boochani was persecuted for his reporting and his support for Kurdish rights, and fled for Australia in 2013.
He arrived by boat on Christmas Island, an Australian territory in the Indian Ocean, on 23 July, the first place he reached where he could claim asylum.
He was forcibly transferred to Manus Island just over a month later, to a detention facility that was later found to be illegal. He would spend 2,269 days held by Australia’s offshore processing regime.
After a protracted court case, he and nearly 2,000 others were compensated for their unlawful detention.
Over the six years he was held on Manus Island and in Port Moresby, Boochani witnessed friends shot, stabbed and murdered by guards on Manus Island, saw others die through medical neglect, and watched others descend into mental anguish and suicide.
He was twice tortured for several days in the notorious Chauka solitary confinement block, in the now-demolished Manus detention centre. He was jailed for eight days for reporting on a hunger strike in the centre, which was put down by force by PNG police.
But throughout he maintained a role as a working journalist on the island, the most prominent – and, initially, the sole – voice bearing witness from within the secretive regime.
“I am still a journalist in this place,” he told Guardian Australia in 2015. “This is my work, my duty.”- *This article was first published in The Guardian on Thursday 23 July 2020
Photo: YouTube
Watch this most powerful video- ‘Engaging with Behrouz Boochani and his novel 'No friend but the Mountains'-
on hope, resilience, brutality, violence and war against refugees.
We Refugees
…I am told I have no country now
I am told I am a lie
I am told that modern history books
May forget my name.
We can all be refugees
Sometimes it only takes a day,
Sometimes it only takes a handshake
Or a paper that is signed.
We all came from refugees
Nobody simply just appeared,
Nobody's here without a struggle,
And why should we live in fear
Of the weather or the troubles?
We all came here from somewhere.- Benjamin Zephaniah
This is the crisis of our times, and how we respond to it is a test of our values, our spirit, our humanity, our ingenuity, our generosity, and our sincerity:
We Refugees: I am told I have no country now …
The Gift of Refugees and Migrants
"Injustice flourishes in soil where empathy has been uprooted.”
...And finally
This is How to Make the World Great Again: The Compassion Project
- Dear Mr. Trump This is How to Make America Great Again
- World in Chaos and Despair: The Healing Power of Gardens
- If you want to know the truth about Brexit, Trump, and the rise of Populism, then you must see this!
- The Mother of all Heists: ‘The Neoliberal Looting of America’
- Celebrating the tree of life that has shaped human history and civilisation