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Contrairement à ce que l'on pourrait penser, les arbres ne sont pas des êtres solitaires enracinés dans un silence éternel. Bien au contraire. Des recherches récentes révèlent que les arbres, notamment les plus anciens, communiquent entre eux à travers un réseau subtil de signaux bioélectriques. Et ils ne parlent pas pour ne rien dire : ils transmettent des informations cruciales, notamment aux plus jeunes, pour leur survie.Une étude internationale fascinante, publiée en mai 2025 dans la revue Royal Society Open Science, a mis en lumière ce phénomène en étudiant une forêt de bouleaux dans les Dolomites. Conduite par des chercheurs de la Southern Cross University (Australie) et de l'Institut italien de technologie (IIT), cette étude montre que les arbres utilisent leur système électromagnétique pour se prévenir mutuellement en cas de danger environnemental, comme une éclipse solaire.Lorsqu'une éclipse se prépare, les arbres les plus âgés sont les premiers à détecter la perturbation lumineuse à venir. Avant même que l'événement ne survienne, ils envoient des signaux bioélectriques à travers la forêt. Grâce à un réseau de capteurs de faible puissance, les scientifiques ont pu observer que ces signaux déclenchent une réponse anticipée chez les arbres plus jeunes. La forêt agit alors comme un système coordonné, capable de se préparer collectivement à l'événement.Mais pourquoi une telle réaction face à une éclipse ? Parce que les arbres dépendent étroitement du cycle jour-nuit pour leurs fonctions vitales : régulation de l'eau, photosynthèse, transport des nutriments… Une baisse soudaine de lumière peut les désorienter et nuire à leur équilibre. En se mettant collectivement « en veille » au bon moment, les arbres minimisent le stress subi. C'est une stratégie adaptative invisible mais puissante.Pour les chercheurs, ce sont les vieux arbres qui jouent un rôle central dans cette communication forestière. Monica Gagliano, biologiste à l'Université de Californie du Sud, souligne que ces anciens arbres « servent de mémoire écologique », transmettant aux jeunes générations des signaux fondés sur leur expérience passée. Une forme d'intelligence végétale collective, ancrée dans l'âge et la mémoire.Cette découverte a des implications profondes : protéger les vieux arbres, c'est préserver la capacité des forêts à se défendre, à s'adapter et à enseigner. Car oui, dans le langage silencieux des forêts, les anciens murmurent à l'oreille des jeunes : « Prépare-toi. J'ai déjà vécu cela. Voici comment survivre. » Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Pflanzen besitzen Intelligenz und ein Bewusstsein, ist die Ökologin Monica Gagliano überzeugt. Tatsächlich verarbeiten sie Informationen aus der Umwelt. Wie das allerdings funktioniert ist für Forschende aus Botanik, Ökologie und Genetik ein Rätsel. Walch-Nasseri, Friederike www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Zeitfragen. Feature
Well Dash Hounds, if you are still out there listening and tuning in, we are thankful. Listening is an act of love. Love brings joy, and joy is a form of resistance. So sit back this week and learn how Kelly and Beth are getting through the hard times naturally. Of course with everything that seems good, be cautious. Nature is such a healer until it isn't. And it's just you and your houseplant whose picking up on your negative vibes and blaming you for everything. Confused? So are we. Theme music: Big White Lie by A Cast of Thousands. Cite your sources, dude Eells, Josh. “He Talked to Plants and They Talked Back.” New York Times, 21 December 2017, https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/news/the-lives-they-lived/2013/12/21/cleve-backster/. First, Elsa. “The Secret Life of Plants.” New York Times, 30 December 1973, https://www.nytimes.com/1973/12/30/archives/the-secret-life-of-plants-by-peter-tompkins-and-christopher-bird.html. Fitzgerald, Sunny. “The Secret to Mindful TRavel: A Walk in the Woods.” National Geographic, vol. October, 2019, https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/article/forest-bathing-nature-walk-health. McEvoy, Patrick. “Courage, Memory and Voice: A Review of Monica Gagliano's Thus Spoke the Plant.” Ecological Citizen, https://www.ecologicalcitizen.net/pdfs/v04n1-13.pdf. Schreiber, Dan. The Theory of Everything Else: A Voyage Into the World of the Weird. HarperCollinsPublishers, 2023. Stempel, Jonathan, and Husch Blackwell. “Apple to pay $95 million to settle Siri privacy lawsuit.” Reuters, 2 January 2025, https://www.reuters.com/legal/apple-pay-95-million-settle-siri-privacy-lawsuit-2025-01-02/. Accessed 20 January 2025.
In an episode we first aired in 2018, we asked the question, do you really need a brain to sense the world around you? To remember? Or even learn? Well, it depends on who you ask. Jad and Robert, they are split on this one. Today, Robert drags Jad along on a parade for the surprising feats of brainless plants. Along with a home-inspection duo, a science writer, and some enterprising scientists at Princeton University, we dig into the work of evolutionary ecologist Monica Gagliano, who turns our brain-centered worldview on its head through a series of clever experiments that show plants doing things we never would've imagined. Can Robert get Jad to join the march?We have some exciting news! In the “Zoozve” episode, Radiolab named one of Venus's quasi-moons. Then, Radiolab teamed up with The International Astronomical Union to launch a global naming contest for one of Earth's quasi-moons, so that you, our listeners, could help us name another, and we now have a winner!! Early next week, head over to https://radiolab.org/moon, to check out the new name for the heavenly body you all helped make happen.Sign-up for our newsletter!! It includes short essays, recommendations, and details about other ways to interact with the show. Sign up (https://radiolab.org/newsletter)!Radiolab is supported by listeners like you. Support Radiolab by becoming a member of The Lab (https://members.radiolab.org/) today.Follow our show on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @radiolab, and share your thoughts with us by emailing radiolab@wnyc.org.Leadership support for Radiolab's science programming is provided by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Science Sandbox, a Simons Foundation Initiative, and the John Templeton Foundation. Foundational support for Radiolab was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.
How do plants communicate using sound? How do they remember previous stimuli that have proven not to be threat, when at first they seemed like one? Where is the memory encoded considering they have no brain? What are the implications for biology of plant memory? In this episode we cover the ground breaking topics in plant cognition studies of: plant intelligence, behaviour, memory and communication. The type of experiments presented here have never really been done before, because there has always been an assumption in plant science that the cellular cognition that all living cells have, relies solely on light, touch or chemical interactions; so it doesn't really permit for plant behaviour, memory and consciousness. So with my guest today, the first scientist to bypass the assumptions and try these tests, we're going to discuss her experiments with plants; that clearly show not only basic memory and the corresponding updated behaviour based on that memory, but even pavlovian memory, i.e. associative memory that requires arbitrary stimuli to take on meaning to the plant. Obviously all of this has massive implications for distributed memory and memory beyond brains. We're also going to get into plant medicine and other indigenous approaches to connecting with plant consciousness; and what plant communication and biophilia in general might do for our relationship to the natural world as we face imminent biosphere collapse. My guest is of course, the research associate professor of Evolutionary Ecology at several universities in Australia, Monica Gagliano. She's published over 60 scientific papers, across the fields of Ecology, Plant Cognition, Plant Communications and Marine Ecology. She is also the author of the books “The Language of Plants: Science, Philosophy and Literature”, and the highly celebrated,“Thus Spoke the Plant, A remarkable Journey of Groundbreaking Scientific Discoveries and Personal Encounters”. What we discuss: 00:00 Intro 05:00 The consensus on Plant intelligence & communication. 09:20 The difference between reacting and responding in cognition. 10:00 Bio-acoustic communication between plants. 21:07 Possible methods for plants to percieve sound. 22:00 Response to gravity may be similar. 23:30 Her plant memory experiment with Mimosa. 27:15 ‘Habituation' learning: screening out non-useful stimuli. 32:15 The connection between hardship and accelerated adaptive learning. 37:50 Her ‘Pavlovian' associative memory experiment with peas. 46:10 The Implications of plant memory for modern biology. 49:25 Where is memory stored without a nervous system? 52:30 Monica's ethical crisis in animal studies. 01:00:00 ‘Pavlovian' associative memory experiment with peas. 01:01:30 ‘Dieta', amazonian plant communication practice. 01:05:00 Shamanic interface with plant wisdom, particularly for healing. 01:08:00 Reductionist materialist pushback is representative of the colonial history of abuse of nature. 01:11:00 Indigenous science and a new book in the making. References: Monica Gagliano, “Thus Spoke the Plant, A remarkable Journey of Groundbreaking Scientific Discoveries and Personal Encounters”. Gagliano, Manusco & Robert, “Towards Understanding Plant Bioacoustics” paper
Monica Gagliano is a research associate professor in evolutionary ecology and former fellow of the Australian Research Council. She is currently based at Southern Cross University, where she directs the Biological Intelligence Lab funded by the Templeton World Charity Foundation. She has pioneered the brand-new research field of plant bioacoustics, for the first time experimentally demonstrating that plants emit their own “voices” and detect and respond to the sounds of their environments. Her work has extended the concept of cognition (including perception, learning processes, memory) in plants. Her latest book is Thus Spoke the Plant (North Atlantic Books, 2018). monicagagliano.com Aware: Glimpses of Consciousness “Can Plants Talk?” in The New York Times
Human Entities 2024: culture in the age of artificial intelligenceEighth edition, 15 May 2024 Plant consciousnessMonica GaglianoEvolutionary ecologist, Research Associate Professor (Adjunct) at Southern Cross University, Australia Monica Gagliano PhD is an internationally award-winning research scientist, selected by Biohabitats as one of the 24 most Inspiring Women of Ecology, together with Jane Goodall, Rachel Carson, Sylvia Earl, and Terry Tempest Williams. She has been an invited lecturer at the most prestigious universities, including UC Berkeley, Stanford, Harvard, Dartmouth and Georgetown. Monica's pioneering work has been widely featured by prominent media, such as The New York Times, Forbes, The New Yorker, The Guardian, National Geographic, and many others. Monica is Research Associate Professor (Adjunct) of evolutionary ecology based in Australia. She is currently Chief Scientist at Kaiāulu|Coherence Lab in Hawaii, and Research Associate at the Takiwasi Centre in Perú. Monica has pioneered the brand-new research field of plant bioacoustics, which for the first time, experimentally demonstrates that plants emit voices and detect and respond to the sounds of their environments. Her work has extended the concept of cognition in plants. By demonstrating experimentally that learning and memory are not the exclusive province of animals, Monica has reignited the discourse of plant subjectivity, as well as ethical and legal standing. Inspired by encounters with nature and indigenous elders from around the world, Monica applies an innovative and holistic approach to science, one that is comfortable engaging at the interface between areas as diverse as ecology, physics, law, anthropology, philosophy, literature, music, the arts, and spirituality. By re-kindling a sense of wonder for the beautiful place we call home, she is helping to create a new ecology of mind that inspires the emergence of revolutionary solutions toward human interactions with the world we co-inhabit. Monica's studies have led her to author numerous ground-breaking scientific articles and books, including Thus Spoke the Plant (2018) and The Mind of Plants (2021). https://www.monicagagliano.comhttps://www.instagram.com/_monicagagliano_https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monica_Gaglianohttps://researchportal.scu.edu.au/esploro/profile/monica_gagliano/overview CreditsOrganised by CADA in partnership with Lisbon Architecture Triennale and Faculty of Fine Arts, University of Lisbon Programmed by Jared Hawkey/Sofia Oliveira with guest programmers: Andrea Pavoni, Justin Jaeckle, Lavínia Pereira and Olivia Bina. Funded by: República Portuguesa – Cultura / Direção-Geral das ArtesSupport: Câmara Municipal de Lisboa; Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia – NOVA LINCS; Instituto Ciências Sociais, Urban Transitions Hub, Universidade de Lisboa; DINAMIA'CET (ISCTE-IUL) and Faculdade Belas Artes, Universidade de Lisboa, Departamentos de Design de Comunicação e Arte MultimédiaDesign: Pedro LoureiroPhotography: Joana LindaSound: Diogo Melo
Hi friends, we will be on hiatus for the fall. To tide you over, we're putting up some favorite episodes from our archives. Sadly, the guest featured in this week's archive pick—Karen Bakker—passed way last month. Her colleagues at UBC posted a rememberance here. ——— Consider the peacock. Its plumage is legendary—those shimmering, iridescent colors, and those eerie, enchanting eyespots. But what often goes less appreciated (at least by us humans) is that this chromatic extravaganza is also a sonic extravaganza. The peacock's display operates in infrasound, an acoustic dimension that we simply can't hear without assistance. Which raises a question: If we're oblivious to the full vibrancy of the peacock's display, what other sounds might we be missing out on? My guest today is Dr. Karen Bakker. Karen is Professor of Geography at the University of British Columbia and author of the new book, The Sounds of Life: How Digital Technology is Bringing us Closer to the Worlds of Animals and Plants. In the book, Karen dives into rich realms of sound that, for one reason or another, humans have tended to ignore. In this conversation, Karen and I discuss the twin fields of "bioacoustics" and "ecoacoustics." We talk about "deep listening" and "digital listening", "infrasound" and "ultrasound." We discuss why sound is such a ubiquitous signaling medium across the tree of life. We consider the fact that scientific discoveries about sound have often been resisted. We touch on debates about whether animal communication systems constitute languages, and discuss new efforts to decode those systems using AI. We also talk about turtles, bats, plants, coral, bees, and—yes—peacocks. If you enjoy our conversation, I strongly recommend Karen's book. It's really bursting with insight, science, and stories—all presented with unusual clarity. Another year of Many Minds is drawing to a close and we're about to go on a brief holiday hiatus. But first a little end-of-year ask: What topics or thinkers would you like to see us feature in 2023? If you have any ideas, we'd love to hear them. You can email us at: manymindspodcast@gmail.com. Alright friends, I hope you enjoy the holidays. And I hope you enjoy this conversation with Dr. Karen Bakker. A transcript of this episode is available here. Notes and links 3:30 – A range of bat sounds are available on the website of Dr. Mirjam Knörnschild (who was previously featured on the show!). 4:30 – The winner of the 2014 ‘Most Beautiful Sound in the World' contest was a recording of a froggy swamp in Malaysia. 10:30 – A popular article profiling the relatively young field of “bioacoustics.” A recent academic article by Dr. Bakker and a colleague about “conservation acoustics” in particular. 11:30 – A popular article about the use of acoustic technologies to discover and monitor whale populations. 17:00 – A research article about the involvement of infrasound in peacock mating displays. 23:30 – A research study showing that coral larvae move toward reef sounds. 28:00 – A review paper by Camila Ferrara and colleagues about sound communication in Amazonian river turtles. 31:00 – A research article by Heidi Appel and a colleague about plants responding to the sounds of leaf-chewing. 35:00 – A recent historical study of Karl von Frisch and his work with honey bees. A recent study suggesting the possibility of play in bumble bees (not honey bees). 42:00 – A popular article profiling the field of “biosemiotics.” 48:00 – An essay by Dr. Bakker about honeybee communication and how technologies may be helping us understand it. 53:00 – Dr. Bakker recommends books by Indigenous scholars Robin Wall-Kimmerer (Braiding Sweetgrass), Dylan Robinson (Hungry Listening), and John Borrows. Dr. Bakker recommends: A number of examples of the “sounds of life” are collected at Dr. Bakker's website, here. The same site also includes recommendations for getting involved in citizen science. In addition to the books by Indigenous scholars listed above, Dr. Bakker recommends work by Monica Gagliano. You can read more about Karen's work on her website and follow her on Twitter. Many Minds is a project of the Diverse Intelligences Summer Institute (DISI) (https://disi.org), which is made possible by a generous grant from the Templeton World Charity Foundation to UCLA. It is hosted and produced by Kensy Cooperrider, with help from Assistant Producer Urte Laukaityte and with creative support from DISI Directors Erica Cartmill and Jacob Foster. Our artwork is by Ben Oldroyd (https://www.mayhilldesigns.co.uk/). Our transcripts are created by Sarah Dopierala (https://sarahdopierala.wordpress.com/). You can subscribe to Many Minds on Apple, Stitcher, Spotify, Pocket Casts, Google Play, or wherever you like to listen to podcasts. **You can now subscribe to the Many Minds newsletter here!** We welcome your comments, questions, and suggestions. Feel free to email us at: manymindspodcast@gmail.com. For updates about the show, visit our website (https://disi.org/manyminds/), or follow us on Twitter: @ManyMindsPod.
We wanted to create this episode highlighting some shimmering jewels from the first 50 episodes of the podcast. We know that getting into a podcast can be daunting when there are dozens of episodes to choose from. So we wanted to distill some of the varied guests from our previous episodes with some clips from the show. Consider becoming a member of SAND to support the production costs of this podcast. Thank you for listening and sharing the show. Guest Clips 3:18 – Peter Russell from #8 Evolving with Consciousness 7:04 – Monica Gagliano from #23 The Songs of Gaia 12:18 – Donald Hoffman and Rupert Spira from #38 Weaving the Eternal Golden Braid 21:00 – Gabor Maté and Resma Menaken from #24 Somatic Abolitionism 26:42 – Eriel Tchekwie Deranger from #14 Healing Relationships in Community and Ourselves 29:00 – Neil Theise from #34 Conversations on Complexity 33:40 – Joan Tollifson from #30 Here. Now. Being. 37:10 – Bayo Akomolafe and Sophie Strand from #6 New Gods at the End of the World 41:54 – Parvathy Baul from #47 What Shines
Did you know that in 2022, red meat consumption dropped by a whopping 44%? Animal fat utilization declined by 78%, butter by 68%, and margarine increased by a staggering 192%! The mainstream anti-meat narrative has altered our collective beliefs about nutrition - and potentially with dire consequences. But don't worry, we're not here to scare you - in fact, we're here to empower you with the knowledge you need to make the best choices for your body. This episode is all about reclaiming vitality through nutrition. We'll take you on a journey through the world of food and agriculture, revealing the powerful impact it has on your body and the truth behind the greenwashing, low prices and other product label illusions that complicate our food choices. Our amazing guest for today is Autumn Smith, cofounder of Paleovalley. Their mission is to create products with integrity that are free from problematic ingredients and teeming with ingredients that promote vibrant health. They prioritize nutrient density in an industry that prioritizes everything else, and believe that every dietary choice and every added ingredient is a powerful opportunity to love and care for yourself. In this episode, Autumn fills us in on regenerative agriculture, climate change, and the vital role animals play in our ecosystem. She shares a sneak peek into her exciting upcoming docuseries, "Rethink Meat," which is being created to help dispel the myth that meat is dangerous. We also discuss the dangers of conventional agriculture and the critical role that soil health plays in our food choices. I hope this conversation helps you make sense of terms like "pasture-raised" and "free-range", so you can make the best choices when buying products and avoid being misled by labels. If you identify as a vegetarian or vegan, you'll be especially sure to learn something new ;) Check out Autumn's company and products: Paleovalley and Wild Pastures. I LOVE THEM and use them myself every day! And you can SAVE 10% OFF your order too with my special discount code “AMYFOURNIER10”! TIME STAMPS 00:00:00 Episode Begins 00:10:47 Interview Begins 00:12:28 Autumn's Story 00:17:16 Autumn's Upcoming Docuseries 00:19:42 The 3 Types Of Agriculture 00:24:45 Reductionism 00:26:01 Turmeric Complex 00:29:10 Conventional Meat 00:34:10 Environmental Health Risks 00:39:34 Labeling Illusions 00:43:30 Fred Provenza Episode 00:46:11 The Anti-Animal Narrative 00:51:43 Monica Gagliano's Episode 00:57:21 What Do Vegetarians/Vegans Need To Know? 01:02:04 Myths On Saturated Fat & Cholesterol 01:06:47 Alarming Statistics 01:11:05 Autumn's Solution 01:18:59 Coupon Code: amyfournier10 01:20:54 Autumn's Resources Sharing your kind thoughts & feedback in a review is the ULTIMATE way to support Awakening Aphrodite. You can also jump on Amy's email list and follow her updates at @FitAmyTV. Find out more at amyfournier.com and watch this episode on YouTube at Awakening Aphrodite Podcast/FitAmyTV! For special discounts on Amy's FAVORITE products, visit her estore.
Did you know that in 2022, red meat consumption dropped by a whopping 44%? Animal fat utilization declined by 78%, butter by 68%, and margarine increased by a staggering 192%! The mainstream anti-meat narrative has altered our collective beliefs about nutrition - and potentially with dire consequences. But don't worry, we're not here to scare you - in fact, we're here to empower you with the knowledge you need to make the best choices for your body. This episode is all about reclaiming vitality through nutrition. We'll take you on a journey through the world of food and agriculture, revealing the powerful impact it has on your body and the truth behind the greenwashing, low prices and other product label illusions that complicate our food choices. Our amazing guest for today is Autumn Smith, cofounder of Paleovalley. Their mission is to create products with integrity that are free from problematic ingredients and teeming with ingredients that promote vibrant health. They prioritize nutrient density in an industry that prioritizes everything else, and believe that every dietary choice and every added ingredient is a powerful opportunity to love and care for yourself. In this episode, Autumn fills us in on regenerative agriculture, climate change, and the vital role animals play in our ecosystem. She shares a sneak peek into her exciting upcoming docuseries, "Rethink Meat," which is being created to help dispel the myth that meat is dangerous. We also discuss the dangers of conventional agriculture and the critical role that soil health plays in our food choices. I hope this conversation helps you make sense of terms like "pasture-raised" and "free-range", so you can make the best choices when buying products and avoid being misled by labels. If you identify as a vegetarian or vegan, you'll be especially sure to learn something new ;) Check out Autumn's company and products: Paleovalley and Wild Pastures. I LOVE THEM and use them myself every day! And you can SAVE 10% OFF your order too with my special discount code “AMYFOURNIER10”! TIME STAMPS 00:00:00 Episode Begins 00:10:47 Interview Begins 00:12:28 Autumn's Story 00:17:16 Autumn's Upcoming Docuseries 00:19:42 The 3 Types Of Agriculture 00:24:45 Reductionism 00:26:01 Turmeric Complex 00:29:10 Conventional Meat 00:34:10 Environmental Health Risks 00:39:34 Labeling Illusions 00:43:30 Fred Provenza Episode 00:46:11 The Anti-Animal Narrative 00:51:43 Monica Gagliano's Episode 00:57:21 What Do Vegetarians/Vegans Need To Know? 01:02:04 Myths On Saturated Fat & Cholesterol 01:06:47 Alarming Statistics 01:11:05 Autumn's Solution 01:18:59 Coupon Code: amyfournier10 01:20:54 Autumn's Resources Sharing your kind thoughts & feedback in a review is the ULTIMATE way to support Awakening Aphrodite. You can also jump on Amy's email list and follow her updates at @FitAmyTV. Find out more at amyfournier.com and watch this episode on YouTube at Awakening Aphrodite Podcast/FitAmyTV! For special discounts on Amy's FAVORITE products, visit her estore.
Did you know that in 2022, red meat consumption dropped by a whopping 44%? Animal fat utilization declined by 78%, butter by 68%, and margarine increased by a staggering 192%! The mainstream anti-meat narrative has altered our collective beliefs about nutrition - and potentially with dire consequences. But don't worry, we're not here to scare you - in fact, we're here to empower you with the knowledge you need to make the best choices for your body. This episode is all about reclaiming vitality through nutrition. We'll take you on a journey through the world of food and agriculture, revealing the powerful impact it has on your body and the truth behind the greenwashing, low prices and other product label illusions that complicate our food choices. Our amazing guest for today is Autumn Smith, cofounder of Paleovalley. Their mission is to create products with integrity that are free from problematic ingredients and teeming with ingredients that promote vibrant health. They prioritize nutrient density in an industry that prioritizes everything else, and believe that every dietary choice and every added ingredient is a powerful opportunity to love and care for yourself. In this episode, Autumn fills us in on regenerative agriculture, climate change, and the vital role animals play in our ecosystem. She shares a sneak peek into her exciting upcoming docuseries, "Rethink Meat," which is being created to help dispel the myth that meat is dangerous. We also discuss the dangers of conventional agriculture and the critical role that soil health plays in our food choices. I hope this conversation helps you make sense of terms like "pasture-raised" and "free-range", so you can make the best choices when buying products and avoid being misled by labels. If you identify as a vegetarian or vegan, you'll be especially sure to learn something new ;) Check out Autumn's company and products: Paleovalley and Wild Pastures. I LOVE THEM and use them myself every day! And you can SAVE 10% OFF your order too with my special discount code “AMYFOURNIER10”! TIME STAMPS 00:00:00 Episode Begins 00:10:47 Interview Begins 00:12:28 Autumn's Story 00:17:16 Autumn's Upcoming Docuseries 00:19:42 The 3 Types Of Agriculture 00:24:45 Reductionism 00:26:01 Turmeric Complex 00:29:10 Conventional Meat 00:34:10 Environmental Health Risks 00:39:34 Labeling Illusions 00:43:30 Fred Provenza Episode 00:46:11 The Anti-Animal Narrative 00:51:43 Monica Gagliano's Episode 00:57:21 What Do Vegetarians/Vegans Need To Know? 01:02:04 Myths On Saturated Fat & Cholesterol 01:06:47 Alarming Statistics 01:11:05 Autumn's Solution 01:18:59 Coupon Code: amyfournier10 01:20:54 Autumn's Resources Sharing your kind thoughts & feedback in a review is the ULTIMATE way to support Awakening Aphrodite. You can also jump on Amy's email list and follow her updates at @FitAmyTV. Find out more at amyfournier.com and watch this episode on YouTube at Awakening Aphrodite Podcast/FitAmyTV! For special discounts on Amy's FAVORITE products, visit her estore.
Con Gabi Scardi, critica, curatrice e docente di arte contemporanea e Alice Benessia, fisica, filosofa della scienza e artista, parliamo dell'ultimo numero della rivista Anjmot, So long, 7and thanks for all the fish, Safari editore, di Lav, di Università di Torino, di Pianpicollo Selvatico, di Monica Gagliano, di pesci, di delfini, di orsi, ma anche di Giulia e Giò, dei loro figli, di Selvatica Milano e scopriamo che Alice voleva essere Asina e Gabi Cane
Monica Gagliano is a research associate professor in evolutionary ecology and former fellow of the Australian Research Council. She is currently based at Southern Cross University, where she directs the Biological Intelligence Lab funded by the Templeton World Charity Foundation. She has pioneered the brand-new research field of plant bioacoustics, for the first time experimentally demonstrating that plants emit their own “voices” and detect and respond to the sounds of their environments. Her work has extended the concept of cognition (including perception, learning processes, memory) in plants. Her latest book is Thus Spoke the Plant (North Atlantic Books, 2018). / monicagagliano.com / Aware: Glimpses of Consciousness
David's guest today is Dr Monica Gagliano who is Research Associate Professor in Evolutionary Ecology at the Biological Intelligence (BI) Lab, Southern Cross University in Perth, Australia. Her main research is broadly focusing on key aspects of the ecological processes by which organisms are able to gather information on the variable conditions of their surrounding environment in order to thrive. In collaboration with various disciplines across the Sciences and the Humanities, her research aims at expanding our perception of animals, plants and more generally Nature. In the process of learning how to do this, she has pioneered the brand-new research field of plant bioacoustics and extended the concept of cognition to plants, re-igniting the discourse on plant subjectivity, sentience and ethical standing.“Not all who wander are lost” - Goethe“The soul has an absolute and unforgiving need for regular excursions into enchantment” - Thomas MooreImaginal Inspirations is hosted by David Lorimer, Programme Director of the Scientific and Medical Network and Chair of the Galileo Commission, an academic movement dedicated to expanding the evidence base of a science of consciousness. Imaginal cells are responsible for the metamorphosis of the caterpillar into a butterfly, which is the Greek symbol for the soul. These cells are dormant in the caterpillar but at a critical point of development they create the new form and structure which becomes the butterfly.scientificandmedical.netgalileocommission.orgbeyondthebrain.org Works and links mentioned:https://uk.bookshop.org/books/thus-spoke-the-plant-a-remarkable-journey-of-groundbreaking-scientific-discoveries-and-personal-encounters-with-plants/9781623172435The Mind of Plants https://blackwells.co.uk/bookshop/product/9780907791874https://www.waterstones.com/book/the-green-thread/patricia-vieira/monica-gagliano/9781498510615Thomas Berry - The Dream of the Earth https://uk.bookshop.org/books/the-dream-of-the-earth/9781619025325Tao Te Ching https://uk.bookshop.org/books/the-divine-feminine-tao-te-ching-a-new-translation-and-commentary/9781644112465Production: Martin RedfernArtwork: Amber HaasMusic: Life is a River, by Magnus Moone
Self-actualization is a function of consciousness where the inner-self is recognized and expressed in one's life. When conducting a pea plant experiment to test associative learning, Dr. Gagliano used a classical conditioning experiment similar to the "Pavlovian Dog" experiment to reveal the pea plant was capable of projecting into the future, imagining dinner. "I was doing a process called the Deitas, a deep plant meditation, and during that time I was literally dictated this experiment. I found myself writing down notes in my diary and realized, oh my god, this is an experiment. The plants gave me details about everything." You'll never look at your house plants the same again.
Consider the peacock. Its plumage is legendary—those shimmering, iridescent colors, and those eerie, enchanting eyespots. But what often goes less appreciated (at least by us humans) is that this chromatic extravaganza is also a sonic extravaganza. The peacock's display operates in infrasound, an acoustic dimension that we simply can't hear without assistance. Which raises a question: If we're oblivious to the full vibrancy of the peacock's display, what other sounds might we be missing out on? My guest today is Dr. Karen Bakker. Karen is Professor of Geography at the University of British Columbia and author of the new book, The Sounds of Life: How Digital Technology is Bringing us Closer to the Worlds of Animals and Plants. In the book, Karen dives into rich realms of sound that, for one reason or another, humans have tended to ignore. In this conversation, Karen and I discuss the twin fields of "bioacoustics" and "ecoacoustics." We talk about "deep listening" and "digital listening", "infrasound" and "ultrasound." We discuss why sound is such a ubiquitous signaling medium across the tree of life. We consider the fact that scientific discoveries about sound have often been resisted. We touch on debates about whether animal communication systems constitute languages, and discuss new efforts to decode those systems using AI. We also talk about turtles, bats, plants, coral, bees, and—yes—peacocks. If you enjoy our conversation, I strongly recommend Karen's book. It's really bursting with insight, science, and stories—all presented with unusual clarity. Another year of Many Minds is drawing to a close and we're about to go on a brief holiday hiatus. But first a little end-of-year ask: What topics or thinkers would you like to see us feature in 2023? If you have any ideas, we'd love to hear them. You can email us at: manymindspodcast@gmail.com. Alright friends, I hope you enjoy the holidays. And I hope you enjoy this conversation with Dr. Karen Bakker. A transcript of this episode will be available soon. Notes and links 3:30 – A range of bat sounds are available on the website of Dr. Mirjam Knörnschild (who was previously featured on the show!). 4:30 – The winner of the 2014 ‘Most Beautiful Sound in the World' contest was a recording of a froggy swamp in Malaysia. 10:30 – A popular article profiling the relatively young field of “bioacoustics.” A recent academic article by Dr. Bakker and a colleague about “conservation acoustics” in particular. 11:30 – A popular article about the use of acoustic technologies to discover and monitor whale populations. 17:00 – A research article about the involvement of infrasound in peacock mating displays. 23:30 – A research study showing that coral larvae move toward reef sounds. 28:00 – A review paper by Camila Ferrara and colleagues about sound communication in Amazonian river turtles. 31:00 – A research article by Heidi Appel and a colleague about plants responding to the sounds of leaf-chewing. 35:00 – A recent historical study of Karl von Frisch and his work with honey bees. A recent study suggesting the possibility of play in bumble bees (not honey bees). 42:00 – A popular article profiling the field of “biosemiotics.” 48:00 – An essay by Dr. Bakker about honeybee communication and how technologies may be helping us understand it. 53:00 – Dr. Bakker recommends books by Indigenous scholars Robin Wall-Kimmerer (Braiding Sweetgrass), Dylan Robinson (Hungry Listening), and John Borrows. Dr. Bakker recommends: A number of examples of the “sounds of life” are collected at Dr. Bakker's website, here. The same site also includes recommendations for getting involved in citizen science. In addition to the books by Indigenous scholars listed above, Dr. Bakker recommends work by Monica Gagliano. You can read more about Karen's work on her website and follow her on Twitter. Many Minds is a project of the Diverse Intelligences Summer Institute (DISI) (https://disi.org), which is made possible by a generous grant from the Templeton World Charity Foundation to UCLA. It is hosted and produced by Kensy Cooperrider, with help from Assistant Producer Urte Laukaityte and with creative support from DISI Directors Erica Cartmill and Jacob Foster. Our artwork is by Ben Oldroyd (https://www.mayhilldesigns.co.uk/). Our transcripts are created by Sarah Dopierala (https://sarahdopierala.wordpress.com/). You can subscribe to Many Minds on Apple, Stitcher, Spotify, Pocket Casts, Google Play, or wherever you like to listen to podcasts. **You can now also subscribe to the Many Minds newsletter here!** We welcome your comments, questions, and suggestions. Feel free to email us at: manymindspodcast@gmail.com. For updates about the show, visit our website (https://disi.org/manyminds/), or follow us on Twitter: @ManyMindsPod.
We're all part of this greater consciousness. How does that extend to nature? Initially interested in plant communication Dr. Gagliano discovers that plants are aware and behave in ways we never imagined. Plants are capable of memory, stimulus response, learning experience and awareness of environment. "I can certainly tell you that Mimosa Pudica can remember for at least a month." Is a brain critical for any form of cognition? "We have evidence to the contrary. I feel it's a very superficial take on what's happening. No it [cognition] doesn't arise from any brain or neuron. It is the brain and neuron who are informed by cognition."
This episode consists of Part 1 & Part 2. In this week's conversation, we speak with Ecologist Monica Gagliano about her groundbreaking research with plants in context to perception, learning, memory, cognition, and intelligence. Her work opens a new awareness of how we perceive the plant world and challenges traditional thinking about plant and animal intelligence, and how we might connect on a much deeper level than we ever thought. We hear about the patient little Mimosa plant, or Sensitive plant, and how they learn, remember and react. Kindred is hosted by Kate Coffin and Jenn Asplundh. Please find out more info and message us at kindredpodcast.co. Follow Us Instagram @thekindredpod Facebook @thekindredpod Support us at Patreon/kindredpodcast Please follow, rate, and review. Thanks.
This episode consists of Part 1 & Part 2. In this week's conversation, we speak with Ecologist Monica Gagliano about her groundbreaking research with plants in context to perception, learning, memory, cognition, and intelligence. Her work opens a new awareness of how we perceive the plant world and challenges traditional thinking about plant and animal intelligence, and how we might connect on a much deeper level than we ever thought. We hear about the patient little Mimosa plant, or Sensitive plant, and how they learn, remember and react. Kindred is hosted by Kate Coffin and Jenn Asplundh. Please find out more info and message us at kindredpodcast.co. Follow Us Instagram @thekindredpod Facebook @thekindredpod Support us at Patreon/kindredpodcast Please follow, rate, and review. Thanks.
Nel libro della ricercatrice Monica Gagliano un viaggio affascinante tra le piante e la ricerca scientifica.
One of my clients, Sonia, is currently listening to one Going Conscious episode a day and has been doing so since the beginning of the show, now on episode 41! She has been finding it very powerful and is enjoying seeing themes emerge. She's inspired me to start doing the same. In this recap episode you will hear the first parts of four Going Conscious episodes that centre around plant-based living, removing animals from the food chain and the incredible unknown powers of plants. This time they are coming from very varied perspectives, from advocacy to science. We will hear from Elaine who is spearheading the post-animal economy and working with startups and investors in growing a next-gen materials industry to replace animal-based materials. We will hear from Monica the Research Associate Professor who pioneered the brand-new research field of plant bioacoustics, demonstrating that plants emit their own ‘voices' and detect and respond to the sounds of their environments. We will hear from Joey who is Founder & Co-Owner of Veshin Factory in China, where he and his partners are on a mission to move the fashion accessories industry to conscious, sustainable, vegan production. And we will hear from Stephanie who is Founder and Managing Director of Vegan Mainstream - a trailblazer in the vegan business world since 2009. Please let me know in a short review which episode, guest or takeaway grabs your attention, and I'll be reading some out as listener shout-outs soon. To listen to the full episodes, search for: #77 Elaine Sui #16 Monica Gagliano #41 Joey Pringle #59 Stephanie Redcross West Discover show notes, book recommendations and more on www.goingconscious.com. Connect with Nikki:Instagram & LinkedIn @nikkitrott www.consciousaccelerator.com
“Alexa, queue Body by Megan Thee Stallion & Snatched by Big Boss Vette” This week, we're tackling the Invasion of the Body Snatchers franchise, where the flowers can't be trusted, sleep is the enemy, and an emotionally unavailable boyfriend might actually save your life. Big thanks to our friend Jason D of @jasondshotsauce for suggesting this one! Follow us on Instagram at @thewhorrorspodcast Email us at thewhorrorspodcast@gmail.com Artwork by Gabrielle Fatula (gabrielle@gabriellefatula.com) Music: Epic Industrial Music Trailer by SeverMusicProd Standard Music License Works Referenced: The Legacy of Invasion of the Body Snatchers by Jim Knipfel: https://www.denofgeek.com/movies/the-legacy-of-invasion-of-the-body-snatchers/ Howe, Andrew (2015). "Monstrous Flora: Dangerous Cinematic Plants of the Cold War Era". In Patrícia Vieira; Monica Gagliano; John Charles Ryan (eds.). The Green Thread: Dialogues with the Vegetal World. Lanham: Lexington Books. pp. 147–166. ISBN 978-1498510608. Invasion of the Body Snatchers Wikis:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invasion_of_the_Body_Snatchers; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pod_People_(Invasion_of_the_Body_Snatchers); https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_Snatchers_(1993_film)#CITEREFKn%C3%B6ppler2017 Knöppler, Christian (2017). The Monster Always Returns: American Horror Films and Their Remakes. Bielefeld: transcript Verlag. ISBN 978-3839437353. Horror Timelines Episode 73 : Invasion of the Body Snatchers video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wBEBkTEJ7U
Have you ever used lavender essence to relax before bedtime, ginseng or ginger in your tea or perhaps elderberry syrup to boost your natural immunity? If you answered yes to any of those, guess what? You have been practicing herbal medicine, just the way nature intended it! More than ever before in our modern world, people are searching for natural ways to support the health of their minds and bodies. This episode offers timely wisdom and insight from one of the most influential urban herbalists and authors on plant medicines of our time: Judith Berger, writer of the ever-relevant Herbal Rituals. In my opinion, it's much more than a book, and definitely more than a common reference for naturally treating health conditions: it is a lyrical homage to the ancient practices of herbal medicine. Judith Berger is an herbalist, a prolific author, a poet and Physician Assistant who was born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. As you'll hear in this episode, her earliest contact with nature was through the prism of fairy tales, the wilds of her father's backyard garden and the dark corridors of the local plant nursery where she first cherished the scent of soil. She spent ten years in New York City studying and practicing as an urban herbalist before pursuing a degree as a Physician Assistant to integrate natural medicine with the modern medical model. This episode will take you on an adventure into the world of plants and medicine! We talk about the soul of nature and the subtle, complex medicine of plants and mushrooms. Judith shares her thoughts on the digital overwhelm of our time, and offers insight on how herbal treatments can soothe our nerves to balance the stress of everyday life. We discuss the many changes the field of herbalism underwent since the writing of Herbal Rituals, and Judith shares her experiences of herbal effectiveness and contrasting medical philosophies realized through her training as Physician Assistant. We also cover the history and folklore of certain medicinal plants, the contributions of St. Hildegarde of Bingen, common herbal misconceptions and myths, and valuable resources for purchasing your own herbs or seeds. You can find Judith's wonderful offerings, writing and more at judithbergerherbalist.com. *If you like this episode you might also enjoy episodes #86 with Monica Gagliano and #79 with Molly Larkin/Bearheart! TIME STAMPS 00:08:32 Amy's Glowing Review of Herbal Rituals 00:12:31 Judith's Intentions for her Book 00:17:19 Judith's Childhood in Brooklyn 00:23:08 Retaining the Magic 00:28:47 D'aulaires' Book Of Greek Myths 00:34:25 Judith's Experience as a PA 00:37:45 The Wise Woman Traditions of Herbalism 00:39:44 Pharmaceuticals Based on Herbs 00:44:36 Memories of Connection between Human and Nature 00:51:44 The Hands-Off Herbalist 00:57:48 Talking To Trees? 01:04:51 The Properties & Voice of Black Cohosh 01:10:04 The Tale of the Elder Tree 01:14:50 St. Hildegarde Of Bingen 01:19:26 Misconceptions and Myths 01:23:52 Resources for High Quality Herbs 01:26:30 Where to find Judith Berger You can find Amy at amyfournier.com and watch this episode on Awakening Aphrodite Podcast/FitAmyTV! For special discounts on her favorite products, visit her affiliate page!
Have you ever used lavender essence to relax before bedtime, ginseng or ginger in your tea or perhaps elderberry syrup to boost your natural immunity? If you answered yes to any of those, guess what? You have been practicing herbal medicine, just the way nature intended it! More than ever before in our modern world, people are searching for natural ways to support the health of their minds and bodies. This episode offers timely wisdom and insight from one of the most influential urban herbalists and authors on plant medicines of our time: Judith Berger, writer of the ever-relevant Herbal Rituals. In my opinion, it's much more than a book, and definitely more than a common reference for naturally treating health conditions: it is a lyrical homage to the ancient practices of herbal medicine. Judith Berger is an herbalist, a prolific author, a poet and Physician Assistant who was born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. As you'll hear in this episode, her earliest contact with nature was through the prism of fairy tales, the wilds of her father's backyard garden and the dark corridors of the local plant nursery where she first cherished the scent of soil. She spent ten years in New York City studying and practicing as an urban herbalist before pursuing a degree as a Physician Assistant to integrate natural medicine with the modern medical model. This episode will take you on an adventure into the world of plants and medicine! We talk about the soul of nature and the subtle, complex medicine of plants and mushrooms. Judith shares her thoughts on the digital overwhelm of our time, and offers insight on how herbal treatments can soothe our nerves to balance the stress of everyday life. We discuss the many changes the field of herbalism underwent since the writing of Herbal Rituals, and Judith shares her experiences of herbal effectiveness and contrasting medical philosophies realized through her training as Physician Assistant. We also cover the history and folklore of certain medicinal plants, the contributions of St. Hildegarde of Bingen, common herbal misconceptions and myths, and valuable resources for purchasing your own herbs or seeds. You can find Judith's wonderful offerings, writing and more at judithbergerherbalist.com. *If you like this episode you might also enjoy episodes #86 with Monica Gagliano and #79 with Molly Larkin/Bearheart! TIME STAMPS 00:08:32 Amy's Glowing Review of Herbal Rituals 00:12:31 Judith's Intentions for her Book 00:17:19 Judith's Childhood in Brooklyn 00:23:08 Retaining the Magic 00:28:47 D'aulaires' Book Of Greek Myths 00:34:25 Judith's Experience as a PA 00:37:45 The Wise Woman Traditions of Herbalism 00:39:44 Pharmaceuticals Based on Herbs 00:44:36 Memories of Connection between Human and Nature 00:51:44 The Hands-Off Herbalist 00:57:48 Talking To Trees? 01:04:51 The Properties & Voice of Black Cohosh 01:10:04 The Tale of the Elder Tree 01:14:50 St. Hildegarde Of Bingen 01:19:26 Misconceptions and Myths 01:23:52 Resources for High Quality Herbs 01:26:30 Where to find Judith Berger You can find Amy at amyfournier.com and watch this episode on Awakening Aphrodite Podcast/FitAmyTV! For special discounts on her favorite products, visit her affiliate page!
Have you ever used lavender essence to relax before bedtime, ginseng or ginger in your tea or perhaps elderberry syrup to boost your natural immunity? If you answered yes to any of those, guess what? You have been practicing herbal medicine, just the way nature intended it! More than ever before in our modern world, people are searching for natural ways to support the health of their minds and bodies. This episode offers timely wisdom and insight from one of the most influential urban herbalists and authors on plant medicines of our time: Judith Berger, writer of the ever-relevant Herbal Rituals. In my opinion, it's much more than a book, and definitely more than a common reference for naturally treating health conditions: it is a lyrical homage to the ancient practices of herbal medicine. Judith Berger is an herbalist, a prolific author, a poet and Physician Assistant who was born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. As you'll hear in this episode, her earliest contact with nature was through the prism of fairy tales, the wilds of her father's backyard garden and the dark corridors of the local plant nursery where she first cherished the scent of soil. She spent ten years in New York City studying and practicing as an urban herbalist before pursuing a degree as a Physician Assistant to integrate natural medicine with the modern medical model. This episode will take you on an adventure into the world of plants and medicine! We talk about the soul of nature and the subtle, complex medicine of plants and mushrooms. Judith shares her thoughts on the digital overwhelm of our time, and offers insight on how herbal treatments can soothe our nerves to balance the stress of everyday life. We discuss the many changes the field of herbalism underwent since the writing of Herbal Rituals, and Judith shares her experiences of herbal effectiveness and contrasting medical philosophies realized through her training as Physician Assistant. We also cover the history and folklore of certain medicinal plants, the contributions of St. Hildegarde of Bingen, common herbal misconceptions and myths, and valuable resources for purchasing your own herbs or seeds. You can find Judith's wonderful offerings, writing and more at judithbergerherbalist.com. *If you like this episode you might also enjoy episodes #86 with Monica Gagliano and #79 with Molly Larkin/Bearheart! TIME STAMPS 00:08:32 Amy's Glowing Review of Herbal Rituals 00:12:31 Judith's Intentions for her Book 00:17:19 Judith's Childhood in Brooklyn 00:23:08 Retaining the Magic 00:28:47 D'aulaires' Book Of Greek Myths 00:34:25 Judith's Experience as a PA 00:37:45 The Wise Woman Traditions of Herbalism 00:39:44 Pharmaceuticals Based on Herbs 00:44:36 Memories of Connection between Human and Nature 00:51:44 The Hands-Off Herbalist 00:57:48 Talking To Trees? 01:04:51 The Properties & Voice of Black Cohosh 01:10:04 The Tale of the Elder Tree 01:14:50 St. Hildegarde Of Bingen 01:19:26 Misconceptions and Myths 01:23:52 Resources for High Quality Herbs 01:26:30 Where to find Judith Berger You can find Amy at amyfournier.com and watch this episode on Awakening Aphrodite Podcast/FitAmyTV! For special discounts on her favorite products, visit her affiliate page!
Když se řekne inteligence rostlin, neznamená to neprůkazné chiméry ze života flóry. Zkoumání rostlin coby inteligentních organismů může přinést průlom i v tom, jak vnímá lidstvo sebe sama. Nové objevy na tomto poli mohou přinést důležité stimuly pro proměnu nejen přístupů v zemědělství, ale také v oblasti komunikace nebo řízení uvnitř institucí. Že jsou to nesmysly? Monica Gagliano se vás pokusí přesvědčit svými objevy. Původem italská evoluční ekoložka badatelsky působí v Austrálii. Zaměřuje se na výzkum inteligence rostlin a konkrétně zkoumá paměť rostlin a jejich schopnost učit se. Patří mezi světové kapacity oboru.Monica Gagliano je docentka v oboru evoluční ekologie na Southern Cross University, kde vede laboratoř biologické inteligence (BI) v rámci iniciativy Diverse Intelligences nadace Templeton World Charity Foundation. Je průkopnicí zcela nové oblasti výzkumu bioakustiky rostlin a poprvé experimentálně prokázala, že rostliny vydávají vlastní „hlas“ a detekují zvuky svého prostředí a reagují na ně. Ve své práci rozšířila koncept poznávání (včetně vnímání, procesů učení a paměti) u rostlin. Svými experimenty prokazujícími, že učení není výhradní doménou živočichů, znovu rozvířila diskuzi o subjektivitě rostlin a jejich etickém a právním postavení. Její poslední knihou je titul Thus Spoke the Plant: A Remarkable Journey of Groundbreaking Scientific Discoveries and Personal Encounters with Plants.Sledujte nás na sociálních sítích Facebook, Instagram a Twitter.
Can plants "speak"? Do they communicate? Can they "learn", have "families", etc? I am thrilled to have you here for this week's brilliant and fascinating guest, Dr. Monica Gagliano! Dr. Gagliano is an exceptional evolutionary behavioral ecologist who pioneered the field of bio-acoustics and published research on plant cognition: scientifically proving plants' abilities to perceive, learn, remember and communicate with a consciousness not all too different from our own. In this enlightening conversation, Dr. Gaglano shares a story that is also told in her book, “Thus Spoke The Plant,” about how the plants actually instructed her design of the experiment that demonstrated their sentience. Humans are truly not the “superior” species! In fact, plants are our “elders” and have always collaborated and communicated with human societies for food and medicine, a relationship that has unfortunately crumbled in our noisy, consumer-based modern era. Dr. Gagliano emphasizes how becoming open to new forms of communication with the plant kingdom will ultimately lead us back to ourselves, providing the deep connection and groundedness that our society is so desperately seeking right now. She shares with us her experience in Australia's COVID-19 lockdown and how her relationship with the land helped provide the answers that she intuitively needed to alleviate her perceived isolation. Dr. Gagliano's approach to both conventional science and the intuitive discoveries beyond are enlightening, inspiring and hold great promise for the healing of our species. So...cozy up and get ready for this heartwarming and eye-opening conversation with the one and only Dr. Monica Gagliano! I hope you enjoy this episode as much as I did! The best way to support the Awakening Aphrodite podcast is to share the show with your friends and loved ones! And your iTunes reviews allow me to know that my work is helping and inspiring others! Your feedback is much needed and appreciated! Thank you. TIME STAMPS 00:00:00 Beginning Of Interview 00:00:23 Dr. Gagliano's Isolated Experience In Australia 00:08:19 Learning From The Land 00:12:45 Your Center Cannot Be Found In Others 00:19:37 Not All Those Who Wander Are Lost 00:21:25 Do Things That Bring You Joy 00:31:12 Origin Of The Word “Person” 00:33:30 Dr. Gagliano's Work 00:37:23 Sound As The Original Creative Force 00:38;40 The Intelligence Of Plants 00:43:49 The Pavlovian Experiment On Plants 00:46:53 The Error Of Human-Centric Research 00:48:20 The Plant Agenda 00:53:04 How Plants Directed The Experiment 01:03:10 Do Plants Have Unique Identities And Souls? 01:11:35 Inigenous Knowledge Of Emerging Sciences 01:13:28 The Oryngham 01:17:09 Dr. Gagliano's Plant-Gift Medicine For Covid 01:21:17 Can The Average Person Tap Into Plant Communication? 01:24:44 What Do Plants Want Us To Know? 01:29:58 How To Cultivate Your Relationship With The Plant Kingdom 01:31:54 Plants As Our Elders 01:33:21 Dr. Gagliano's Direction 01:37:40 Does Scientific Research Actually Incite Change? 01:39:27 The Search For Land 01:45:00 Dr. Gagliano's Vision: Resonant Earth HOW TO FIND DR. MONICA GAGLIANO www.monicagagliano.com Instagram: _monicagagliano_ Instagram: _resonantearth_ Twitter: @Monica_Gagliano Facebook: monica.gagliano.18 HOW TO FIND AMY INSTAGRAM: @FitAmyTV YOUTUBE: Awakening Aphrodite Podcast/FitAmyTV FACEBOOK: Amy Fournier JOIN MY FREE ONLINE WOMEN'S CIRCLE!
Can plants "speak"? Do they communicate? Can they "learn", have "families", etc? I am thrilled to have you here for this week's brilliant and fascinating guest, Dr. Monica Gagliano! Dr. Gagliano is an exceptional evolutionary behavioral ecologist who pioneered the field of bio-acoustics and published research on plant cognition: scientifically proving plants' abilities to perceive, learn, remember and communicate with a consciousness not all too different from our own. In this enlightening conversation, Dr. Gaglano shares a story that is also told in her book, “Thus Spoke The Plant,” about how the plants actually instructed her design of the experiment that demonstrated their sentience. Humans are truly not the “superior” species! In fact, plants are our “elders” and have always collaborated and communicated with human societies for food and medicine, a relationship that has unfortunately crumbled in our noisy, consumer-based modern era. Dr. Gagliano emphasizes how becoming open to new forms of communication with the plant kingdom will ultimately lead us back to ourselves, providing the deep connection and groundedness that our society is so desperately seeking right now. She shares with us her experience in Australia's COVID-19 lockdown and how her relationship with the land helped provide the answers that she intuitively needed to alleviate her perceived isolation. Dr. Gagliano's approach to both conventional science and the intuitive discoveries beyond are enlightening, inspiring and hold great promise for the healing of our species. So...cozy up and get ready for this heartwarming and eye-opening conversation with the one and only Dr. Monica Gagliano! I hope you enjoy this episode as much as I did! The best way to support the Awakening Aphrodite podcast is to share the show with your friends and loved ones! And your iTunes reviews allow me to know that my work is helping and inspiring others! Your feedback is much needed and appreciated! Thank you. TIME STAMPS 00:00:00 Beginning Of Interview 00:00:23 Dr. Gagliano's Isolated Experience In Australia 00:08:19 Learning From The Land 00:12:45 Your Center Cannot Be Found In Others 00:19:37 Not All Those Who Wander Are Lost 00:21:25 Do Things That Bring You Joy 00:31:12 Origin Of The Word “Person” 00:33:30 Dr. Gagliano's Work 00:37:23 Sound As The Original Creative Force 00:38;40 The Intelligence Of Plants 00:43:49 The Pavlovian Experiment On Plants 00:46:53 The Error Of Human-Centric Research 00:48:20 The Plant Agenda 00:53:04 How Plants Directed The Experiment 01:03:10 Do Plants Have Unique Identities And Souls? 01:11:35 Inigenous Knowledge Of Emerging Sciences 01:13:28 The Oryngham 01:17:09 Dr. Gagliano's Plant-Gift Medicine For Covid 01:21:17 Can The Average Person Tap Into Plant Communication? 01:24:44 What Do Plants Want Us To Know? 01:29:58 How To Cultivate Your Relationship With The Plant Kingdom 01:31:54 Plants As Our Elders 01:33:21 Dr. Gagliano's Direction 01:37:40 Does Scientific Research Actually Incite Change? 01:39:27 The Search For Land 01:45:00 Dr. Gagliano's Vision: Resonant Earth HOW TO FIND DR. MONICA GAGLIANO www.monicagagliano.com Instagram: _monicagagliano_ Instagram: _resonantearth_ Twitter: @Monica_Gagliano Facebook: monica.gagliano.18 HOW TO FIND AMY INSTAGRAM: @FitAmyTV YOUTUBE: Awakening Aphrodite Podcast/FitAmyTV FACEBOOK: Amy Fournier JOIN MY FREE ONLINE WOMEN'S CIRCLE!
Can plants "speak"? Do they communicate? Can they "learn", have "families", etc? I am thrilled to have you here for this week's brilliant and fascinating guest, Dr. Monica Gagliano! Dr. Gagliano is an exceptional evolutionary behavioral ecologist who pioneered the field of bio-acoustics and published research on plant cognition: scientifically proving plants' abilities to perceive, learn, remember and communicate with a consciousness not all too different from our own. In this enlightening conversation, Dr. Gaglano shares a story that is also told in her book, “Thus Spoke The Plant,” about how the plants actually instructed her design of the experiment that demonstrated their sentience. Humans are truly not the “superior” species! In fact, plants are our “elders” and have always collaborated and communicated with human societies for food and medicine, a relationship that has unfortunately crumbled in our noisy, consumer-based modern era. Dr. Gagliano emphasizes how becoming open to new forms of communication with the plant kingdom will ultimately lead us back to ourselves, providing the deep connection and groundedness that our society is so desperately seeking right now. She shares with us her experience in Australia's COVID-19 lockdown and how her relationship with the land helped provide the answers that she intuitively needed to alleviate her perceived isolation. Dr. Gagliano's approach to both conventional science and the intuitive discoveries beyond are enlightening, inspiring and hold great promise for the healing of our species. So...cozy up and get ready for this heartwarming and eye-opening conversation with the one and only Dr. Monica Gagliano! I hope you enjoy this episode as much as I did! The best way to support the Awakening Aphrodite podcast is to share the show with your friends and loved ones! And your iTunes reviews allow me to know that my work is helping and inspiring others! Your feedback is much needed and appreciated! Thank you. TIME STAMPS 00:00:00 Beginning Of Interview 00:00:23 Dr. Gagliano's Isolated Experience In Australia 00:08:19 Learning From The Land 00:12:45 Your Center Cannot Be Found In Others 00:19:37 Not All Those Who Wander Are Lost 00:21:25 Do Things That Bring You Joy 00:31:12 Origin Of The Word “Person” 00:33:30 Dr. Gagliano's Work 00:37:23 Sound As The Original Creative Force 00:38;40 The Intelligence Of Plants 00:43:49 The Pavlovian Experiment On Plants 00:46:53 The Error Of Human-Centric Research 00:48:20 The Plant Agenda 00:53:04 How Plants Directed The Experiment 01:03:10 Do Plants Have Unique Identities And Souls? 01:11:35 Inigenous Knowledge Of Emerging Sciences 01:13:28 The Oryngham 01:17:09 Dr. Gagliano's Plant-Gift Medicine For Covid 01:21:17 Can The Average Person Tap Into Plant Communication? 01:24:44 What Do Plants Want Us To Know? 01:29:58 How To Cultivate Your Relationship With The Plant Kingdom 01:31:54 Plants As Our Elders 01:33:21 Dr. Gagliano's Direction 01:37:40 Does Scientific Research Actually Incite Change? 01:39:27 The Search For Land 01:45:00 Dr. Gagliano's Vision: Resonant Earth HOW TO FIND DR. MONICA GAGLIANO www.monicagagliano.com Instagram: _monicagagliano_ Instagram: _resonantearth_ Twitter: @Monica_Gagliano Facebook: monica.gagliano.18 HOW TO FIND AMY INSTAGRAM: @FitAmyTV YOUTUBE: Awakening Aphrodite Podcast/FitAmyTV FACEBOOK: Amy Fournier JOIN MY FREE ONLINE WOMEN'S CIRCLE!
Have you ever hugged a tree? In episode 45 of Overthink, Ellie and David head into nature to explore the philosophical side of trees. Often, trees have been ignored, even as they populate so much of the space around us. Why did Socrates say he could learn nothing from trees, and why did Nietzsche write so romantically about them? Deleuze and Guattari criticize trees for being too vertically organized, but Michael Marder argues that they're far more cooperative than we ever imagined. In that spirit, trees are clearly alive, but Peter Wohlleben goes as far as to say they could possibly be intelligent, and even have language of their own. Does that mean that trees deserve rights? Ellie and David get into the root of it in episode 45!Works DiscussedRichard Powers, The OverstoryPlato, PhaedrusMartin Buber, I and ThouAristotle, De Anima Plotinus, EnneadsHans Jonas, The Phenomenon of LifePeter Wohlleben, The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They CommunicateMassimo E. Maffei and Wilhelm Boland, “The Silent Scream of the Lima Bean”Monica Gagliano et al., “Learning by association in plants”Monica Gagliano et al., “Plants learn and remember: let's get used to it”Simona Ginsburg and Eva Jablonka, The Evolution of the Sensitive Soul: Learning and the Origins of ConsciousnessChristopher Stone, “Should Trees Have Standing?”Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, A Thousand PlateausFriedrich Nietzsche, The Birth of TragedyMichael Marder, “In (Philosophical) Defense of Trees”Website | overthinkpodcast.comInstagram & Twitter | @overthink_podEmail | Dearoverthink@gmail.comYouTube | Overthink podcast
MONICA GAGLIANO – THE MIND OF PLANTS... with TRE's Giles Brown
Author and evolutionary ecologist Dr Monica Gagliano shares her fascinating research into plant communication and plant’s cognitive abilities. [...]Read More... from Talking Plants
Author and evolutionary ecologist Dr Monica Gagliano shares her fascinating research into plant communication and plant's cognitive abilities.
When you apply cremes, soaps or liquids on your body, do you think about where all of the ingredients came from?Hanna Mehrabani and Sahba Sizdahkhani describe the nuts and bolts of creating skin care products derived from organic soils in this fragrant Living 4D conversation.Stay tuned for a special musical performance by Sahba, that fuses jazz and improvisation with Persian Classical Music. Learn more about Hanna and Sahba on Instagram here and here. Listen to Sahba's music on his website.For Living 4D listeners: Save 10 percent on any plant-based, skin and self-care products Hanna sells on her Seeb and Solace website by using the code LIVING4D at checkout.Show NotesHow Hanna transitioned from fracking for the oil and gas industry to formulating skin/animal care products. (9:45)Hanna chooses between fearing everything or having faith and slow breathing. (15:45)Sabha's journey to become a musician with a Persian focus. (21:56)Sahba expresses musically the experience of using their self-care products with a santur. (33:36)“Anything we put in or on our bodies is essentially soil. Soil is our skin. Soil is our body.” (41:05)Your skin care regimen allows your body to breathe or suffocates it. (52:44)Sahba expresses organic soil musically. (1:09:09)Washing your hands too much? (1:14:10)Pregnant women eat frankincense (designed to be consumed) in Iran. (1:30:00)How much saffron is enough? (1:40:01)Incremental detox. (1:54:11)Love and respect your liver! (2:07:42)“Fifty percent of what I'm feeling is collective anxiety, and the rest is mine.” (2:12:28)Paul performs a song he created with Angie. (2:21:01)ResourcesPaul's Living 4D conversations with Dr. Monica Gagliano, Ari Honarvar, Dr. Zach Bush and Alicia RoseChloramines and drinking waterMugwortThe work of John Coltrane and Hazrat Inayat Khan Thanks to our awesome sponsors: The CHEK Shop, Cymbiotika (save 15 percent on your purchase by using the code CHEK15 at checkout), Organifi (save 20 percent on your purchase by using the code CHEK20 at checkout), Paleovalley (save 15 percent on your purchase by using the code chek15 at checkout), BiOptimizers (save an extra 10 percent on your purchase by using the code PAUL10 at checkout) and Airestech (save 15 percent on any purchase you make by using the code CHEK15 at checkout).As an Amazon Associate, we earn commissions from qualifying purchases.
Could plants really be sentient beings who are capable of understanding and communicating with us?Dr. Monica Gagliano shares her amazing life's journey that nearly led her away from science until “the plants rescued the scientist in me” in this environmentally conscious Living 4D conversation.Learn more about Monica and her work on her website and on social media via Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.Show NotesGrowing up in Italy, Monica recognized the relationship between nature and health. (15:20)Monica's work with plants emerged from a moral crisis in her research on marine animals. (24:28)Monica's first plant medicine ceremony led to her deal with plants. (29:56)You have to choose to hear plants talking to you in this noisy Western world of ours. (41:20)The collective spirit between plants and humans. (50:32)Are we unidimensional or multi-dimensional beings? (1:06:05)Monica and her plants find a place to call home. (1:10:49)A specialist of impossibilities. (1:23:10)“We glorify innovation, pioneering and new bright ideas, but the truth is that pioneers don't fit very well with the educational system.” (1:30:25)Monica recognizes plants have consciousness for the first time in the lab. (1:37:09)Discovering the acoustic relationship between humans and plants. (1:50:02)The true and deeper meaning of reciprocity. (2:07:12)An amazing time of initiation. (2:20:34)Monica's call to action: Resonant Earth. (2:31:19)ResourcesThus Spoke The Plant by Monica Gagliano and Suzanne SimardMonica's interview with the New York TimesThe Secret Life of Plants by Peter Tompkins and Christopher BirdThe work of Cleve BacksterThe Quantum Revelation: A Radical Synthesis of Science and Spirituality by Paul LevyPaul's Living 4D conversations with Paul Levy and James CarseFinite and Infinite Games: A Vision of Life as Play and Possibility by James CarseThe Invisible Rainbow: A History of Electricity and Life by Arthur FirstenbergThanks to our awesome sponsors: The CHEK Shop, Paleovalley (save 15 percent on your purchase by using the code chek15 at checkout), BiOptimizers (save an extra 10 percent on your purchase by using the code PAUL10 at checkout), Cymbiotika (save 15 percent on your purchase by using the code CHEK15 at checkout), Organifi (save 20 percent on your purchase by using the code CHEK20 at checkout) and Airestech (save 15 percent on any purchase you make by using the code CHEK15 at checkout).As an Amazon Associate, we earn commissions from qualifying purchases.
Monica Gagliano, professoressa associata di ricerca in biologia evolutiva alla Southern Cross University, sarà uno degli oratori dell'evento TedX Sydney. Al centro del suo intervento sarà il concetto di eresia.
Dr. Monica Gagliano takes us on a deep dive into the results of her scientific research into plant intelligence. But she also shares the profound impact of her personal encounters with the living intelligence of the natural world, and what those encounters have revealed about herself, about life, and about the murderous consequences of modern scientific training. We also explore definitions of intelligence and plant intelligence; the impact of anthropocentrism on our relationship to the natural world; listening to and learning from plants; and the role of altered states and psychedelics in our capacity to directly communicate with not only plants, but the intelligent life of nature itself. ... For links to Dr. Gagliano's work, full show notes, and to watch this episode in video, head to https://bit.ly/ATTMind153 ***Full Topics Breakdown Below*** SUPPORT THIS PODCAST ► Patreon: https://patreon.com/jameswjesso ► Donations: https://www.paypal.com/biz/fund?id=383635S3BKJVS ► Merchandise: https://www.jameswjesso.com/shop/ ► More options: https://www.jameswjesso.com/support/ ► Newsletter: https://www.jameswjesso.com/newsletter *** Extra BIG thanks to my patrons on Patreon for helping keep this podcast alive! Especially, Andreas D, Clea S, Joe A, Ian C, David WB, Yvette FC, Ann-Madeleine, Dima B, Eliz C, Chuck W, Nathan B, & Nick M Episode Breakdown What is intelligence? What is plant Intelligence? Why we assume plants aren't intelligent Gagliano's transformation away from “cold-hearted scientist” How anthropocentric bias in Academia delegitimizes plant intelligence research Plant bioacoustics and shamanic medicine songs Voice, plant voice, and how we silence them An example of listening to plants Appropriation and the silencing of plant intelligence The history of our enslavement to wheat What if plants listened to plants as a “someone” and not a “something” Slowing down and letting yourself be confused is a good thing The role of altered states in communicating with and learning from plants The psychedelic experience is happening all the time The role of plant dietas in healing Allowing our encounters with the natural world to become meaningful moments of learning and insight What medicine means A closing poem from The Spoke The Plant ************** SUPPORT THIS PODCAST ► Patreon: https://patreon.com/jameswjesso ► Donations: https://www.paypal.com/biz/fund?id=383635S3BKJVS ► Merchandise: https://www.jameswjesso.com/shop/ ► More options: https://www.jameswjesso.com/support/ ► Newsletter: https://www.jameswjesso.com/newsletter ► Or, you can buy a copy of one of my books! Decomposing The Shadow: https://www.jameswjesso.com/decomposing-the-shadow/ The True Light Of Darkness: https://www.jameswjesso.com/true-light-darkness/
Green Dreamer: Sustainability and Regeneration From Ideas to Life
How does viewing the Earth as an embodiment of imagination invite us to conceptualize or feel our ecological crises in different ways? And what does it mean to be more imaginative with our scientific inquiries—while also remaining a humility to recognize the limitations of this particular lens? In this episode, we welcome Monica Gagliano, the author of Thus Spoke the Plant and a Research Associate Professor in evolutionary ecology at Southern Cross University, where she directs the Biological Intelligence (BI) Lab as part of the Diverse Intelligences Initiative of the Templeton World Charity Foundation. Gagliano's work has extended the concept of cognition (including perception, learning processes, memory) in plants. By re-kindling a sense of wonder for this beautiful place we call home, she is helping to create a fresh imaginative ecology of mind that can inspire the emergence of truly innovative solutions to human relations with the world we co-inhabit. // The song featured in this episode is Allergic by Lil Idli. // Green Dreamer is a community-supported podcast and multimedia journal exploring our paths to collective healing, biocultural revitalization, and true abundance and wellness for all. Find our show notes, transcripts, and newsletter at GreenDreamer.com. *Our episodes are minimally edited. Please view them as invitations to dive deeper into the topics and resources explored.
This episode features a conversation between Kamala Sankaram, artist and composer of The Last Stand and the world's leading forest ecologist Dr. Suzanne Simard. In part two of this episode, evolutionary ecologist and ecoacoustics expert Dr. Monica Gagliano and musicologist Frank J. Oteri discuss the sonic relationship between plants and musicians.
Today we celebrate a Swedish botanist and professor, a Scottish minister, and naturalist, and a British botanist. We hear an excerpt about September's changing colors. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about the language of plants - what they are saying to us if we only knew how to listen. And then we'll wrap things up with an American writer and her description of the end of summer. Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart To listen to the show while you're at home, just ask Alexa or Google to “Play the latest episode of The Daily Gardener Podcast.” And she will. It's just that easy. The Daily Gardener Friday Newsletter Sign up for the FREE Friday Newsletter featuring: A personal update from me Garden-related items for your calendar The Grow That Garden Library™ featured books for the week Gardener gift ideas Garden-inspired recipes Exclusive updates regarding the show Plus, each week, one lucky subscriber wins a book from the Grow That Garden Library™ bookshelf. Gardener Greetings Send your garden pics, stories, birthday wishes, and so forth to Jennifer@theDailyGardener.org Curated News E Is For Evergreen | Boyles & Wyer | John Wyer Facebook Group If you'd like to check out my curated news articles and original blog posts for yourself, you're in luck. I share all of it with the Listener Community in the Free Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener Community. So, there's no need to take notes or search for links. The next time you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community where you'd search for a friend... and request to join. I'd love to meet you in the group. Important Events September 17, 1702 Death of Olaus Rudbeck, Swedish botanist. Four months before he died, a fire destroyed much of Upsala. At 72, he helped lead the effort to save the building where he taught even after learning that the fire had destroyed his home along with his personal collections and writings. Thanks to Olaus, the university library was saved. After the fire, he drew up plans to rebuild the city. (The plans were carried out without him.) Twenty-nine years after his death, Carl Linnaeus named the Rudbeckia, or Black-Eyed Susan, after him. Linnaeus wrote, So long as the earth shall survive and as each spring shall see it covered with flowers, the Rudbeckia will preserve your glorious name. September 17, 1833 Birth of Hugh Macmillan, Scottish minister, and naturalist. In The Ministry of Nature, (1871), he wrote, Nature looks dead in winter because her life is gathered into her heart. She withers the plant down to the root [so] that she may grow it up again, fairer and stronger. She calls her family together within her inmost home to prepare them for being scattered abroad upon the face of the earth. September 17, 1910 Birth of Patrick Millington Synge, British botanist, writer, and plant hunter. He served as chief editor for the Royal Horticultural Society. In 1934, he joined the British Museums expedition to the Ruwenzori range in Kenya and Uganda, which inspired his book The Mountains of the Moon - a nod to Herodotus's name for the area. The equatorial mountain lakes were home to six-foot-tall impatiens, 30-foot-tall lobelia, and thick, tree-like heather. The experience was otherworldly and his writing is romantic and lyrical. He wrote, Slowly we glide out through a long lane of water cut through the papyrus thicket into Lake Kyoga, where blue water lilies cover the surface with a far-stretching shimmer of blue and green... Vita Sackville-West loved his book, writing, Readers of Mr. Patrick Synge's enthralling book... will remember his photographs of this alarming plant (groundsel). Patrick is remembered in the daffodil Narcissus hispanicus ex 'Patrick Synge' and in the exotic-flowering favorite Abutilon 'Patrick Synge'. Unearthed Words And finally, it seemed autumn had realized it was September. The last lingering days of summer had been pushed off stage and in the hidden garden long shadows stretched towards winter. The ground was littered with spent leaves, orange, and pale green, and chestnuts on spiky coats sat proudly on the fingertips of cold branches.” ― Kate Morton, The Forgotten Garden Grow That Garden Library Thus Spoke the Plant by Monica Gagliano This book came out in 2018, and the subtitle is A Remarkable Journey of Groundbreaking Scientific Discoveries and Personal Encounters with Plants. In this book, research scientist Monica Gagliano explores plant communication - a subject that influenced her research and ultimately changed her life. Monica has studied plant communication and cognition for a good amount of her academic career. She shares firsthand accounts from people all over the world and then shares the scientific revelations. This book is 176 pages of plant stories - strange, beautiful, and unforgettable. You can get a copy of Thus Spoke the Plant by Monica Gagliano and support the show using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for around $20 Today's Botanic Spark Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart September 17, 1907 Birth of Elizabeth Enright, American writer, illustrator, and creative writing teacher. She won the Newbery Medal for Thimble Summer (1938). In book three of her popular Melendy family series called Then There Were Five (1944), she wrote, The mullein had finished blooming and stood up out of the pastures like dusty candelabra. The flowers of Queen Anne's lace had curled up into birds' nests, and the bee balm was covered with little crown-shaped pods. In another month -- no, two, maybe -- would come the season of the skeletons, when all that was left of the weeds was their brittle architecture. But the time was not yet. The air was warm and bright, the grass was green, and the leaves and the lazy monarch butterflies were everywhere. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."
Biotunes https://mapsbolt.wixsite.com/biotunes Cannatunes https://cannatunes.wixsite.com/mysite/music Ginseng Guided meditation spa kit https://www.cimarron-maz.com/product-page/guided-ginseng-meditation Other stuff Damanhur https://damanhur.travel/ Plants Play https://www.plantsplay.com/ Cleave Baxter https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/992993.Primary_Perception Loretta "Maps Bolt" Hord is an artist, innovator, technoshaman, and paradigm changer focused on interspecies collaboration. After studying environmental law at the SUNY College of Environmental Sciences and Forestry she began trying her hand at biodynamic farming, environmental education, and geo locative coding. Since then, Maps Bolt creates realistic pathways for humanity to manifest deeper connections with the natural world through animistic perspectives and technology. Maps Bolt looks to be eclectic in her experiences and use them to facilitate her work. Constantly learning new skills in coding, alternative artistic methods, and AR/VR development, she works to connect all of these disciplines into the pioneering of plant music applications and provides a unique user experience that makes plant vitality evident through sound. As founder of Biotunes, she uses multi-media, multi-sensory applications that translates bio-rhythmic energy of the plant into musical notes and a cymatic visual projection. Her strongest influences has been the works of other researchers and scientists such as Monica Gagliano, author ot "Thus Spoke the Plant", Cleave Baxter who first transmitted data from plants, or Jeremy Narby who stated in his 2012 Bioneers presentation “The way the shamans describe it, the spirits of nature, or the essences, are themselves melodies. When they perceive these different entities, if you pay careful attention, they vibrate out a melody. And the work of the shaman is to pick up the given melodies of each species.” This statement best expresses the core of Maps work with plants and creating immersive experiences that engage the public. Her work is also influenced by the notion of "hikoi", a Maori term for pilgrimage. Through the engagement of making music with plants by translating the electrical impulses into musical notes, questions about who gets to belong, who makes the decisions, and what is considered valuable in the conservation world arises. Combining plant generated soundscapes with geolocative tools, allows for the creation of “songlines” - geo-triggered audio tours of ethnobotanical communities . When the music made by plants are connected to gps location, the plants song will automatically play through a mobile app when approaching each individual plant species. The placement of the songlines are often in in publically accessible forests and gardens. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/plantcunning/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/plantcunning/support
En el capítulo de hoy invitamos a nuestro amigo Miguel, a quien le apasionan temas de agricultura, sostenibilidad y desarrollo.Tiene una maestría en estudios agrarios, alimentarios y ambientales del Instituto Internacional de Estudios Sociales, Universidad Erasmus en La Haya. Es una persona que admiramos mucho por su forma compasiva de ver al mundo y su sed de conocimiento que lo lleva siempre a cuestionar la realidad. Esta vez platicamos sobre alimentación, medio ambiente y sociedad ¿Qué tanto daño le estamos haciendo al planeta con la producción y distribución actual de alimentos? Evolucionamos al domesticar los alimentos y alterarlos genéticamente para que sean más resistentes o estamos acabando con la diversidad? De esto y mucho más estaremos hablando en el capítulo de hoy, quédense con nosotras.Referencias Mencionados:1. La bóveda del fin del mundo: https://youtu.be/m76gOnBj31Y 2. Economista britanico Raj Patel sobre la desigualdad en el sistema alimenticio: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/127985/stuffed-and-starved-by-raj-patel/ 4. Economista estadounidense Raj Chetty sobre la desigualdad y el fin del sueño americano: https://youtu.be/u2U9-Wq2ub03. Canal de Bioneers en Youtube: https://youtube.com/c/bioneers4. Michael Pollan sobre plantas de poder: https://youtu.be/5DrM90dg5t4 4. Paul Stamets sobre como los hongos pueden salvar al mundo: https://youtu.be/lbGRMj9tP5M 5. Monica Gagliano sobre la inteligencia de las plantas: https://youtu.be/90BUQoLu_Hg 6. Monica Gagliano y Michael Pollan en un panel sobre la inteligencia de las plantas y la consciencia humana: https://youtu.be/LlyZl33Chz8CONTACTANOSEmail- Sanandoentreamigas@gmail.comInstagram- @SanandoentreamigasEmail Stephanie: Stephie.wendler@gmail.comPágina Verona: www.veronapenalba.comMúsica deUntil we meet again By Joe BagaleYouTube Audio LibraryContáctanos: Instagram- @Expansion_PodcastEmail Stephanie: Stephie.wendler@gmail.comPágina Verona: www.veronapenalba.com Musica deTrack: Rain — KV [Audio Library Release]Music provided by Audio Library PlusWatch: https://youtu.be/PQuOzTSv1VsFree Download / Stream: https://alplus.io/rain
In todays episode we speak with groundbreaking botanical researcher Monica Gagliano. In collaboration with various disciplines across the Sciences and the Humanities, Monica's research aims at expanding our perception of animals, plants and more generally Nature. In the process of learning how to do this, she has pioneered the brand-new research field of plant bioacoustics and extended the concept of cognition to plants, re-igniting the discourse on plant subjectivity, sentience and ethical standing.Monica is a Research Associate Professor in Evolutionary Ecology at the Biological Intelligence (BI) Lab, Southern Cross University, a Research Associate Professor (Adjunct) at the University of Western Australia, a Research Affiliate at the Sydney Environment Institute, University of Sydney & an all round, swell human bean.We also tip-toe through the following proverbial tulips:-Indigeneity -Linear time-Astrology-Ethnobotany-Science Vs Scientism-New, old and novel epistemologiesand like HEAPS more...SHOW NOTESMonica Gaglianohttps://www.monicagagliano.com/https://www.themindofplants.com/The Bard McKennahttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22F6pZU_PC8BYRON JOEL'S WORK IN REGENERATIVE AGRICULTUREwww.oaktreedesigns.com.auBYRON'S MUSIC ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Täna vestlesime koos Alari ja Henriga Šveitsi antropoloogi Jeremy Narby [1] raamatust "Kosmiline siug" [2].Narby endaga oli mul pikem intervjuu Tähenduse teejuhtide viiendas numbris [3].Meie jutuajamisest lipsasid läbi õige mitme raamatu ja filmi nimed. Minu konspekti said neist kirja järgmised:1. Michael Harner, "Šamaani tee" [4].2. Monica Gagliano, "Thus Spoke the Plant" [5].3. Louie Schwartzbergi dokumentaalfilm, "Fantastic Fungi" [6].4. Gordon Wasson, "The Road to Eleusis" [7].5. Roger Wals; Charles S. Grog (toim.), "Kõrgem tarkus" [8].6. Ralph Metzner, "Alkeemiline kaemus" [9].7. Ralph Metzner, "Meeleruum ja ajavoog" [10].8. Ken Wilber, "Kõiksuse lühilugu" [11].9. Ken Wilber, "Arm ja meelekindlus" [12].10. Fritz Riemann, "Hirmu põhivormid" [13].11. Fritz Riemann, "Astroloogia on eluabi õpetus" [14].12. Fritz Riemann, "Vananemise kunst" [15].13. Undo Uus, "Blindness of Modern Science" [16].14. Charles T. Tart, "Teadvuse seisundid" [17] 15. Ram Das, "Still Here" [18].16. Ram Das, "Be Here Now" [19].17. Wilhelm Reich, "The Mass Psychology of Fascism" [20]18. Roberto Assagioli, "Transpersonaalne areng" [21].Siin peaks nüüd olema lugemist õige mitmeks õhtupoolikuks.H.————————[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RlivUUAztE&list=PLhpEK-_b7mfHV67I6wxQvcb1n1UOqIY7T&index=12[2] https://www.rahvaraamat.ee/p/kosmiline-siug-dna-ja-teadmiste-l%C3%A4tted/1029613/en?isbn=9789949959389&fbclid=IwAR1P3SNCdvnolG5sRwA2YJKGXORlS9UgEK4Mrb71gfT3WKq_9kqxWyrTv08&gclid=Cj0KCQiA4feBBhC9ARIsABp_nbVBSaSWNCNBVCdnyoPxuXNYnNby48SMQJXZ8PChp68ykGRTnMBXq0MaAvWYEALw_wcB[3] https://teejuhid.postimees.ee/7160703/epistemoloogiline-vahejuhtum-belgia-politseiga[4] https://www.apollo.ee/samaani-tee.html[5] https://www.amazon.com/Thus-Spoke-Plant-Groundbreaking-Discoveries-ebook/dp/B079WL73XL/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1614693473&sr=8-1[6] https://www.amazon.com/s?k=fantastic+fungi&crid=ZQ5UI3EDLKIH&sprefix=Fantastic+fungi%2Caudible%2C243&ref=nb_sb_ss_fb_1_15_ts-doa-p[7] https://www.amazon.com/Road-Eleusis-Unveiling-Secret-Mysteries/dp/1556437528/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2MOQSN965DJ3R&dchild=1&keywords=gordon+wasson&qid=1614695457&sprefix=Gordon+Wasson%2Caps%2C257&sr=8-1[8] https://www.apollo.ee/korgem-tarkus.html[9] https://www.transpersonaalne.ee/toode/ralph-metzner-alkeemiline-kaemus-hingetarkuse-kasutamine-tervendamiseks-ja-juhiste-saamiseks-2012/[10] https://www.transpersonaalne.ee/toode/ralph-metzner-meeleruum-ja-ajavoog-teadvusseisundite-moistmine-ja-oskus-neid-kasutada-2012/[11] https://www.transpersonaalne.ee/toode/ken-wilber-koiksuse-luhilugu-2013/[12] https://www.apollo.ee/arm-ja-meelekindlus.html[13] https://www.apollo.ee/hirmu-pohivormid.html[14] https://www.apollo.ee/astroloogia-on-eluabi-opetus.html[15] https://www.apollo.ee/vananemise-kunst.html[16] https://www.raamatukoi.ee/blindness-of-modern-science[17] https://www.apollo.ee/teadvuse-seisundid.html[18] https://www.amazon.com/Still-Here-Embracing-Aging-Changing-ebook/dp/B00FPWS4ZG/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1614698143&sr=8-1[19] https://www.amazon.com/Here-Now-Enhanced-Ram-Dass-ebook/dp/B005R9HK8O/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1614698228&sr=8-1[20] https://www.amazon.com/Mass-Psychology-Fascism-Third-ebook/dp/B00DFFLD62/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1614698387&sr=8-3[21] https://www.transpersonaalne.ee/toode/roberto-assagioli-transpersonaalne-areng-2016/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Hey everybody! Episode 35 of the show is out. In this episode, I spoke with Monica Gagliano. Monica is a scientist and the author of the very good book, Thus Spoke the Plant. Monica's scientific research has focused on plant intelligence, communication through sound, and cognition. She has a really interesting story and has not only experienced plants and life through her scientific work, but also with her own direct experience of plants through ceremonial practices. I think Monica really embodies the true spirit of a scientist, someone who is willing to question the world, even in the face of adversity, and to come to conclusions that help to illuminate and deepen our understanding of the world we live in and our relationship to it. I think she is doing very important work and I imagine her work will only continue to grow and expand as it becomes more accepted. It was a pleasure speaking with her and I think you all will gain a lot out of it. To view bonus material and extended conversations, check out my Patreon page below. Enjoy! “My main research is broadly focusing on key aspects of the ecological processes by which organisms are able to gather information on the variable conditions of their surrounding environment in order to thrive.In collaboration with various disciplines across the Sciences and the Humanities, my research aims at expanding our perception of animals, plants and more generally Nature. In the process of learning how to do this, I have pioneered the brand-new research field of plant bioacoustics and extended the concept of cognition to plants, re-igniting the discourse on plant subjectivity, sentience and ethical standing. I am a Research Associate Professor in Evolutionary Ecology at the Biological Intelligence (BI) Lab, Southern Cross University, a Research Associate Professor (Adjunct) at the University of Western Australia Research Affiliate at the Sydney Environment Institute, University of Sydney.”To learn more about Monica, visit her website at: https://www.monicagagliano.com/And to learn about the Mind of Plants book and symposium she spoke of, visit: https://www.themindofplants.com/This episode of the show is sponsored by the Temple of the Way of Light. To learn more or sign up for a retreat, visit: https://templeofthewayoflight.org/Share the show, Subscribe or Follow, leave comments, and if you can go on Apple Podcasts and leave a starred-rating and a short review. That would be super helpful with the algorithms and getting this show out to more people. Thank you in advance!For more information about me and my upcoming plant medicine retreats with my colleague Merav Artzi, visit my site at: https://www.NicotianaRustica.orgTo support this podcast on Patreon, visit: https://www.patreon.com/UniverseWithinTo donate directly with PayPal: https://www.paypal.me/jasongrechanikMusic courtesy of Nuno Moreno. See his work at: https://m.soundcloud.com/groove_a_zen_sound and https://nahira-ziwa.bandcamp.com/https://www.facebook.com/UniverseWithinPodcasthttps://www.instagram.com/UniverseWithinPodcast
Rak Razam is an experiential journalist whose works include two books on Ayahuasca and the documentary Shamans of the Global Village. In this episode, Rak discusses what shamanism is and describes the plants that are central to the shamanic journeys of Peru and other South American countries. He shines a light on the history of shamanism in the world, why so many today are chasing the visions, and the role of the shaman now to heal the global village. In this episode, we discuss: Ayahuasca, a sacred jungle medicine that grows all over South America that is mixed into a brew that acts as a purgative that can create not just hallucination, but also very deep visionary experiences, when used in particular kinds of sets and settings for healing. Ayahuasceros – the people working with Ayahuasca. Lisa Ling’s third-party reporting on Ayahuasca. The different names of Ayahuasca in certain regions. For example, the Columbians call it Yagé. How people report that it feels like 10 years of psychotherapy in one night. What a shaman is, as well as any potential connection between the Sanskrit word śamana and the western word shaman, which was coined in the Western world by the book Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy from the 50s by Mercea Eliade. How psychoactive plants are part of every landscape. The theory that you can’t serve the people unless you’ve been served. Curanderos, from the Spanish word “to heal”, and the science of curanderismo: Ayahuasceros specialize in Ayahuasca. Vegetalistas work with plants. Tabaqueros work with tobacco for divination and healing. Shamanic training in which you have to do a dieta: a purification process (give up sugar, oil, salt, meats) to increase sensitivities. The book Thus Spoke the Plant by Monica Gagliano. How Gabor Mate used to lead people to Peru for Ayahuasca. Rak Razam is an alchemical storyteller with his finger on the pulse of tomorrow and the heart of today. A screenwriter, documentary filmmaker, author, journalist and culture maker, his focus is on the new cultural paradigm birthing in this brave new world. His works include the books Aya Awakenings: A Shamanic Odyssey and The Ayahuasca Sessions: Conversations with Amazonian Curanderos and Western Shamans, and the documentary Shamans of the Global Village. www.rakrazam.com Heather Grzych is the author of The Ayurvedic Guide to Fertility and the host of the Wisdom of the Body podcast. A board-certified Ayurvedic practitioner, she bridges the worlds of conventional and alternative medicine to help women and men heal their physical and emotional lives. Heather is on the board of directors for the National Ayurvedic Medical Association (NAMA) and has consulted with doctors, governments, and insurance companies. She offers virtual consultations and programs worldwide. www.heathergrzych.com Connect with Heather: Instagram.com/heathergrzych Facebook.com/grzychheather This podcast is for educational purposes only.
Bioneers: Revolution From the Heart of Nature | Bioneers Radio Series
Are plants intelligent? If we knew their language what might they tell us? Potawatomi Indigenous ecologist and author Robin Kimmerer and evolutionary ecologist Monica Gagliano merge Traditional Ecological Knowledge with Western science for a surprising trip into the minds of mosses and chili seeds and the songs of corn. They agree what we really need today is a revolution in values, an “Honorable Harvest” of gratitude and reciprocity with our plant kin.
Monica is a Research Associate Professor in evolutionary ecology at Southern Cross University. She has pioneered the brand-new research field of plant bioacoustics, demonstrating that plants emit their own ‘voices’ and detect and respond to the sounds of their environments. By re-kindling a sense of wonder for this beautiful place we call home, she is helping to inspire solutions to human relations with the world we co-inhabit. Her latest book is Thus Spoke the Plant. In this episode we talk about how Monica discovered that there is no scientific question big enough to justify taking another’s life, and the incredible moment of crisis which heralded big change and dismantled her idea of science, and how plants came to rescue the scientist within her. We talk about how to surrender to and embrace change, the lessons we can learn from plants, how to ask disruptive questions, the humbleness and awe of plant time, being comfortable with not knowing, bioacoustics and regeneration of the environment, the aliveness of all and giving up purpose to find purpose. Discover show notes, Monica’s book recommendation and more on www.goingconscious.com. Connect with Monica:www.monicagagliano.com Connect with Nikki:Instagram @nikkitrottwww.nikkitrott.com
Are plants intelligent? Can they think? Can they hear, see, feel, smell and taste? Throughout history, most Western philosophers and scientists answered those questions with a resounding “no.” Plants have long been treated as passive, inanimate objects that form the backdrop to our active lives, rather than highly sensitive organisms with intelligence and agency of … Continue reading Ep. 37 – Monica Gagliano on plant intelligence and human imagination →
In part one of McUniverse we serve a 3 course meal of ideas as a carnivore, a vegan and a scientist, talk about the ethics of eating and the consciousness of plants. Guests James Aspey https://www.jamesaspey.com.au/ https://www.instagram.com/jamesaspey/?hl=en Dr Monica Gagliano https://www.monicagagliano.com/ https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/576914/thus-spoke-the-plant-by-monica-gagliano/ Carnivore Diet Links Mikhalia Peterson https://mikhailapeterson.com/ Shawn Baker https://shawn-baker.com/ Joe Rogan and Shawn Bakerhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yj_Bc9hdHa0 Plant Intelligence Links Michael Pollan https://michaelpollan.com/ The Huichol - Keepers of Peyote https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huichol#Peyote Contact www.danmcuniverse.com https://twitter.com/DanMcUniverse dan@danmchugh.com.au See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Join me, Dan McHugh, for McUniverse... A podcast that encourages you to entertain ideas that you wouldn't normally allow yourself to consider. Contact www.danmcuniverse.com https://twitter.com/DanMcUniverse dan@danmchugh.com.au See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hello and welcome to this episode of the podcast. In this episode, I’m talking to ecologist and woodland owner Simon Leadbeater. We talk specifically about whether trees are sacred; spoiler alert, Simon thinks they are and he explains eloquently and convincingly why. He touches on books by authors you may well have already read; The Hidden Life of Trees by Peter Wohlleben and Thus Spoke the Plant by Monica Gagliano. However, if you believe trees are sacred and sentient, a problem arises, namely do you have any right to move them, to prune them or even to move amongst them. And it’s questions like these that we touch on in the episode. About Simon Leadbeater: Simon has a background in local government and the third sector. He and his wife bought Rector’s Wood in 1999 and have lived there ever since. Simon has published work around the themes or ecology, rewinding and forestry. In his own words, Simon sums up his feelings on woodlands and the right to roam therein; “I think my essential philosophy is that we lack empathy for nature and particularly her animals, and we no longer venerate nature, in particular we no longer consider trees (and other plants) as sacred. If you have empathy, and wish to act as animals’ proxy, then obviously you will give them space; if you consider trees sacred, then you will wish to look after them with reverent care. The latter would include behaving in a woodland as if you were in a temple or church – our behaviour would be appropriate for such sacred settings.” What We Discuss: Simon’s beliefs surrounding the sacredness of trees. What are the historical roots of considering trees to be sacred? How/why have we moved away from this idea? What makes Simon believe trees are sentient? How does this sentience manifest itself in the everyday lives of trees? What is open access to nature? Why might it be problematic? How do humans rediscover their connection with forests and woodlands? Why is important to consider the feelings of the trees themselves? Links: Simon Leadbeater on Twitter Simon’s Work: Leadbeater, S.R.B. (2019), ‘Ancient Roots to Untruths; Unlearning the past and seeing the world anew,’ Quarterly Journal of Forestry,’ January 2019 Vol 113 No.1 Nearby Wild Blog Leadbeater S (2019) ‘In defence of tears,’ The Ecological Citizen 3(Suppl A): 101–3 Leadbeater, S.R.B., (2018) ‘Meat: the Alpha and Omega of Extinction,’ ECOS, 39(3) Books Simon mentions in the interview: Wohlleben, P., (2016) The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They Communicate, Discoveries from a Secret World (2016), Greystone Books Gagliano, M., (2018) Thus Spoke the Plant: A Remarkable Journey of Groundbreaking Scientific Discoveries and Personal Encounters with Plants, North Atlantic Books: Berkeley, California Mathew Hall (2011), Plants as Persons: a Philosophical Botany, State University of New York Press The Imagination of Plants: A Book of Botanical Mythology (out this year, not yet read – but probably excellent) Safina, C., (2015), Beyond Words: What Animals Think and Feel, Henry Holt and Co. Taylor, B., (2010), Dark Green Religion: Nature Spirituality and the Planetary Future, University of California Press Powers, R., (2018) The Overstory, William Heinemann: London Hill, J., Butterfly, (2000) The Legacy of Luna: the story of a tree, a woman, and the struggle to save the redwoods, HarperCollins Publishers Inc Get in touch: Email podcast@rootsandall.co.uk Website www.rootsandall.co.uk Twitter @rootsandall Instagram @rootsandallpod Patreon Link Help me keep the podcast free & independent! Or onate as much or as little as you like at GoFundMe
Dai sistemi di difesa ai network di comunicazione tramite funghi, fino ad arrivare alle ultime teorie avanzate da Monica Gagliano. Ospite speciale il Dottor Matteo Riboni in veste di specialista. Seguici anche su: YOUTUBE https://youtube.com/channel/UCSccnE9-Y9PfJC2thw-vgtg FACEBOOK https://facebook.com/mentecast/ SPOTIFY https://open.spotify.com/show/6rEXAE1nfxmfdzY9dtFYO7 iTUNES https://podcasts.apple.com/it/podcast/mentecast/id1458522809? SOUNDCLOUD https://soundcloud.com/user-613167048 TWITTER https://twitter.com/mentecast INSTAGRAM https://instagram.com/mentecast FONTI: https://courses.lumenlearning.com/boundless-biology/chapter/plant-defense-mechanisms/ https://www.britannica.com/list/botanical-barbarity-9-plant-defense-mechanisms Mycorrhiza https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4497361/ https://www.newscientist.com/article/2211209-tree-stumps-that-should-be-dead-can-be-kept-alive-by-nearby-trees/ https://e360.yale.edu/features/exploring_how_and_why_trees_talk_to_each_other https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2018/09/news-plants-communicate-caterpillar-attack-calcium-video/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7kHZ0a_6TxY https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4m9SefyRjg https://www.nationalgeographic.com.au/nature/the-worlds-largest-living-organism.aspx La Tronche en Biais, intervento con Francis Martin https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70yDevgIc6A http://mycor.nancy.inra.fr/blogGenomes/?page_id=149 Monica Gagliano e il condizionamento delle piante https://www.nature.com/articles/srep38427 https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2016/02/160221-plant-science-botany-evolution-mabey-ngbooktalk/ https://www.wnycstudios.org/story/smarty-plants http://www.news.uwa.edu.au/201704119544/research/study-reveals-plants-listen-find-sources-water Lincoln Taiz "Plants neither possess nor require consciousness" https://www.cell.com/trends/plant-science/fulltext/S1360-1385(19)30126-8 https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/07/190703121448.htm
In this episode, we unpack the 5 elements of Sustainability 5.0: Spirit, Earth, Ancient Wisdom, Community, and Self. Together these 5 elements form what we believe are the foundational pillars for holistic sustainability for design. Through this episode we briefly explore each of these elements, what they mean, alongside examples of these elements in practice. This episode is here to act as a guide and overview of the 5 elements before we delve deeper into each one individually in later episodes. Resources + Mentions: Dr. Monica Gagliano - scientist and researcher of plant cognisance. Dr. Masaru Emoto - author of The Hidden Messages in Water on experiments with the vibration and frequency of water. Earth is Hiring by Peta Kelly - tapping into the spirit of your business. Fafarm - regenerative agricultural textile methods. Fibre Shed - local textile and clothing communities. Botanical Inks - natural dye studio in Bristol UK. Personhood granted to Wanganui river. Saving the Planet with Indigenous Knowledge by Dr. Daniel Wildcat. Zazi - artisan fashion community. FFORA - functional and beautifully designed accessories for people in wheelchairs. Lissome - sustainable fashion publication. Mindfulness apps - Headspace, Insight Timer.
What does true freedom really mean to you?Is it merely getting what you want out of life, or being the best person you can be, who inspires others and gives back to the world?Discover the elements and power of integral consciousness and what you can do to be the real change in the world.Show NotesThe definition of true freedom. (7:29)Why do people get sick even when they do their best to stay healthy? (12:44)Tips for engaging archaic consciousness. (23:05)Clay can be used for medicinal detoxification and creating a grounding effect for your body. (29:12)Put enough psychic energy into a stone and it can “wake up” and become conscious. (37:11)The importance of water and hydration. (45:11)How the sun is linked to archaic consciousness. (51:34)Developing a relationship with a plant is a safe way to learn how to love. (1:00:09)Engaging magic consciousness. (1:11:50)The link between magic consciousness and the reptilian brain system. (1:21:48)Problems with the story gap. (1:29:27)Living your myth. (1:32:57)“The mental level of consciousness can either free and connect you or bind and debilitate you.” (1:37:05)God: The most dangerous idea. (1:47:07)Listen to your heart before your head or ego. (1:53:27)Integral consciousness: The pinnacle of human consciousness. (2:01:18)Wake up, grow up, clean up and show up. (2:15:08)Be aware of your ECHO. (2:21:52)ResourcesTami Simon’s interview with Sandra Ingerman for the Insights at the Edge podcastThus Spoke The Plant by Monica Gagliano and Suzanne SimardThe Coming Waves by Dustin DiPernaBrainstorm: The Power and Purpose of the Teenage Brain by Dr. Daniel SiegelIncreasing Your Capacity for Feeling Using Stone Shapes from Paul’s YouTube channelHow to Eat, Move And Be Healthy!Esoteric Physiology: Consciousness and Disease by Dennis KlocekPaul’s Living 4D podcast conversations with Dr. Nick Berry, Matt Wallden, Nir Eyal, Kyle Kingsbury and Aubrey Marcus and James HollisThe work of Misty Tripoli, Dr. Clare Graves and Eckhart TolleArnold Patent’s Universal PrinciplesHooked: How to Build Habit-Forming Products by Nir Eyal
>> SUBSCRIBE :: Sign up for newsletter to receive updates on upcoming programs and events >> GET WILDLY UNSTUCK :: Sign up for Wildly Unstuck audio program (it’s free) + learn the top 5 things sabotaging your health goals & what to do about them. ABOUT EPISODE *Due to Monica’s location in nature at her home in Australia, the internet connection gets disrupted at certain points in the conversation - while we did our best to make the audio sound better at certain points, we apologize for the quality and encourage you to continue listening as she has so many amazing things to say. In her book Thus Spoke The Plant, a “phytobiography”– or a collection of stories written in partnership with a plant –research scientist Monica Gagliano reveals the dynamic role plants play in genuine first-hand accounts from her research into plant communication and cognition. By transcending the view of plants as the objects of scientific materialism, Gagliano encourages us to rethink plants as people–beings with subjectivity, consciousness, and volition, and hence having the capacity for their own perspectives and voices. Monica’s research aims at expanding our perception of animals, plants and more generally Nature. In the process of learning how to do this, Monica has pioneered the brand-new research field of plant bioacoustics and extended the concept of cognition to plants, re-igniting the discourse on plant subjectivity, sentience and ethical standing. In this interview, Monica shares about how an ethical crisis was the seed that changed the course of Monica’s career and led to her working with plants and writing her book. We talk about the collective “plant blindness” and Monica shares how resistant and scared she was to change. We talk about Trust as one of the biggest lessons Monica has and continues to learn through this work, and Monica’s explanation of “personhood” with regards to plants, and thus the legality of the natural world. Monica shares what the “real plant revolution” is and its many implications... plus lots of talk on top issues capturing Monica’s attention: GMOs, Cannabis, and the appropriation of potent medicinal plants on a larger scale. Stick to the end to hear Monica’s request for your support and how you can help her mission to protect and restore the ecologies of the Earth! Click here for full show notes ***** SUPPORT THE PODCAST Your support means the world... If the show has helped, inspired or spoken to you, it would mean the world to me if you show your support through a small financial contribution. Each FYW episode is a labor of love that takes me about three days to produce... From as little as $1 a month, your support will help to cover the costs associated with producing and hosting the show. I love you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart! To make a monthly contribution, head to the Patreon page here. If you would like to make a one-time contribution, you may use our personal PayPal Link here and offer any dollar amount you'd like : https://paypal.me/wildlyrooted Thank you as every penny counts toward supporting this work! xo ***** For more from Wildly Rooted Get Wildly UNSTUCK audio program (it's free) Support Wildly Rooted on Patreon (I thank you!) Work with Venessa 1-on-1 Say hi on Instagram @WildlyRooted
Join me for a discussion with Monica Gagliano, a Research Associate Professor in Evolutionary Ecology, Adjunct Senior Research Fellow at the University of Western Australia, Research Affiliate at the Sydney Environment Institute, University of Sydney & Senior Research Fellow at the Biological Intelligence (BI) Lab, University of Sydney, as we discuss her work on plant cognition, plant intelligence, and the possibility of plant … Continue reading Monica Gagliano Live!
Wait! Plants have no nervous system - so how could they have any consciousness? Yet, as Monica Gagliano explains, science has proven that plants have sentience - as the shamans have told us for millennia. Join me listening to this amazing and experienced expert in the field of plant intelligence.
Bioneers: Revolution From the Heart of Nature | Bioneers Radio Series
Are plants intelligent? If we knew their language what might they tell us? Potawatomi Indigenous ecologist and author Robin Kimmerer and evolutionary ecologist Monica Gagliano merge Traditional Ecological Knowledge with Western science for a surprising trip into the minds of mosses and chili seeds and the songs of corn. They agree what we really need today is a revolution in values, an “Honorable Harvest” of gratitude and reciprocity with our plant kin.
Episode 150: Join us for a mind and heart expanding conversation with Dr. Monica Gagliano about her research in plant cognition and her direct experiences with the botanical world. A pioneer in the field of Plant BioAcoustics, Monica's peer-reviewed work has furthered the concept of plant sentience. Monica's experiences with plants have altered her life, her research, and are the subject of her new book, Thus Spoke the Plant. In this interview, Monica talks about her experiments with plants- including her groundbreaking studies with Peas, which provided evidence that plants, at least Peas, are capable of associative learning. Monica tells us about the invitation that she received from the Vegetal World to delve more deeply into direct contact with plants and how her decision to say yes to that invitation changed her life. Monica also explains how listening is a key to establishing a relationship with plants and what listeners can do to connect with the plants in their lives. To hear more about Monica's earlier scientific research, listen to our first podcast together: Learning, Memory, and Decision Making in Plants. To get her new book, Thus Spoke the Plant,visit: NorthAtlanticBooks.com/shop/thus-spoke-the-plant/ Dr. Monica Gagliano's research aims at expanding our perception of animals, plants, and Nature. She is a Research Associate Professor in Evolutionary Ecology and Adjunct Senior Research Fellow at the University of Western Australia, Research Affiliate at the Sydney Environment Institute, University of Sydney and a Senior Research Fellow at the Biological Intelligence (BI) Lab, University of Sydney. Monica's website is: MonicaGagliano.com
SPEAKERS: Brian Pickles, Monica Gagliano and Alex Gaut HOST: Robyn Williams Join pioneering scientists Brian Pickles and Monica Gagliano alongside Nature Connection guide, Alex Gaut as they discuss the fascinating world of tree communication, plant cognition and the healing powers of forest bathing. Gagliano’s bio acoustics research in plant cognition and Pickles’ work revealing a mycelium communication network dubbed “the Wood Wide Web” has exposed an incredible hidden world where plants and trees share, trade, care for family, display altruism, wage war, and even think! And the connection between trees and humans and is just as fascinating. Originally established with Japanese government support because of its measurable health benefits, tree bathing has become widely popular in Japan, Europe and the US as a mind-tree-body therapy.
Have you ever wondered what your dog or cat would say to you if they could talk? How about your plant? In this episode we explore the world of bioacoustics and cognitive ecology. Featuring MIDI Sprout creator, Joe Patitucci, and ecologist, Monica Gagliano, who is the author of Thus Spoke the Plant. Twenty Thousand Hertz is produced out of the studios of Defacto Sound, and hosted by Dallas Taylor. Follow the show on Twitter & Facebook. Become a monthly contributor at 20k.org/donate. If you know what this week's mystery sound is, tell us at mystery.20k.org. Check out Data Garden’s plant music at datagarden.org. Go to forhims.com/20k for your $5 complete hair kit. Check out SONOS at sonos.com. Episode transcript, music, and credits can be found here: https://www.20k.org/episodes/plantsthatsing
Do you need a brain to be able to sense the world around you, or to remember or learn?
Do you need a brain to be able to sense the world around you, or to remember or learn?
Do you need a brain to sense the world around you, remember or learn? Apparently not. Dive into the marvellous work of evolutionary ecologist Dr Monica Gagliano whose pioneering experiments are proving plants are learning behaviour in ways we never thought possible. But that doesn't mean our brains aren't special. Cognitive neuroscientist Dr Muireann Irish beautifully articulates how some of the complex processes such as memory work in our brain and what is still a mystery. One thing is for certain – this episode will inspire you, challenge your brain-centred worldview and leave you with even more questions.
From being a disciplined, traditionally-trained scientist, to listening to plants give her directions, to then combining her research with the direction they gave her and turning it into hard-core scientific experimentation, Dr. Monica Gagliano has helped change how we understand plants.
This week we welcome to the show Dr Monica Gagliano. Dr Gagliano is an evolutionary ecologist and the author of the fantastic book, Thus Spoke The Plant. We chat about her experiences running experiments on plant communication and cognition, as well as her experiences learning from and with both indigenous plant teachers and plant spirits themselves around the world. Very much my jam. Show Notes Thus Spoke The Plant. Monica's Website. Monica on Twitter. Monica giving the keynote at Bioneers 2018.
Deryn talks with leading research scientist Monica Gagliano about her latest discoveries on plant communication and cognition.
Author and plant behavior researcher Monica Gagliano talks about courage, scientific blindness, plant spirits, cannonball trees, cosmic glitches, and her fascinating new book Thus Spoke the Plant: A Remarkable Journey of Groundbreaking Scientific Discoveries & Personal Encounters with Plants (North Atlantic).
Dr. Gundry and biologist Monica Gagliano sit down to get to the bottom of plant intelligence, plant memory, and Monica’s new book, which she says “may freak some people out” simply because of the exciting plant wisdom she uncovers.WATCH THE INTERVIEW ON YOUTUBE HERE.Want to have your questions answered on The Dr. Gundry Podcast? Use “#AskGundry” on social media.I WANT TO KNOW MORE ABOUT YOU, PLEASE TAKE THIS SURVEY.Monica Gagliano, PhD, is a research associate professor of evolutionary ecology at the Centre of Evolutionary Biology at the University of Western Australia, a research affiliate at the Sydney Environment Institute at the University of Sydney and former fellow of the Australian Research Council.She pioneered the brand-new research field of plant bioacoustics, experimentally demonstrating for the first time that plants emit their own ‘voices’ and detect and respond to the sounds of their environments. By demonstrating that learning is not the exclusive province of animals, Gagliano has ignited the discourse on plant subjectivity and their ethical and legal standing.In collaboration with various disciplines across the Sciences and the Humanities, her research aims at expanding our perception of animals, plants and more generally Nature. In the process of learning how to do this, I have pioneered the brand-new research field of plant bioacoustics and extended the concept of cognition to plants, re-igniting the discourse on plant subjectivity, sentience and ethical standing.Monica Gagliano:Website – https://www.monicagagliano.com/Twitter – https://twitter.com/monica_gagliano?l…Buy Thus Spoke the Plant here – https://amzn.to/2PPRketSHARE, SUBSCRIBE and RATE “THE DR. GUNDRY PODCAST” HERE on ITUNES.
In this week’s episode Monica Gagliano speaks with Joanna about: exploring scientifically the acoustic behavior of plants; a dream connection with the Shipibo and teacher plants; dieting and communing with the plant wisdom; a word of gratitude from the plant world; remembering the undivided world; merging with the heart of the sequoia; a mysterious experience with water; exploring a new kind of science; learning from a playful ambassador of the plant world; the Biological Intelligence Lab; realizing that we are the other; a message from the tobacco plant. The post Listening to the Plants appeared first on Future Primitive Podcasts.
We've always been big proponents of things in this world being a bit stranger than they appear. On this episode of The What If? Podcast, things are no different. Vegetables might not just make you smart. They might actually *be* smart. Today, we're talking about Cleve Backster and his crazy plant polygraphs, Monica Gagliano and her plant roller coasters, fungal neural networks with more worms in them, and a whole lot more. Leave us a voicemail: (612) 246-4614 Get an extra episode each week: https://www.patreon.com/whatifpodcast Send us an email: hi@whatifpodcast.com Visit our website: http://whatifpodcast.com/ Shop our store: https://shop.whatifpodcast.com/
A treat for all the vegans out there. Rick and Michael tackle John Wyndham’s ‘The Day of the Triffids’, exploring whether plants can think, feel, and learn. And of course, the most fundamental question of all: who’s the real master of the earth - humans or wheat? Featuring: Prof. Monica Gagliano
Do you really need a brain to sense the world around you? To remember? Or even learn? Well, it depends on who you ask. Jad and Robert, they are split on this one. Today, Robert drags Jad along on a parade for the surprising feats of brainless plants. Along with a home-inspection duo, a science writer, and some enterprising scientists at Princeton University, we dig into the work of evolutionary ecologist Monica Gagliano, who turns our brain-centered worldview on its head through a series of clever experiments that show plants doing things we never would've imagined. Can Robert get Jad to join the march? This episode was produced by Annie McEwen. Support Radiolab today at Radiolab.org/donate.
Scientists are beginning to understand that plants have abilities that we've only ever associated with animals. They can learn, have memory and decision making capabilities. Steve Wood and Deryn Thorpe discuss the latest research with scientist Monica Gagliano, a Research Associate Professor in Evolutionary Ecology and Adjunct Senior Research Fellow at the University of Western Australia & Research Affiliate at the Sydney Environment Institute, University of Sydney.
Episode 118: Can plants learn? Do they have memory? Can they make decisions? In this episode, Monica Gagliano, Research Associate Professor of Evolutionary Ecology at the University of Western Australia, talks about her research with plants. Monica has pioneered the new field of plant bioacoustics and recently extended the concept of cognition to plants. Monica talks about her research exploring whether plants can learn and if they have memory and decision-making capabilities. Monica also talks about plant time vs. human time, the chemical vocabulary of plants, and why she treated plants as animals and not as objects in her experiments. To learn more about Monica's work, click here.
Bioneers: Revolution From the Heart of Nature | Bioneers Radio Series
Are plants intelligent? If we knew their language what might they tell us? Potawatomi Indigenous ecologist and author Robin Kimmerer and evolutionary ecologist Monica Gagliano merge Traditional Ecological Knowledge with Western science for a surprising trip into the minds of mosses and chili seeds and the songs of corn. They agree what we really need today is a revolution in values, an “Honorable Harvest” of gratitude and reciprocity with our plant kin.
กดฟัง WiTcast ตอนที่ 18 download ไฟล์ MP3 (คลิกขวา save link as) PODCAST / iTUNES สำหรับผู้ที่ใช้ iPhone, ipod ท่านสามารถใช้โปรแกรม iTunes สมัครเป็นสมาชิกรายการให้โหลดเองอัตโนมัติได้ โดยเข้า iTunes store แล้วเสริชหา witcast หรือ subscribe ผ่าน feed นี้โดยตรง http://feeds.feedburner.com/witcast ร่วมบริจาคเงินสนับสนุนรายการได้โดยโอนเข้าบัญชี : ธนาคารไทยพาณิชย์ สาขาบิ๊กซี สะพานควาย เลขบัญชี 0332935256 ชื่อ แทนไท ประเสริฐกุล หรือส่งผ่าน paypal มาที่ yeebud@gmail.com ------------------------------------------------------------- SHOW NOTE Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire. - William Butler Yeats ป๋องแป๋งพาเด็กบุกสิงคโปร์กับโครงการ "สุดยอดผู้หลงใหลในวิทยาศาสตร์" โดย vicharkarn.com Singapore Science Centre หูนกเค้าแมว - 1,2 หิ่งห้อยลุงกิจ สวนของโครงการอยู่ในโซนพื้นที่เรียกว่า "กระเพาะหมู" จะเห็นว่าเขียวอยู่หย่อมเดียวท่ามกลางป่าคอนกรีต ลิงก์ facebook ของกลุ่มอนุรักษ์ที่ลุงกิจทำ ชื่อ "ลำพูบางกระสอบ" หมูทอดคุณเบิร์ด รูปนี้แกพยายามจะเก๊กเป็นวูฟเวอรีนน่ะ อย่าลืมนะครับ หน้าพหลฯ ซ.8 ช่วงเช้า ไปแวะทักและอุดหนุนได้ อันนี้ทำพิธีเซ่นไหว้เจ้าแม่ก่อนอัด จบกันที GT200 ! James Mccormick ผู้อยู่เบื้องหลังเครื่องตรวจระเบิดลวงโลกตระกูล GT200, ADE 651 และ Alpha 6 ถูกตัดสินจำคุกแล้ว -1,2,3,4,5 [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_IaBLOuzEzU] -รวมข้อมูลทั่วไปเกี่ยวกับดราม่า GT200 + กระทู้ pantip - 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15 Ideomotor Effect -1,2,3,4 [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gNF8wK8hd7I] [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMtuWymUzz4] เพจเรื่องวิ่งเรื่องกล้วย หัวนมหลั่งเลือด ข่าววิ่งแล้วเจ็บนม - 1,2,3 [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=My9BDRtzZd4] [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tygfo4_wXjc] พืชคุยกัน / ผลกระทบของเสียงที่มีต่อพืช งานวิจัยคุณ Monica Gagliano -1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15 พืชสะท้อนเสียงค้างคาว -1,2,3 คลิป Myth Buster [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CMiVNPXR5qw] [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FhsbM9LxPAk] WiT Quizzz... 1. หัวนมผู้หญิงเมื่อตื่นตัวมีความยาวเฉลี่ย 10 มิล 2. ชื่อกาแล็กซี่ milky way มีต้นกำเนิดมาจากตำนานกรีกว่าเทพีเฮร่าให้นมอาคิลิส แล้วอาคิลิสดูดแรงไปหน่อย นมเลยกระฉูดปริ๊สออกมาเปื้อนฟ้าเป็นทางช้างเผือก 3. ในผู้ชาย พบคนที่มีหัวนมเกิน 2 หัวนมถึง 1 ใน 18 คน / / / / / เฉลย 1. จริง - 1 2. หลอก - จริงๆ ตำนานคือเฮอคิวลิสเป็นเด็กที่ดูดนมเฮร่า ไม่ใช่อาคิลิส - 1,2 3. จริง - 1,2 [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JbieSOsMIk] [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-T03tIkQQTA] Milk line / Nipple line - 1 เวอร์ชั่นเล็กๆ เหมือนไฝ บางทีอาจไม่รู้ตัว ตำแหน่งที่แปลกๆ หน่อย อันนี้เคสพิเศษสุด อยากดูรูปเพิ่มเสริชกูเกิลว่า supernumerary nipple เฉลย WiT Game