September 2006 Event
Sex, Ecology, and Spirituality
with Alan Seid
When: Thursday, September 21, 2006
Where: Garden Street Family Center, 1231 N. Garden
Time: 7:00-9:00. Doors open at 6:30
Where: Garden Street Family Center, 1231 N. Garden
Time: 7:00-9:00. Doors open at 6:30
Spend an evening with Alan Seid who will give us a guided tour of Ken Wilber’s AQAL Model (All Quadrants, All Levels) a theoretical and practical framework which attempts to honor and include the knowledge and wisdom from as many
sources as possible. Wilber is considered the most widely read and influential of contemporary American philosophers, having been described as "the Einstein of consciousness." His framework attempts to integrate
the wisdom from East and West, as well as from pre-modern, modern and postmodern cultures.
sources as possible. Wilber is considered the most widely read and influential of contemporary American philosophers, having been described as "the Einstein of consciousness." His framework attempts to integrate
the wisdom from East and West, as well as from pre-modern, modern and postmodern cultures.
After covering the basic layout of the integral model,
we will discuss it’s applicability to our own growth and development, as well as to the fields of education, politics, medicine, and sustainability.
we will discuss it’s applicability to our own growth and development, as well as to the fields of education, politics, medicine, and sustainability.
Alan has spent much of his life studying various tools, processes and practices. He has been studying Wilber’s work since 2000, and completed Integral Institute’s Integral Ecology and Sustainability seminar in
November 2004. Alan offers trainings in various areas, including Marshall Rosenberg’s model of Nonviolent Communication, as well as counseling and conflict mediation. More about Alan at: http://www.ic.org/nica/
November 2004. Alan offers trainings in various areas, including Marshall Rosenberg’s model of Nonviolent Communication, as well as counseling and conflict mediation. More about Alan at: http://www.ic.org/nica/