Robert,

Don't know about Gaia being 'new-agey.'  I was thinking more in terms of
James Lovelock's notion that 'earth, in all its interactions and
transformations, added up to a single giant living system.'

arthur

I would make one change.  An additional word. Random.


Don't know about Gaia being 'new-agey.'  I was thinking more in terms of
James Lovelock's notion that 'earth, in all its interactions and
transformations, added up to a single Random giant living system.'


-----Original Message-----
From: Robert E. Bowd [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, June 3, 2003 11:01 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Futurework] Gaia Hypothesis...


Hello Brad:

Don't know about Gaia being 'new-agey.'  I was thinking more in terms of
James Lovelock's notion that 'earth, in all its interactions and
transformations, added up to a single giant living system.'  I have always
sensed this was Ray's perspective, if I have been reading him correctly.

Edmund O'Sullivan's excellent book (2000) "Transformative Learning -
Educational Vision for the 21st Century" [OISE/UT Press] further develops
this premise.  Philosophically, the book has a strong spiritual component,
but I wouldn't classify it as 'new-agey.'

Your tongue-in-cheek wit was noted.  So far my polyps are fine.  But who
knows... I am middle-agey.

Regards,
BB

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