The Mindful Cranks
A podcast by Ron Purser
50 Episoade
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Episode 30 - Adrian Daub: Questioning Silicon Valley
Publicat: 16.12.2020 -
Episode 29 - Paula Haddock: Mindfulness for Social Change
Publicat: 20.10.2020 -
Episode 28 - Laurence Cox: The Irish Buddhist
Publicat: 16.10.2020 -
Episode 27 - Daniel Nehring - Mindfulness and Therapeutic Cultures
Publicat: 27.09.2020 -
Episode 26 - Matthew Ingram - Retreat: How the Counterculture Invented Wellness
Publicat: 08.09.2020 -
Episode 25 - Christopher Titmuss - The Political Buddha
Publicat: 10.07.2020 -
Episode 24 - Miguel Farias - The Buddha Pill
Publicat: 30.04.2020 -
Episode 23 - Evan Thompson - Why I Am Not a Buddhist
Publicat: 21.04.2020 -
Episode 22 - Michael Ungar - Change Your World
Publicat: 02.04.2020 -
Episode 21 - Rabbi Michael Lerner - Revolutionary Love
Publicat: 29.02.2020 -
Episode 20 - Winton Higgins - Politics Matters: Becoming a Dharmic Citizen
Publicat: 12.02.2020 -
Episode 19 - Candy Gunther Brown: Debating Mindfulness in Public Schools
Publicat: 30.12.2019 -
Episode 18 - David Forbes - Mindfulness and Its Discontents
Publicat: 13.12.2019 -
Episode 17 - David Loy - EcoDharma
Publicat: 26.04.2019 -
Episode 16 - Steven Stanley
Publicat: 27.03.2019 -
Episode 15 - Wakoh Shannon Hickey
Publicat: 26.03.2019 -
Episode 14 - Jaime Kucinskas - The Mindful Elite
Publicat: 10.02.2019 -
Episode 13 Glenn Wallis
Publicat: 10.01.2019 -
Episode 12 - Deborah Rozelle & David Lewis
Publicat: 26.09.2018 -
Episode 11 - The Cranks Are Back
Publicat: 25.09.2018
Shortly after my Huffington Post essay “Beyond McMindfulness” went viral, a popular mindfulness promoter accused me of being a “crank”. So why not own it? Alas, The Mindful Cranks was born. The Mindful Cranks was the first podcast to critique the mindfulness movement. Conversations with guests soon expanded in scope to include critical perspectives on the wellness, happiness, resilience and positive psychology industries - sharing a common concern that such highly individualistic and market-friendly techniques ignore the larger structural and systemic problems plaguing society. Whether these be trendy Asian spiritualities such as mindfulness or yoga, or other interventions from therapeutic cultures, The Mindful Cranks will call them out without mercy. I am very fortunate to engage with my favorite journalists, authors and public intellectuals whose works that I admire, as well as educators and spiritual teachers who I have learned from — fellow cranks who don’t simply accept the way things are. They’re modern muckrakers who dare to question the unquestionable. But being cranky can be critically wise and compassionate. Casting a wide net around the impending meta-crisis, The Mindful Cranks also explores with leading thinkers how the problems of our times are deeply entangled with our ways of knowing and being. Rather than just retreating from such problems by sitting on cushion, doing yoga or listening to a meditation app, I believe using our minds is not necessarily a bad thing if it challenges the limits of human knowledge.
