Warrior Wisdom #3: The Ultimate Weapon

In the second Rambo movie, bureaucrat Murdock reads Rambo his resume:
‘Rambo, John J. Born 7.6.47, Bowie, Arizona, of Indian-German descent. That’s a helluva combination. Joined the army 6.8.64, accepted special forces, specialization: light weapons. Cross trained as medic. Helicopter and language qualified. 59 confirmed kills, 2 silver stars, 4 bronze, 4 purple hearts, distinguished service cross, Medal of Honor. Incredible…’

Then come the words of wisdom from the non-stop fighting machine.

Murdock: ‘You’ll get every modern piece of equipment we have to ensure your safety. Rambo, you can feel totally safe because we have the most advanced weapons in the world available.’

Rambo: ‘I always believed that the mind’s the best weapon.’

Murdock: ‘Times change.’

Rambo: ‘For some people.’

From Rambo: First Blood Part II

Read also:
Warrior Wisdom #1: Mastery
Warrior Wisdom #2: The True Way

Favorites From 50 Years of Cinema

1971] A Clockwork Orange
1972] The Godfather
1973] Turks Fruit
1974] The Godfather: Part 2
1975] One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
1976] Taxi Driver
1977] Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope
1978] Dawn of the Dead
1979] Apocalypse Now
1980] Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back

1981] Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark
1982] Blade Runner
1983] Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi
1984] Once Upon a Time in America
1985] Back to the Future
1986] Stand By Me
1987] Robocop
1988] Die Hard
1989] Lethal Weapon 2
1990] GoodFellas

1991] The Silence of the Lambs
1992] Reservoir Dogs
1993] Groundhog Day
1994] Pulp Fiction
1995] Braveheart
1996] Trainspotting
1997] L.A. Confidential
1998] The Big Lebowski
1999] The Matrix
2000] Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

2001] The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Rings
2002] The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
2003] The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
2004] Sideways
2005] Sin City
2006] Apocalypto
2007] No Country For Old Men
2008] The Dark Knight
2009] Inglourious Basterds
2010] Black Swan

2011] Melancholia
2012] Skyfall
2013] Blue is the Warmest Colour
2014] Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
2015] Mad Max: Fury Road
2016] Moonlight
2017] Blade Runner 2046
2018] Bohemian Rhapsody
2019] Joker
2020] Mank

 

Van 51 miljard ton uitstoot naar 0

Hoe komen we van onze verslaving aan fossiele brandstoffen af? Laat die enorm complexe vraag maar over aan de rijkste nerd ter wereld: Bill Gates. De oud-Microsoft oprichter dook in het klimaatprobleem en schreef er het urgente boek over: ‘How to Avoid a Climate Disaster’.

Bill Gates (65), oprichter van Microsoft, multimiljardair en filantroop, is tien jaar bezig geweest de oorzaken en gevolgen van klimaatverandering te onderzoeken. Met behulp van experts in natuurkunde, scheikunde, biologie, technologie, politieke wetenschap en finance heeft hij in kaart gebracht wat er moet gebeuren om een klimaatcatastrofe te voorkomen. ‘Naar nul gaan zal heel erg moeilijk zijn, maar het is mogelijk’, aldus Gates.

51 miljard ton. Dat is de hoeveelheid broeikasgassen die we met de mensheid uitstoten in een jaar tijd. Dat moet terug naar nul omdat CO2 heel lang in de atmosfeer blijft en warmte vasthoudt. Dat levert allemaal vervelende (en extreem prijzige) problemen op, zoals droogte, bosbranden, stormen en overstromingen. En slechts een halve graad verschil – van 1,5 naar twee – kan tot een 100 procent slechter resultaat leiden.

Tegelijkertijd groeit de wereldbevolking naar tien miljard mensen in 2050 en zal de behoefte aan energie, voeding, spullen en transport op aarde flink toenemen. Dat zijn twee gigantische uitdagingen naast elkaar die we moeten oplossen. En de enige manier om dat te doen is schone energie zo goedkoop maken dat zelfs de armste landen erop over kunnen schakelen. Door de coronacrisis zal de uitstoot met slechts twee of drie miljard ton dalen. Dat is het bewijs dat we er niet gaan komen met minder vliegen en autorijden.

Een lege badkuip
Het doel is volgens Gates om naar nul uitstoot te gaan. De reden is dat het klimaat te vergelijken is met een badkuip die volstroomt. Als we minder uitstoten stroomt de badkuip nog steeds vol alleen langzamer. Natuurlijk zullen we altijd nog wel wat fossiele brandstoffen gebruiken. Daarvoor kan Direct Air Capture (DAC) -technologie worden ingezet dat atmosferische lucht aantrekt en vervolgens via een reeks chemische reacties de kooldioxide (CO2) extraheert. Kunnen we deze technologie niet gewoon massaal inzetten om het gehalte CO2 op het optimale niveau te houden? Helaas is dat technologisch niet mogelijk op deze schaal (Gates heeft wel het prijskaartje toegevoegd voor als dat wel zou kunnen: 5,1 biljoen dollar, 6 procent van de wereldeconomie). Al is het niet de ultieme oplossing, zal DAC wel een belangrijk onderdeel zijn van de weg naar nul.

Wat moet er allemaal gebeuren?
Fossiele brandstoffen zijn overal: plastic, cement, hamburgers, elektriciteit, wegen, tunnels, wc-papier en kleding… Of ze bevatten fossiele brandstoffen en/of ze worden vervoerd met voertuigen die fossiele brandstoffen verbranden. Per dag gebruiken we vier miljard vaten olie en deze olie is goedkoper dan frisdrank. Dus voorlopig zit stoppen er niet in. Maar het pad inzetten richting nul kan wel en dat vraagt om een complexe combinatie van openbaar beleid en technologische innovatie. Wat de transitie lastig zal maken is weerstand vanuit de energie-industrie die gebaat is bij de status quo. ‘Wat we moeten doen is de juiste incentives invoeren om het gedrag van mensen en bedrijven te veranderen. Dit zal niet makkelijk worden’, schrijft Gates.

>>> Lees verder op CFO.nl <<<

Jung, psychologist and idealist philosopher

Born in Switzerland, Carl Gustav Jung (1875 – 1961), along with Sigmund Freud, became the most well known psychiatrist of the twentieth century and possibly of all time.

In his little book ‘Decoding Jung’s metaphysics’, philosopher Bernardo Kastrup analyses Jung’s metaphysics. In other words: What is beyond what we think of as the physical world? Or in Kastrup’s words: A metaphysics of nature entails a certain view about what nature is in and of itself, as opposed to how it behaves (which is the study of science).

According to Kastrup, Jung hid his thoughts about this in his writing, because he was first and foremost a scientist. But Kastrup makes it obvious that Jung was also very much an idealist philosopher, which means that he thought that mind is primary in nature. In Jung’s view, the psyche holds the body rather than the other way around.

Famous principles in Jung’s work are archetypes, the collective unconscious and synchronicity, all principles that fit the idealist view very nicely. Jung considers the unconscious integral to the psyche. Sometimes, experiences in the unconscious can potentially cross the boundary and enter ego-consciousness. That is clearly an idealist position: There is only one mind (mind-at-large) and egos are localisations of this mind-at large or collective unconscious (or for the Dutch reader: Fragmenten uit het Schemerland). Content of this collective unconscious could potentially enter the ego-mind. Jung refers to these experiences as ‘psychoid’.

Jung describes archetypes as unconscious, but nonetheless active-living dispositions, ideas in the Platonic sense, that perform and continually influence our thoughts and feelings and actions. These ideas have effects which have an organizing influence on the contents of consciousness.

For instance, the inner life and behavior of a mother towards her child is largely determined by the so-called ‘mother archetype’, a mode of being and acting that is inherited by every woman and constellated by the presence of the child. These behaviours are thus not learned, but inborn. They correspond to the primordial templates of the collective unconscious (the larger mind) as they assert themselves by impinging on ego-consciousness.

The archetypes cannot be apprehended in and of themselves. All we can assess is the organising effects on our ego-consciousness. This is once again an idealist perspective. All we know, and can ever know for certain, is what we directly perceive. We cannot observe archetypes directly. All we have is the images, dreams and visions they help create. An archetype is a tendency that ‘tends’ to express itself in a certain way, Kastrup writes.

Each archetype can manifest itself to a variety of images, feelings and spontaneous behavioural patterns, all of which symbolize – or point to – a message. Our deeper dreams, visions, passions and impulsive actions thus have a meaning and can be interpreted, if only we pay attention to them. Taken together, the archetypal manifestations in our lives – in both dream and waking states – form a symbolic narrative meant to show to ego-consciousness what is going on in the unconscious. It is up to the Jung-analyst to unravel the meaning of these narratives.

Synchronicity is described by Jung as the simultaneous occurrence of a certain physic state with one or more external events which appear as meaningful parallels to the momentary subjective state. As an example, Jung famously reported an incident he witnessed during a therapy session. The female patient he was seeing related a dream in which she was given a golden scarab, an important archetypal symbol of rebirth. As she was recounting the dream, an insect began knocking on the window. Jung let it in and found it was a rose chafer beetle, an insect that looks very much like a scarab.

How can these strong links occur between the mind and physical world when there is only causality? According to Kastrup, who decoded Jung’s work, Jung believed in a non-local, organising foundation of nature. If the ego-mind and the physical world both arise from this deeper (mental) foundation, then these meaningful coincidences start to make a whole lot more sense. This is once again an idealistic proposition.

And so, the inescapable conclusion is that Jung was an idealist who thought that nature is in and of itself consciousness.

More on Kastrup’s writing can be found on his website.