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      • In this conversation, poet, translator, and author David Hinton calls for a radical reweaving of mind and land. Tracing the shifts in human consciousness that distanced us from nature, he draws on Tao and Ch’an Buddhist philosophy in an effort to help us navigate the sixth extinction with an ethics tempered by love.
      emergencemagazine.org/interview/an-ethics-of-wild-mind/
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  2. Feb 7, 2023 · In this conversation, poet, translator, and author David Hinton calls for a radical reweaving of mind and land, drawing on Tao and Ch’an Buddhist philosophy to help us navigate the sixth extinction with an ethics tempered by love.

  3. In Wild Mind, Wild Earth, David Hinton explores modes of seeing and being that could save the planet by reestablishing a deep kinship between human and earth: the insights of primal cultures and the Ch’an (Zen) Buddhism of ancient China.

  4. Apr 10, 2024 · David Hinton: Wild Mind, Wild Earth – Zen and Ecology in an Age of Extinction. Enjoy highlights from our Faith & Moral Courage event series: read the keynote speech by author and scholar David Hinton, delivered at St Ethelburga’s Bridging Divides, Loving Earth Conference.

    • 020 7496 1610
  5. Aug 2, 2023 · In Wild Mind, Wild Earth, Hinton explores modes that could save the Earth by re-establishing a deep kinship between human and earth, based on his insights of Taoism and Ch’an (Zen) Buddhism of ancient China and Native American culture.

  6. Feb 13, 2023 · Advocating for a return to a deep kinship between humans and the Earth, David speaks about how reweaving consciousness and landscape might help us navigate the sixth extinction with an ethics tempered by love.

    • Emergence Magazine
  7. In this conversation, poet, translator, and author David Hinton calls for a radical reweaving of mind and land, drawing on Tao and Ch’an Buddhist philosophy to help us navigate the sixth extinction with an ethics tempered by love.

  8. Oct 18, 2013 · What Hinton is slowly achieving with these essays and walks is a creation of his own monkhood, a poet’s thought system recreating ancient Chinese philosophy and thinking in Western language. He’s aware of Hunger Mountain as a separate object, yet central to his own identity.