| |
CONFERENCE PROGRAM
Friday, October 12
18:00 Welcome and Cocktails
19:00 Dinner
20:00 Opening remarks by Institute
of Ecotechnics Chairman, Mark Nelson
20:15 THE ORIGIN OF HUMAN UNIQUENESS
- HOW UNIQUE?
Jeffrey Schwartz, Anthropologist.
Univ. of Pittsburgh and Division of Anthropology, American Museum of Natural
History, New York. President, World Academy of Art and Science. Human
Origins; What the Bones Tell Us; Skeleton Keys: An Introduction to Human
Skeletal Morphology, Development, and Analysis; Sudden Origins:
Fossils, Genes, and the Emergence of Species; co-author, Extinct
Humans and The Human Fossil Record.
Saturday, October 13
08:30 Breakfast
09:00 FALL BACK TO JUMP AHEAD:
HOW RELAXATION OF SELECTION LEADS TO THE EVOLUTION OF COMPLEXITY
Terrence Deacon, Anthropologist.
Professor of Biological Anthropology and Linguistics, Department of Anthropology
and the Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California,
Berkeley. Recipient, J.I. Staley Prize from the School of American Research.
The Symbolic Species: The Coevolution of Language and the Brain. Upcoming:
Homunculus: Evolving Consciousness; and Golem: Making Things Think.
10:15 Coffee/Tea Break
10:30 HOW
CULTURE SHAPES OUR BRAINS
Bob Turner, Imaging Neuroscientist.
Director, Department of Neurophysics, Max-Planck-Institute, Leipzig, Germany.
Developer of MRI techniques for brain function and connectivity, pioneered
studies of functional brain changes with practice, including music. Associate
Editor, Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.
12:30 Lunch
13:30 THE DRIVE TO LOVE
Helen Fisher, Anthropologist. Research Professor and member, Center for Human Evolutionary Studies, Department of Anthropology, Rutgers University. Chief Scientific Advisor, Chemistry.com. Why We Love: The Nature and Chemistry of Romantic Love; The First Sex: The Natural Talents of Women and How they are Changing the World; Anatomy of Love: The Natural History of Monogamy, Adultery and Divorce; The Sex Contract: The Evolution of Human Behavior.
14:45 Break
15:00 THE BODY HAS A MIND OF ITS OWN
Sandra Blakeslee, Science Writer. Regular contributor to The New York Times. The Body has a Mind of Its Own (2007, with Matthew Blakeslee); On Intelligence: How a New Understanding of the Brain will Lead to the Creation of Truly Intelligent Machines (with Jeff Hawkins); Phantoms in the Brain (with V.S. Ramachandran); What About the Kids? (with Wallerstein); The Good Marriage (with Wallerstein).
16:15
Break
16:45
INHERITED HISTORIES AND THE LIFE FORCE
OF IRON
Tom Joyce, Blacksmith, Santa Fe, New Mexico. His work
is in over 30 public collections and has been exhibited in museums such
as Museum of Art and Design, the Smithsonian Institution, Museum of Applied
Arts, Moscow, and Musee Des Arts Decoratifs, Paris. Awards include Artists
Blacksmiths' Association of North America's Honorary Award for Outstanding
Contribution to the Art and Science of Blacksmithing. Recipient of a MacArthur
Foundation fellowship. Member of the American Craft Council College of
Fellows.
18:00
Break
19:00
Dinner
20:00
OUR BODIES, OURSELVES: HISTORY AND GLOBAL IMPACT
OF THE BOOK THAT BECAME A "MOVEMENT"
Judy Norsigian, Activist.
Co-founder and Executive Director, Our Bodies Ourselves, a non-profit
public interest women’s health education, advocacy, and consulting
organization. Board member, Public Responsibility in Medicine and Research;
served for 14 years on the board of the National Women’s Health
Network. Co-author, Our Bodies, Ourselves, in its eighth edition,
which has sold more than four million copies worldwide and has been culturally
adapted and translated into twenty-four languages. |
Sunday, October 14
08:30 Breakfast
09:00 EMOTIONAL
SKILLS
Paul Ekman, Psychologist. Faculty Research Lecturer,
University of San Francisco, California; Distinguished Scientific Contribution
Award, American Psychological Association; William James Award and named
one of the most influential psychologists of the 20th century by the American
Psychological Society. Emotion in the Human Face; What the Face Reveals;
Telling Lies: Clues To Deceit In The Marketplace, Marriage and Politics;
editor of Darwin and Facial Expression.
10:30 Coffee/Tea Break
10:45 MUSIC
AS AN INDICATOR OF AND STIMULUS FOR SOCIAL RITUAL AND PERSONAL SELF-KNOWLEDGE
John Rockwell, Cultural Historian. 30 years at New York
Times, as Arts and Leisure editor, classical music critic, chief pop music
critic, chief dance critic and European cultural correspondent. Founder,
Lincoln Center Festival. Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres;
served on the Board of Overseers of Harvard University. All American
Music; Outsider: John Rockwell on the Arts; The Idiots, on Lars von
Trier's film; Sinatra: an American Classic.
12:30 Lunch
13:30 HOW
WE CO-CREATE OUR WORLD AND MOODS
Lewis Mehl-Madrona, M.D and Clinical Psychologist. Associate
Professor of Family Medicine and Psychiatry, University of Saskatchewan
College of Medicine, Saskatoon, Canada. Certified in family medicine,
geriatrics and pyschiatry. Published extensively on obstetric practices
and perinatal psychology. Twenty-seven years in emergency medicine in
rural and urban settings. Coyote Medicine; Coyote Healing: Miracles
in Native Medicine; Coyote Wisdom; Narrative Medicine. A storied approach
to Health and Healing.
14:45
Break
15:00 AS
SOON AS YOU PUT ON AN ANIMAL HEAD...
(THE UNTOLD HISTORY OF DANCE FROM THE DAWN OF TIME UNTIL RIGHT NOW)
Joseph Houseal, Dance Historian. Executive Director,
Core of Culture Dance Preservation, dedicated to safeguarding ancient
dance and movement traditions. Current concentration on documentation
and preservation of Bhutanese-Tibetan sacred dance. Former director, Parnassus
Dance Theatre, Kyoto, Japan. Contributor, Ballet Review; director of PBS
segments on Kabuki (Emmy-nominated) and on “Le Sacre du Printemps”.
Banff Mountain Culture Award.
16:15
Group photo of all conference participants
16:45
RE-THINKING ARCHITECTURE: INFORMATION
AND THE HUMAN
Antonino Saggio, Architect. Professor of Architecture
and Information Technology, Faculty of Architecture, University of Rome,
La Sapienza. Editor, The IT Revolution in Architecture. This
25-title book series is dedicated to the foundation of a new digital culture
in architecture. Author, Giuseppe Terragni: Life & Works; Peter
Eisenma; Frank O. Gehry; and Using Goals in Design.
18:00
Break
19:00
Dinner
20:00
CULTURE AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR: PERSPECTIVES FROM THE
STUDY OF PRIMATES, HUNTER-GATHERERS AND SOCIOBIOLOGY
Irven DeVore, Anthropologist,
Director (Emeritus) of Primatology, Peabody Museum of Archeology and Ethnology;
Professor and Chair (retired), Department of Anthropology, Harvard University.
Editorial Board, Ethology and Sociobiology. Trustee, The Leakey Foundation.
The Primates; Man the Hunter; Primate Behavior: Field Studies of Monkeys
and Apes; Kalahari Hunter-Gatherers (ed. with Lee).
Monday,
October 15
08:30
Breakfast
09:00 MANAGING
TRANSCENDENCE:
THE FUTURE OF HUMAN NATURE
Joel Garreau, author. Reporter and
editor The Washington Post. Has served as a senior fellow at
University of California, Berkeley, and George Mason University. Member
of Global Business Network. Radical Evolution: The Promise and Peril
of Enhancing our Minds, Our Bodies- and What it Means to be Human; The
Nine Nations of North America; Edge City: Life on the New Frontier.
10:30 Closing Remarks by Mark
Nelson
11:30 Buffet & Conference
Wrap-ups |
|