『Tibetan Buddhism: The Elegant Mind』のカバーアート

Tibetan Buddhism: The Elegant Mind

Tibetan Buddhism: The Elegant Mind

著者: chenrezigproject
無料で聴く

このコンテンツについて

This podcast site shares thoughts and perspectives concerning practical notions and methodologies for all -- regardless of level of experience or knowledge -- who are curious, interested or an ongoing student/practitioner of Himalayan (aka Tibetan) Buddhism. These podcasts are products of The Chenrezig Project, a Buddhist study/discussion group located in Boulder County, CO. Mark Winwood, a member of the undergraduate Psychology teaching faculty at Naropa University in Boulder, is the Chenrezig Project’s founder, resident Dharma sharer and host of these broadcasts. We are involved in an ongoing variety of teachings, writings, community events, etc. To learn more, please visit our website at www.ChenrezigProject.org. ** ** ** Our podcasts feature music composed and performed by Bobby Vega. Bobby has been playing and creating music for more than four decades. He began his professional career as a bass player in 1973 (at the age of 16) on Sly Stones’ single “I Get High on You.” A Bay Area musician’s musician, Bobby has played with artists ranging from Joan Baez and Etta James to Santana and the Jefferson Starship and was included on Bass Player Magazine’s list of ”Top 100 Bassists of All Time” in 2017. An accomplished composer, Bobby has collaborated on the soundtracks for the TV documentary Vietnam: A Television History, the Francis Ford Coppola film One from the Heart, and the Sega video game Sonic The Hedgehog. Four decades and nearly 5,000 gigs after he first began playing bass, Bobby Vega continues to develop his complex and heady blend of rhythm & blues, rock, funk, technique, and tone, “laying it down” with incredible feeling and groove. More about Bobby and his music may be found at www.bobbyvega.com. Elegant Mind Podcasts. © 2018-2023, Mark Winwood. All Rights Reserved. Contact: mwinwood@gmail.comCopyright 2018-2021. All rights reserved. スピリチュアリティ
エピソード
  • The Skeptical Buddhist
    2025/04/10

    Disbelief, Wariness, Incredulity . . .

    There are many Mahayana Buddhist perceptions and perspectives, notions and insights, practices and methodologies that on the (worldly/samsaric) surface initially might not make sense . . . ideas requiring an open mind in order to penetrate and allow the practical understandings that arouse our curiosity and interest sufficient to lean-in abit and engage -- bringing deeper learning, more penetrating contemplative experiences . . . and progressively awakening moments.

    For your consideration . . . a questioning mind is an essential catalyst for both intellectual alertness and developing confidence in one's spiritually innate qualities.

    (Length: 18 minutes)

    Written and shared here by Mark Winwood, a member of the teaching faculty at Naropa University (Boulder, CO) with accompanying music composed and performed by the San Francisco Bay-area musician Bobby Vega.

    contact: mwinwood@gmail.com

    続きを読む 一部表示
    18 分
  • 'DeepSeek'ing Dharma -- and the Human Touch
    2025/02/19

    Recent advances in Artificial Intelligence (A.I.), most recently led by China's DeepSeek scientists, have stunned the tech/financial world in ways splashed about as momentous 'wake-up' or 'Sputnik' moments.

    Certainly, we live in rapidly changing times, but perhaps there ARE things more everyday meaningful than global/political/market tech developments.

    For your consideration: here's a brief discussion of what, beyond the A.I. algorithms, cutting-edge, high-performance 'DeepSeek' Dharma can help create and bring to every one of us . . . compliments of our human Mind.

    (Length: 14 minutes)

    Written by Mark Winwood, a member of the teaching faculty at Naropa University (Boulder, CO), with accompanying music composed and performed by the San Francisco Bay-area musician Bobby Vega.

    contact: mwinwood@gmail.com

    続きを読む 一部表示
    13 分
  • "Now Departing on Track Number . . ."
    2025/01/15

    Visualize a vast railroad terminal resembling New York's Grand Central Station, with freshly deceased people entering all the time, mulling around, eventually trudging from the station waiting room toward the track on which their departure train sits, ready to take them on the journey through the Bardo of Becoming to their next rebirth.

    Consider: While we will all be there one day, the specific train for which each of us is ticketed differs, and the experiences of our time upon it -- as well as the individual conditions awaiting at our destination -- are not randomly assigned or determined.

    Rather, they are earned by us -- moment-by-moment.

    It's classic, big picture, end-of-life Cause-and-Effect . . . based upon the Why's and How's of what we've done in days past.

    (Length: 10 minutes)

    Written by Mark Winwood, a member of the teaching faculty at Naropa University (Boulder, CO), with accompanying music composed and performed by the San Francisco Bay-area musician Bobby Vega. Read by Kathy Ambrose.

    contact: mwinwood@gmail.com

    続きを読む 一部表示
    10 分

Tibetan Buddhism: The Elegant Mindに寄せられたリスナーの声

カスタマーレビュー:以下のタブを選択することで、他のサイトのレビューをご覧になれます。