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Thinking and Feeling

March 26, 2025

Description

The human brain has proven to be particularly good at breaking down all sorts of things into categories and dichotomies – even our perception of the world itself is often split between ‘thinking’ and ‘feeling,’ shaped by the sensory input we receive. It seems that our values, beliefs, opportunities – even how we define ourselves as individuals – are limited to opposing and polarized options. Yet, does this binary mindset only lead us toward more blind-spots?

In this Frankly, Nate unpacks the influence of beliefs on our feelings, and how it ultimately affects our actions. As global risks and complexity intensify and those with political power accelerate deeper divides, adopting an integrative perspective will become essential for fostering connection, cooperation, and civility. The over-reliance of the last few decades on objective facts and science is no longer enough. Now is the time to re-align our analytics with values and emotions that will light our path forward through challenges of the next few decades.

What might we achieve if we moved beyond dichotomies and embraced dualities, recognizing the importance of both sides of the same coin? Is it possible for western cultures to embrace our ‘feeling’ capabilities, without losing our trajectory of great contributions to science and knowledge for the world? Lastly, in what ways can we as individuals shift the way we relate to the world – to integrate thinking and feeling – so that we might remain engaged and informed citizens during these uncertain times?

(Recorded March 18th, 2025)

Show Notes

PDF Transcript

00:06 – Frankly #88 Rocks in the River

00:24 – Ukraine War

00:35 – Dennis Meadows

00:39 – Oil Depletion slides 13-21

00:56 – Biophysical Macroeconomics

04:39 – Wide Boundary

05:05 – Metacrisis

05:20 – Marvin Harris, Social Structure, Superstructure, Infrastructure

05:42 – MacGyver

06:23 – Venn Diagram

07:18 – NOAA, NASA, U.S. Weather Bureau [National Weather Service], U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. National Park Service, EPA [U.S. Environmental Protection Agency], DOE [U.S. Department of Energy], IEA [International Energy Agency]

07:42 – The Great Simplification

Nate Hagens

Nate Hagens

Nate Hagens is the Director of The Institute for the Study of Energy & Our Future (ISEOF) an organization focused on educating and preparing society for the coming cultural transition. Allied with leading ecologists, energy experts, politicians and systems thinkers ISEOF assembles road-maps and off-ramps for how human societies can adapt to lower throughput lifestyles.

Nate holds a Masters Degree in Finance with Honors from the University of Chicago and a Ph.D. in Natural Resources from the University of Vermont. He teaches an Honors course, Reality 101, at the University of Minnesota.