Rebel Nature

De: Christopher Grant Ward
  • Resumen

  • Welcome to Rebel Nature, the podcast that explores how Nature can rewire our brains and our perception of everyday things. Every other week, award-winning artist and naturalist Christopher Grant Ward explores open questions about how we live in the modern world, how we define ourselves, and how we can challenge our existing perspectives by looking for answers to these questions in the natural world. By listening, you’ll learn new ways to see life for what it is, what it can be, and gain insights to enhance your well-being, and ultimately how Nature serves as a beautiful redemption from life’s rigid and grid-like expectations. If you love exploring life’s questions and are looking for inspiring answers, go ahead and subscribe to Rebel Nature wherever you get your podcasts. About Christopher Grant Ward http://christophergrantward.com Christopher Grant Ward is an award-winning artist and naturalist, who explores the connection between nature, art, perception and joy.
    Copyright 2024 Christopher Grant Ward
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Episodios
  • What Do Animal Minds Teach Us About Ourselves?
    Aug 6 2024

    Photos, notes and research links for this episode can be found here. https://www.christophergrantward.com/blog/animals

    Whales mourn. Dolphins play. Orcas have dialects. Parrots can ask existential questions. Rats giggle and tickle each other. Birds give their children names. Fish create art. Do we honestly still believe we are the only ones on planet Earth to feel our complex emotions, think deeply, and have fully conscious and aware lives? What does a survey of the current knowledge of the animal kingdom tell us about ourselves and the human attributes we find so valuable.

    By the end of this episode, you’ll understand how other animals have many of our abilities and traits, how some animals far surpass our abilities, and the one attribute that actually unites the animal kingdom. You will see how our human perspective on ‘thought’ is just one interpretation, and you may be humbled to learn that animals have superpowers of mind and body that we could only dream of. By peering into the souls of these beautiful creatures, and comparing them with our own, you’ll gain a better understanding of what it actually means to think, communicate, and most importantly, what it means to feel. It turns out that it is not a language, nor how we think, but perhaps emotion, that is the beautiful commonality that binds the animal kingdom together.

    ——— CREDITS ———

    Support for Rebel Nature in part by an affiliate partnership with Blick Art Supplies

    Produced and managed by Quail Run Studios

    Original Music written and recorded by Christopher Grant Ward.

    Any commercial music used in this episode has been licensed for airplay by the Harry Fox Agency, 40 Wall St. NY NY

    Any research or primary audio in this episode has been credited in the video and also in the links here: https://www.christophergrantward.com/blog/animals

    You can learn more about me and my art at christophergrantward.com

    Mentioned in this episode:

    Credits

    Support for Rebel Nature in part by an affiliate partnership with Blick Art Supplies Produced and managed by Quail Run Studios Original Music written and recorded by Christopher Grant Ward. Any commercial music used in this episode has been licensed for airplay by the Harry Fox Agency, 40 Wall St. NY NY You can learn more about me and my art at christophergrantward.com

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    39 m
  • How This One Invention Made You Regret Wasting Time
    Jul 23 2024

    Photos, notes and research links for this episode can be found here. https://www.christophergrantward.com/blog/time

    ________

    We feel stressed for not having enough time and guilty for wasting it. In modern life, the clock makes time a commodity, an asset, to be spent or saved. Clocks now define Time, not the other way around, and we just follow along. And meanwhile, time is our past, present and future, it defines our lives

    So if life is defined by time, and time is driven by the clock, then in many ways it is the clock that drives our lives. But what if there was another way to be? What if notions of “saving”, “spending” or “wasting” time don’t really even make sense?

    By the end of this episode, you’ll understand how you were naturally meant to perceive time, and how modern life, with its clocks and calendars, robs us of the attention we need to enjoy the passage of time. And finally, we’ll see how Nature helps us reclaim our focus and attention.

    ——— CREDITS ———

    Support for Rebel Nature in part by an affiliate partnership with Blick Art Supplies

    Produced and managed by Quail Run Studios

    Original Music written and recorded by Christopher Grant Ward.

    Any commercial music used in this episode has been licensed for airplay by the Harry Fox Agency, 40 Wall St. NY NY

    You can learn more about me and my art at christophergrantward.com

    Make your voice heard! We benefit from many voices, and I want you to make yours heard — literally. New technology now allows me to add your comments, thoughts and opinions retroactively to this episode, so your voice can be added to the podcast you are listening to right now. This way, future listeners of this episode can benefit from your experience as well as my own. Add your voice to this podcast for all to hear. To submit a comment to be considered for airplay, message me at hello@christophergrantward.com

    Mentioned in this episode:

    Credits

    Support for Rebel Nature in part by an affiliate partnership with Blick Art Supplies Produced and managed by Quail Run Studios Original Music written and recorded by Christopher Grant Ward. Any commercial music used in this episode has been licensed for airplay by the Harry Fox Agency, 40 Wall St. NY NY You can learn more about me and my art at christophergrantward.com

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    27 m
  • How Your Words Control The Way You See The World
    Jul 9 2024

    Photos, notes and research links for this episode can be found here. https://www.christophergrantward.com/blog/blue

    ——— SUMMARY ———

    A word for the color blue wasn't always around. Written in 750 BC, Homer's Odyssey does not contain the word for blue. Perhaps because Blue is rare in the animal kingdom. So often it's just a trick of light in the natural world.

    Perhaps because it was so incredibly difficult for humans to create a blue artificial pigment? Only when we finally could create blue did we give it a name.

    So what did we see before we saw Blue? And what else does Nature teach us about the rules of language that guide how we perceive the natural world?

    ——— CREDITS ———

    • "Blue" by Eiffel65 has been licensed for airplay by the Harry Fox Agency, 40 Wall St. NY NY

    • Support for Rebel Nature in part by Blick Art Supplies

    • Produced by Quail Run Studios

    • Original script and music by Christopher Grant Ward

    • Learn more about the host christophergrantward.com

    Mentioned in this episode:

    Credits

    Support for Rebel Nature in part by an affiliate partnership with Blick Art Supplies Produced and managed by Quail Run Studios Original Music written and recorded by Christopher Grant Ward. Any commercial music used in this episode has been licensed for airplay by the Harry Fox Agency, 40 Wall St. NY NY You can learn more about me and my art at christophergrantward.com

    Make your voice heard

    We benefit from many voices, and I want you to make yours heard — literally. New technology now allows me to add your comments, thoughts and opinions retroactively to this episode, so your voice can be added to the podcast you are listening to right now. This way, future listeners of this episode can benefit from your experience as well as my own. Add your voice to this podcast for all to hear. To submit a comment to be considered for airplay, message me at hello@christophergrantward.com

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    22 m

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