Thank you Veronika. The term and notion of “wonder questions” came to me by way of Katie & Gay Hendricks during my years training with them decades ago and it has served me well ever since. ✨
This right here sums up why AI will never replace us. It’s a closed system. And if we are not careful it will be devastating. I feel like all leaders in this space should go through a Wheel of Wisdom reading to better understand the limitations and to ask the very question you pose: “Who do you think you are?”
Sadly, I think many of the technocrats would have a harder time answering this question.
“However, a self that has forgotten its place within the whole thinks it’s a closed system and accounts only for its own continuity, its own certainty, its own comfort. It doesn’t perceive or value what lies beyond its own edges. Is that moral failing or a failure of perception? We could say that egocentrism, at its root, is a kind of forgetting. It’s a narrowing of vision that misinterprets the part for the whole. That misperception has consequences—sometimes brutal and devastating.”
Yes, I suspect you are right, Bill. Sitting in the mystery of being and the majesty of our humus is humbling, and a different order of empowerment. Thanks for your company here. 🌿
Beautiful offering. Wonder questions are so important (and it's a great term too) — portals into the inner world and onto the path of self-discovery.
Thank you Veronika. The term and notion of “wonder questions” came to me by way of Katie & Gay Hendricks during my years training with them decades ago and it has served me well ever since. ✨
This right here sums up why AI will never replace us. It’s a closed system. And if we are not careful it will be devastating. I feel like all leaders in this space should go through a Wheel of Wisdom reading to better understand the limitations and to ask the very question you pose: “Who do you think you are?”
Sadly, I think many of the technocrats would have a harder time answering this question.
“However, a self that has forgotten its place within the whole thinks it’s a closed system and accounts only for its own continuity, its own certainty, its own comfort. It doesn’t perceive or value what lies beyond its own edges. Is that moral failing or a failure of perception? We could say that egocentrism, at its root, is a kind of forgetting. It’s a narrowing of vision that misinterprets the part for the whole. That misperception has consequences—sometimes brutal and devastating.”
Yes, I suspect you are right, Bill. Sitting in the mystery of being and the majesty of our humus is humbling, and a different order of empowerment. Thanks for your company here. 🌿