Bernardo Carleial
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Everything posted by Bernardo Carleial
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The first half of this video is very vMEME Yellow
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Hey buddy! Also Brazilian here, to be fair I don't know anyone that might fit into Leo's teaching style, and even if he does, that person may not be very popular on the web and probably be working in another filed of knowledge/expertise... since this kind of content is not very appealing for Brazilian people. However, I do recommend you to look for people that skew more into vMEME Yellow, that's the kind of content that Leo usually tends to present in his videos. I recommend you go look for interviews of Ciro Gomes, Fernando Haddad, Andre Roncaglia, Reinaldo Azevedo. ICL is also a good source of information, although I think they tend to skew more at vMEME Green And fields of knowledge relating to design and inovation, geopolitics and macroeconomics. A book that I might recommend you which has similar insights and teaching style might be "Design para um Mundo Complexo" de Rafael Cardoso. I hope this information might've been useful to you😉👍
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" I know only one thing... that I know nothing." Socrates
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The Best of vMEME Orange! And it also has some elements of vMEME Yellow into it
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I might be wrong about that video. But his analysis in my view, even though he tends to focus on brain activity, seems very holistic, talking about individual and collective consciousness, and about the pros and cons of it, in a very "down to earth" manner.
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Going on the same theme as this post
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Tech companies making use of conventional/materialistic neuroscience for profit, even if it leads to progress and better quality of life at the end, is very vMEME Orange
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The video might be a bit long, but the most important part is the dialogue that happens at 4:30 minutes Here is an EXCELLENT example of the clashing of values between vMEME Purple and vMEME Red, and how the necessity of "moving up" arises. That video requires some contextualization It's a side quest from a game called "The Witcher 3". And in this particular quest there's a monster who lives in the woods, called Leschen, it terrifies the villagers who lives nearby, killing some of them, and because of that, the druid/shaman of this village decided to perform a ritual by which he sacrifices some animals to offer him, in order to please the creature, but it doesn't seem to work... And then the Witcher comes, and has been asked by the villagers if he was able to get rid of this monster once and for all. So the Witcher does a little bit of investigation and finds out who the monster was and how to kill it, but before he does that, he decides to tell the villagers in advance, because there were things they have to do in order to help to get rid of this Leschen, and the first person he approaches was the Druid/Shaman of this village... And we can clearly see how different their worldviews are with regard to this situation: The Druid/shaman sees the Leschen as a force of nature, and that we should not interfere with that, because that was what make them strong and resilient, and is also their bond to their ancestors (vMEME Purple). While the Witcher saw it for what it is, a living creature that is dangerous for the villagers survival, and that requires an immediate response to this threat, which would killing this monster to save them(vMEME Red) I won't tell you the rest because it would take too long, and the main thing I wanted to present you guys I already did. But I highly recommend you guys to watch this video, it may help you clarify a lot about how vMEME Purple becomes unsustainable, and why it's necessary to transcend to vMEME Red
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A "Going-Meta" class for children.
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I love the nativité of young socialists in modern society. "Why You Should become a Socialist: because Capitalism is Wrong" And spending an entire video telling about the wrongdoings of Capitalism without providing any real solution of how to solve that under a Socialist government, he didn't even mention some of the policies of Eastern European countries that tend to skew into a more socialist orientation, and how it can be "actualizable" into more populated countries, like the the U.S for example... I'm not saying that a Socialist Government will not work, I honestly don't know that. But the way that he presented that information it's just propaganda.
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How to apply recontextualization in order to teach History, in this case, the European Society in the Middle Ages
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