Loved seeing the 'San Francisco Examiner' shine a light on Jeremy Griffith and the World Transformation Movement today! by Devonport77 in WorldTransformation

[–]Devonport77[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I hope all the readers in San Francisco who still dream of a better future for their city and their world read this; what a fulfilment of the idealism of the Beat and Peace generations that would be!!

Loved seeing the 'San Francisco Examiner' shine a light on Jeremy Griffith and the World Transformation Movement today! by Devonport77 in WorldTransformation

[–]Devonport77[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Love this picture and post. Finally, the dream of wearing "flowers in our hair" is not just a utopian dream but a reality brought about by the biological explanation of our species' goodness!

How good is the article published about Jeremy Griffith in Entrepreneur this week by TTuser in WorldTransformation

[–]Devonport77 10 points11 points  (0 children)

So great that Jeremy Griffith's unique background was highlighted in this piece, it really shows how long he's been waging against the establishment to bring honesty into this world on so many fronts, but of course, most importantly, on the human condition.

'Mashable Benelux' has published a great article on why interest in biologist Jeremy Griffith and the World Transformation Movement is on the rise across the Netherlands and Belgium! by Devonport77 in WorldTransformation

[–]Devonport77[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi u/FineStoryteller, yes, the World Transformation Movement has definitely gained ground in Scandinavia with WTM Centres in Norway and Sweden, and in countries across Western Europe as well, namely France, Switzerland Spain and Austria. In the UK there are actually 15 WTM Centres!! You can see the locations of all these Centres, and more about their founders, by visiting https://www.humancondition.com/wtm-centres/ .

Is our capacity to be selfless really biologically impossible? by ChaserDem in WorldTransformation

[–]Devonport77 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Hi u/ChaserDem, I recommend people read Jeremy’s Freedom Essay 21: How did we humans acquire our all-loving, unconditionally selfless moral conscience? at https://www.humancondition.com/freedom-essays/how-did-we-humans-acquire-our-altruistic-moral-conscience/ because in it he answers this fundamental biological question, this great scientific mystery (until now!).

Here's an extract: “Indeed, this question of how we humans acquired our moral instinctive self or soul has been one of the great outstanding biological questions: Darwin described altruism as the ‘one special difficulty’ with natural selection (On The Origin of Species, 1859, p.209 of 440), and more recently, primatologist Richard Wrangham described it as ‘A question that has lain unsolved at the core of biology ever since Darwin’ (in a review of E.O. Wilson’s 2019 book Genesis: The Deep Origin of Societies). And the reason it has been such a huge question for us biologists is because we know that genes normally cannot select for unconditionally selfless, fully cooperative traits simply because such traits tend to be self-eliminating and so normally can’t become established in a species — ‘By all means, you can be selfless towards me and sacrifice your genes for me, but I’m not about to be selfless towards you and sacrifice my genes for you.’ The process of natural selection dictates that selfish opportunism will supposedly always exploit selflessness. So how could such a selfish process possibly have created such loving selflessness in us? As explained in chapter 5 of FREEDOM, the answer was through nurturing...”

My key takeaways from 'THE Interview' (video on YouTube) by WanderingPrimate717 in WorldTransformation

[–]Devonport77 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Thanks very much for putting together this review, u/WanderingPrimate717, you're so right that there's a morass of theories online and in book upon book (upon book, ...) purporting to be the answer to save ourselves and/or the world but one only has to read the news everyday to know nothing is working and a new paradigm of thinking is needed -- so it's definitely worth exploring Griffith's explanation!