Day444HRAfterChat
Humanity Rising Day 444 After Chat – Wednesday March 30, 2022
- Back to HR Day Page for HR!Day444 - Exploring the World of Trans II: Gender & Pronouns in a Nonbinary World


Chat from AfterChat Zoom from HR Day 444:
aka ChatPeople Chat
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00:07:40 Leo Jacoby: Martin Buber's attempt to address the other in their wholeness and holiness, fully open to reciprocity... I-Thou 1926 ebook EPUB, 282 KB: ::https://book4you.org/book/16750991/577eb5::
00:08:15 Stanley Pokras: This is the AfterChat for day 444
00:18:32 Leo Jacoby: Kelsey, I mentioned Martin Buber's "I-Thou." Can you recommend other philosophical, theological, or literary texts (from personalism traditions) that contribute to more wholistic ways of encountering an-other?
00:29:08 Leo Jacoby: In addition to perspectives of linguistics, psychology, Sociology, history, et.al. the great wisdom traditions have much to contribute... how we are all connected and how we are called to interact and transcend the ego by way of community where we can be authentic, forgiving, healing human becomings in each other's company on the journey we call life.
00:30:45 Kurt Krueger: Thank You God for your presence today. I get to go do some family activities. Keep coming back… 🙂 Check out how your expertise may bring more peace in the world through the www.OtherNetworks.org/Peace_Lab.
00:35:13 Kelsey Pacha: Oof. I would need to look back at some of my texts to recommend something deeply philosophical—Trans Theology by Marcella Althaus-Reid, Controversies in Queer Theology by Susannah Cornwall—both review the overlaps in gender/queer theory and theology. I also like Justin Tanis’ book Transgender: Theology, Ministry, & Communities of Faith and his concept of gender as a vocation. In terms of other philosophy/theology, I think we can apply many other philosophies/epistemologies to understand our personal discernment around identity, including gender. Not sure this is what you’re looking for Leo but I hope this helps!
00:35:51 Leo Jacoby: Our Afterchat community has this potential and sometimes manifests vulnerable and healing community, thanks to the hospitality of our dear Stanley. The Zoom world has opened up new possibilities in "the age of helpfulness."
00:36:24 Leo Jacoby: Kelsey, thanks for the references to Trans Theology.
00:37:55 Kelsey Pacha: The Birth Order Book has some good reflections about how birth order impacts the sibling relationship, but it’s pretty patriarchal in nature
00:38:07 Kelsey Pacha: Bio break
00:38:33 Leo Jacoby: ::https://book4you.org/s/%20Susannah%20Cornwall/?e=1:: (two ebooks by S Cornwall)
00:40:34 Kelsey Pacha: I will need to get offline in about 5 minutes
00:44:13 Leo Jacoby: ::https://archive.org/search.php?query=Justin%20Tanis:: (resources by Justin Tanis you may be able to borrow)
00:50:17 Leo Jacoby: Each person is an enigma. You're a puzzle not only to yourself but also to everyone else, and the great mystery of our time is how we penetrate this puzzle. -- Theodore Zeldin
00:51:25 Leo Jacoby: ::https://book4you.org/s/Theodore%20Zeldin/?e=1:: (Zeldin ebooks)
00:53:16 Leo Jacoby: Every human life involves an unfathomable mystery, for man is the riddle of the universe, and the riddle of man in his endowment with personal capacities. The stars are not so strange as the mind that studies them, analyzes their light, and measures their distance. -- Harry Emerson Fosdick
00:56:52 Leo Jacoby: No horse gets anywhere until he is harnessed. No steam or gas ever drives anything until it is confined. No Niagara is ever turned into light and power until it is tunneled. No life ever grows great until it is focused, dedicated, disciplined. -- Harry Emerson Fosdick
00:57:59 Leo Jacoby: A supremely religious man or woman is one who believes deeply and consistently in the veracity of his highest experiences. He has his hours in the cellar … but he believes in the truth of the hours he spends upstairs. -- Harry Emerson Fosdick
01:02:58 Leo Jacoby: ::http://www.onlinedigeditions.com/publication/?i=515065&article_id=3145789&view=articleBrowser&ver=html5::
The mystery of every person By Klaus Hemmerle
A reflection by Klaus Hemmerle (1929-1994), renowned theologian and former bishop of Aachen, Germany
"JUST AS YOU DID IT TO ONE OF the least of these, who are members of my family, you did it to me" (Mt 25:40).
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