ABOVE: A Tsimshian shamans rattle used to accompany ritual chanting in healing ceremonies.
Courtesy of the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, Catalog #955
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The symposium is part of the John Templeton Foundations Humble Approach Initiative. The goal of the initiative is to bring about the discovery of new spiritual information by furthering high-quality scientific research. The humble approach is inherently interdisciplinary, sensitive to nuance, and biased in favor of building linkages and connections. It assumes an openness to new ideas and a willingness to experiment. Placing high value upon patience and perseverance, it retains a sense of wondering expectation because it recognizes, in Loren Eisleys haunting phrase, a constant emergent novelty in nature that does not lie totally behind us, or we would not be where we are. A fundamental principle of the Foundation, in the words of its founder, is that humility is a gateway to greater understanding and open[s] the doors to progress in all endeavors. Sir John Templeton believes that in their quest to comprehend ultimate reality, scientists, philosophers, and theologians have much to learn about and from one another. The humble approach is intended as a corrective to parochialism. It encourages discovery and seeks to accelerate its pace.
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