On DialogueThe question of how we communicate is at the heart of On Dialogue. This revised and expanded edition is the most comprehensive documentation to date of best-selling author David Bohm's dialogical world view. Whilst the exercise of dialogue is as old as civilization itself, in recent times a profusion of practices, techniques and definitions has arisen around the term 'dialogue'. None of these approaches can claim to be the correct view, but it is possible to distinguish between them and to clarify the intention of each. To this end, the current edition of On Dialogueilluminates the underlying meaning, purpose and uniqueness of David Bohm's work in this field. |
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Common terms and phrases
able action activity actually affects assumptions attention aware become begin body Bohm brain bring called coherent collective comes communication confusion connection consciousness consider create culture dangerous deal defend dialogue difficulties direction discuss don’t emotions everything example experience explore fact feeling further give goes going happens hold human idea important impulse incoherence individual interested it’s kind knowledge limited listen literal thought look meaning meeting memory mind move movement nature necessary necessity notion object observer opinions paradox participation participatory thought perception perhaps person possible powerful practical present problem produce proprioception question reason reflexes relationship religion representation result seems sense separate share similar society solve sort structure subtle suggest suspend tacit talk tend that’s there’s things thought truth trying turned understand what’s whole wrong
References to this book
Facilitating Reflective Learning In Higher Education Brockbank, Anne,McGill, Ian No preview available - 2007 |