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Avil Beckford is founder of Ambeck Enterprise, The Invisible Mentor and Readers are Leaders. I founded The Invisible Mentor, a non-traditional mentoring program where professionals mentor themselves by way of expert interviews with highly successful people, profiles of wise people, and SummaReviews which are hybrid book summaries and reviews.
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Posts Tagged ‘Martin Luther King’

Adventures in Learning: Life Lessons from the Great Books


Recently I received a course catalog from The Teaching Company in the mail and I took my time going through it. Anyone who knows me knows that I am big on continuous learning. I particularly like this catalog because they didn’t have the regular run-of-the-mill courses, and many of them fascinated me — Change and Motion: Calculus Made Clear, Understanding the Brain, How to Listen to and Understand Great Music, Games People Play: Game Theory in Life, Business, and Beyond, Understanding Complexity, Building Great Sentences: Exploring the Writer’s Craft. Aren’t these fantastic names for courses?

I was interested in nearly all the courses listed, but that’s not practical. One course which fascinated me was Life Lessons from the Great Books. Wouldn’t that be a wonderful course to take? And the amazing thing is that the catalog has courses on DVD, with each lecture 30 minutes long. Most people can sit down for 30 minutes, couldn’t you dedicate 30 minutes each day for a course, if you could apply the concepts?

The following are the Course Lecture Titles. I must admit that most of those books I have never read, but after reading the copy in the catalog I wanted to take the course and I wanted to read the books. Has that ever happened to you?

  1. On Providence (Annotated), Seneca
  2. The Gospel of John (The Gospel of John)
  3. Conscience, Boethius, (The Martin Luther King, Jr. Companion: Quotations from the Speeches, Essays, and Books of Martin Luther King, Jr.) Martin Luther King
  4. The Brothers Karamazov, Dostoevsky
  5. Night (Oprah’s Book Club), Elie Wiesel
  6. Schweitzer—Out of My Life and Thought
  7. The Sufferings of Young Werther, Goethe
  8. Hamlet, Shakespeare
  9. Ajax, Sophocles
  10. Epistle VII (The Seventh Letter (Illustrated)), Plato
  11. “On Old Age”, (Treatises on Friendship and Old Age) Cicero
  12. The Penitent, Isaac Bashevis Singer
  13. Alcestis, Euripides (Three Plays of Euripides: Alcestis, Medea, The Bachae)
  14. Medea, Euripides
  15. Tristan And Isolde, Von Strasburg
  16. Antony and Cleopatra (Folger Shakespeare Library), Shakespeare
  17. Macbeth, Shakespeare
  18. Brave New World, Aldous Huxley
  19. The Odyssey, Homer
  20. Philoctetes (Greek Tragedy in New Translations), Sophocles
  21. Chivalric Adventure, The Song of Roland (Penguin Classics)
  22. Chivalric Romance, The Nibelungenlied: Prose Translation (Penguin Classics)
  23. The Journals of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1806
  24. Seven Pillars of Wisdom: A Triumph: The Complete 1922 Text, T. E. Lawrence
  25. The Eleven Comedies – Volume 1,The 11 Comedies – Volume 2
  26. Menander : The Grouch, Desperately Seeking Justice, Closely Cropped Locks, the Girl from Samos, the Shield (Penn Greek Drama Series), Menander
  27. Mandragola, Machiavelli
  28. The Praise of Folly, Erasmus
  29. Utopia
  30. Animal Farm, (Animal Farm and 1984) George Orwell
  31. The Jewish War: Revised Edition (Penguin Classics), Josephus
  32. Cato a Tragedy, in Five Acts, Joseph Addison
  33. George Washington’s Farewell Address
  34. Abraham Lincoln, George Patton—War
  35. An Autobiography by Theodore Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt
  36. The Wisdom of Great Books

Professor J Rufus Fears from the University of Oklahoma teaches the DVD course Life Lessons from the Great Books. According to the website of The Teaching Company which sells the courses:

“What Makes a Book “Great”?

According to Professor Fears, four characteristics define a Great Book:

  • Its focus on great themes such as love, courage, and patriotism
  • Its composition in a noble language
  • Its ability to speak to readers across the ages
  • Its ability to speak to readers not as groups, but as individuals”

How many of the books above have you read? Would you willingly want to read them? Let’s keep the conversation flowing, please comment.

Please let me know your thoughts in the comments section below. Many readers read this blog from other sites, so why don’t you pop over to The Invisible Mentor and subscribe (top on the right hand side) by email or RSS Feed.

Further Reading

Thirty Great Free eBooks for Innovators
Adventures in Learning: Books to Read in 2012
2011 Books for Mentoring

Book links are affiliate links.

Image Credit: Flickr (http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3268/2913652472_47ea419f37.jpg)

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10 Great People and Their Favourite Tweets?


Archimedes Thoughtful (1620).
Image via Wikipedia

One of the things I discovered about myself is that the more I read, the more creative I am, and the more great ideas I generate. I thought I would have some fun with this blog post and create tweets (less than or equal to 140 characters) for some great people who died. Click on the links to learn more. Enjoy and let me know what you think.

@Einstein I was surprised when Time magazine named me Person of the Century, thx to Max Talmud 4 exposing me 2 key texts in science & math

@FlorenceNightingale Thx 2 Charles Villiers for supporting me when I advocated for improved healthcare in infirmaries

@RolloMay I’m convinced I got it right “The opposite of courage in our society is not cowardice … it is conformity” Man’s Search for Himself

@Archimedes I was so excited when I figured out how 2 measure the volume of an irregular object I ran down the street naked shouting Eureka

@Gutenberg I had no idea that inventing the printing press would so profoundly impact info dissemination, of course the Internet helped

@TheWrightBrothers No one succeeds alone, we’re gr8ful to Otto Lilienthal, whose research was instrumental in assisting us to invent the airplane

@Confucius I’m both teacher and student, learn more by reading the Analects of Confucius online

@MarieAntoinette Things u may not know abt me, I am fond of music, I cld barely read or write at age 12, and I believe in giving to charity

@LadyGodiva I’m not an exhibitionist, I rode naked on a horse to protest the oppressive taxes my husband imposed on his tenants

@MartinLutherKingJr We are our brother’s keeper, what affects one of us affects all of us

Martin Luther King, Jr.’s last speech

Rollo May Existential Psychotherapy Video

Photo credit: Public domain, photo of Archimedes

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Thinking Without Borders


President Lyndon B. Johnson and Rev. Dr. Marti...
Image via Wikipedia

We are socialized to think and act a certain way. And, we often put self-imposed barriers around ourselves. To break free, let’s start making small changes, simple shifts in our mindset.

Take a few minutes to read and think about the Martin Luther King quote below.

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

What’s your interpretation of the quote? Let your mind wander! There are no right or wrong answers, they are your thoughts, let them take you wherever.  Break those self-imposed chains to your thinking, and step beyond your boundaries. For once, think without borders.

Isn’t it freeing?

Let me share a piece of me with you. When I think of the Martin Luther King quote, I think that I am my brother’s keeper, and that my actions will impact others.

I also think that we are all connected, which leads my mind to the Butterfly Effect, a concept where a butterfly flapping its wings in one region, could trigger a tornado (or some other act) in another region.

My mind then roams to The Hundredth Monkey principle, where after a certain point, new information (or learned behaviour) introduced, ceases to be new and is in the collective consciousness.

Just for today, start with the Martin Luther King quote, and let your mind take you wherever. You never know what great ideas you’ll generate simply by giving yourself permission to think without borders.

What are your thoughts? Do you dare to think without borders?

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