Mindwalk
directed by Bernt
Capra,
written by Bernt Capra, Floyd Byars
and Fritjof Capra,
based on the book The Turning Point by Fritjof Capra,
was released at the Toronto International Film Festival
in Canada, on September 9, 1990.
Music by Philip Glass.
Cast:
Liv Ullmann, Sam
Waterston, John Heard, Ione Skye, Emmanuel Montes, Jean Boursin, Gabrielle
Danchick, Jeanne Van Phue, Penny White.
Recommended reading:
Mindwalk: The Screenplay
30th Anniversary Edition
by Fritjof Capra, Floyd
Byars and Bernt Capra.
Published by Brass Tacks
Press.
Published 2021.
Paperback.
ISBN-10: 0982014066
ISBN-13: 978-0982014066
Description:
Since its release in
1991, Mindwalk has become a cult classic, showing not only in theaters,
but in college courses and business seminars. Liv Ullmann, Sam Waterston, and
John Heard play the leads who meet on the tidal island of Mont-Saint-Michel in
France and enter into a philosophical discussion.
Social and environmental
concerns are at the heart of the film, which proposes alternative solutions
based on Systems Theory, along with insights into Quantum Mechanics and
Particle Physics.
The film is based on
Fritjof Capra's book The Turning Point (1982).
The Turning Point
Science, Society, and
the Rising Culture
by Fritjof Capra.
Published by Random
House Publishing Group.
First published 1982.
Paperback.
ISBN-10: 0553345729
ISBN-13: 978-0553345728
Description:
“After a time of decay
comes the turning point.” – I Ching.
A compelling vision of a
new reality, a reconciliation of science and the human spirit for a future that
will work.
The dynamics underlying
the major problems of our time – cancer, crime, pollution, nuclear power,
inflation, the energy shortage – are all the same. We have reached a time of
dramatic and potentially dangerous change, a turning point for the planet as a
whole. We need a new vision of reality, one that allows the forces transforming
our world to flow together as a positive movement for social change. Now
distinguished scientist Fritjof Capra gives us that vision, a holistic paradigm
of science and spirit.
“This
splendid and thoughtful book is an essential guide for anyone inquiring about
the place of science and metascience in our contemporary culture. Those who
enjoyed Fritjof Capra’s Tao of Physics should not expect a sequel; this
is a much more ambitious book that attempts and succeeds in presenting a whole
worldview from the viewpoint of a committed and experienced physicist who also
writes from within the North American culture…. It is unusually detailed and
thorough in its inclusion of the conventional and the alternative approaches to
topics ranging from ecology through medicine and psychology to economics. It is
at once scholarly and easy to read.” – Jim Lovelock, New Scientist.