There's some great wisdom in this book and some unusual stories about the search for wisdom. A few don't have quite the brilliance of the best, but it's a good resource to have.
Reading about Betty Edwards, who made the breakthrough realization about the skill of drawing works when engaging the right hemisphere of the brain (imagination, intuition), while the left hemisphere (language, rational logic) must be got out of the way for the skill to manifest ( she could teach anyone to draw in a three-day workshop)... it became so clear to me that we are in an era dominated by left-hemisphere mindsets, like those locked into their internet lives. Obviously the pertains in the contemporary artworld, where conceptual art (you have to read the handout before you look at the art) dominates and disdains the work that doesn't adhere to this formula. But use that same frame of reference on the ponzi scheme of crypto currency, or the ascendency of journalism that is aimed at provoking disparagement, and hatred. We're on a left-brain jag.
From the book:
"...(the right-brain mindset) makes it easier to let go of fears and insecurities, negative past experiences, and pressure to meet a certain standard - all aspects of ordinary left hemisphere thinking that interfere with seeing freely and truly. Put another way, the right hemisphere mode is a fragile and elusive state that can be easily overridden be the left hemisphere’s rush to judgement. (the bully!) At the same time, when the left hemisphere faces a challenge that it is ill equipped to meet, …it often simply gives up, instead of turning the job over to the right hemisphere.” (witness the Democratic Party these past few decades) “…What if it turns out we put our eggs in the wrong basket? What if, by spending all these centuries cultivating language, mathematics and technological skills, we put in abeyance another system - visual and nonverbal - that is ultimately more powerful and better-suited to our survival?”