In a new Inside Personal Growth podcast, Greg Voisen interviews futurist, author and activist Barbara Marx Hubbard about her new DVD entitled ” Visions of a Universal Humanity.“ During the conversation, Hubbard talks about her vision of a new story for humanity and the documentary DVD. LIke so many of the leaders in this movie, Hubbard represents the leading edge of a postive cultural change trend that needs to emerge if humankind is to survive and thrive.
She relates how ” Visions of a Universal Humanity.“ brings together some of the finest minds of our time including renowned physicist Freeman Dyson, biologist Bruce Lipton, social artist Jean Houston and others who present cutting edge perspectives on humankind’s potential to create a positive future for our Earth.
In a time when so many people are asking the question, “why on earth are we treating one another this way,“ the insights from “Visions of a Universal Humanity’s” brilliant luminaries give us a glimpse into a world where competition is replaced with cooperation and violence by compassion. Hubbard and her latest project imagine a world where artificial trees can create more oxygen than naturally occurring trees and God is described as existing inside the universe rather than outside of it.
During the Inside Personal Growth podcast Hubbard asserts that this documentary will assist viewers in awakening to their own personal possibilities and generate renewed hope for our humanity. In addition to this documentary continues to champion the cause of “a world that works for everyone” by sponsoring a free weekly teleseminar entitled “Three Keys to Evolutionary Metamorphosis.”
Buckminster Fuller called Barbara Marx Hubbard “the best informed human now alive regarding futurism and the foresights it has produced.” Widely regarded as his philosophical heir, Barbara is a social innovator, speaker, author, educator and leader in the new worldview of conscious evolution.
In 1945, when she was 15 years old, the first atomic bombs were dropped on Japan. This terrible act prompted Barbara to ask the fundamental question: “What is the meaning of our new power that can be used for the good? And “What are positive images of the future equal to these new powers?” This defining moment propelled her on her life’s quest to find answers to these questions. The insights she has gained has led to her definitive message of hope that “Our crisis is a birth” of a more universal human and universal humanity.
May we all benefit from the vast perspective of “Visions of a Universal Humanity” and recognize the importance of expanding our own personal vision of what is possible.














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