PROJECT 325 was the first Kaleido retreat and took place near Lake Constance, Switzerland, 15th – 18th February 2018. Inspired from the ETH Cortona Week, P325 was an experiment in creating a grassroots transdisciplinarity forum. Attended by over 80 people comprising of students, established scientists, professionals, musicians, and artists, it was a phenomenal success in the words of the participants. Below, you can find the detailed programme that was offered, comprising of talks, workshops and other activities.
I’m a scientist, I’m curious and above all I’m an experimenter , I like to play with things to understand and experience them better; in the lab as well as in life.
In the last years I had the honor to receive many Tibetan Buddhists teachings. Putting them into practice with the best open-minded skepticism attitude I could have, I went through a deep journey. A journey that became an organizing principle for all other activities in my life. Being a scientist, I started to wonder how much and if at all this journey could be supported by our western view of the world. Well, digging into modern physics, psychology and neuroscience it turns out that Buddhist teachings and the latest cutting edge western findings have mainly one big difference: the language! With language I mean the terminology and the approach to the topic.
I am thrilled to share with you a journey hunting for parallelisms and similarities. I will pay my best effort, in total respect of the two traditions to stick to what is peer reviewed in western science and to what is written in the ancient eastern texts. We will see together how much western findings back up meditation experiences and how these two disciplines are less apart then what one might guess.
The interfaces between mind, brain, consciousness and nature, remain exciting unresolved frontiers in science and philosophy: What is the nature of the human mind and how does conscious experience and meaning emerge in living systems?
In the context of the renaissance of psychedelic research we are currently facing a paradigm shift in the understanding of consciousness. As Freuds dream theory deepened the psychoanalytic understanding of the unconscious, psychoactive compounds could nowadays serve as promising epistemological tools for the scientific exploration of the molecular epistemology and phenomenology of consciousness. Psychoactive plants have been used in ritualistic contexts throughout human history for shamanic, therapeutic and psychospiritual purposes. Beyond shaping social and cultural evolution, psychedelic states of consciousness also raise profound philosophical and existential questions about the nature of subjective experience and the creation of meaning in the universe.
This transdisciplinary talk provides an integral approach of understanding the nature of human existence from its molecular basis up to the level of phenomenal consciousness. Interfaces between different epistemological perspectives such as pharmacology, neuroscience, biosemiotics, philosophy of mind, and deep ecology will be explored. This journey into remote territories advocates an attitude of epistemological humility: Reality turns out to be an ever-changing dance of possibilities that transcends the conceptually misleading distinctions between mind and matter that pervade the history of rationalistic thought.
In this interactive presentation, astronomy meets theology. This has nothing to do with astrology, but a lot with the idea of extraterrestrial life. Could Christian theology deal with the discovery of alien life forms? An analysis of history in these regards may prove surprising.
Also, if you may now wonder what theology could ever contribute to science, this event is for you. I will claim it even significantly contributed to biology. Rest assured, I am no creationist at all, nor presenting a new version of “intelligent” design. Actually, I would call myself sorts of a critical realist.
At least 4 domains make sleep a phenomenon with interface character: Sleep as a behavioral state, sleep as state of the mind, sleep as health indicator and sleep as mirror of development. All these aspects are centred on the brain. The lecture will tackle these 4 domains and guide the audience along a path of discovery approaching a better understanding for the role of sleep.
I am working with artists in transdisciplinary research projects since more than a decade. I will speak about joint research projects in the field of agroecology in East Africa where we develop novel innovative forms of joint knowledge generation and sharing and merge the formal sciences with informal farmer’s knowledge. We do this by brining together digital storytelling and ICT-supported farmer-participatory research and record keeping. Farmer-participatory research (a form of citizen science) that integrates farmers knowledge and builds on their realities on the ground has been projected as an important strategy and option for action towards developing more effective solutions. We have developed and implemented a sociotechnical methodology called Sauti ya wakulima (The voice of the farmers in Swahili) that, since 2011, has allowed small-scale farmers in Tanzania to use mobile phones and a web-based platform to share their stories and knowledge, thereby producing an ecosystem of learning that reached far beyond the lives and communities of the participating farmers. Starting in 2016, we work together with two civil society organisations, Swissaid and Sustainable Agriculture Tanzania, and are expanding the project to reach about 5000 farmers in different regions in Tanzania alongside the establishment of farmer-participatory and farmer-led research and demonstration fields to test best-fit local practices.
Ragas are the ancient system of sacred music in India, passed on as an oral tradition from teacher to student over couple of thousands of years. The word raga means “something, that colours your mind”. Ragas, in the Hindu tradition, are believed to have a natural existence. Artists don’t invent them, they only discover them. According to Vedas they are considered to be subtle beings and with the right state of mind one can call them out. There are different ragas played on different times of the day. On these morning sessions you are invited to become part of the early morning ragas, played on bamboo flute – bansuri.
Our voice and the way we use our voice says a lot about who we are and who we dare to be. Much like our eyes, our voice reveals things about ourselves, we might not even have been aware of. Together we’ll learn to use our voice in a playful way, so we can learn to not only use it to say words but actually express the meaning behind words – to express who we are and what we feel right at this moment. We’ll talk, we’ll shout, we’ll sing and we’ll improvise without any expectation of how it should sound like. All that matters is each individual, unique voice and its sound, which we’ll combine to create a shared space of connectedness.
Stars have always played an important role in human civilisation, once religiously interpreted, used to fix the calendar, helping in navigation. I offer you a workshop in which you will have the chance to see stars and planets in the cold winter night for around 2h. I’ll first explain you how the star chart works that you can orient yourselves in the sky and then I’ll show you some star constellations with a high beam laser pointer. I plan to bring the 46 dobsonian reflector telescope (self-constructed) that we can see some interesting objects such as galaxies and nebulas a little bit closer. As this workshop depends highly on the weather, I’ll plan a cloudy night programme as well. Dont forget to bring warm clothes!
Participants will have the opportunity to drum, make music and improvise using elements from African and Arabic rhythms. The goal is not only self-awareness, but also communication: how does playing in a group touch the various aspects of being part of a community? Drumming presents the opportunity for certain experiences to happen, such as a whole-body experience, a sense of the flow of energy in the group or a redefinition of what it means to be an individual in a group.
Pottery is one of the most ancient crafts, indeed the potters’ wheel is said to pre-date even the wheel developed for transportation some 5000 years ago. I am fascinated by its rhythm, the tactile nature of the clay as it moves through my hands and the wonder at the objects they give birth to. The simplicity of the materials used in the process of making – water, earth and fire – is another thing that draws me to this craft in these busy and complex times.
I offer you a workshop in which you will have the chance to get to know this wonderful material and its properties better. I even plan to take my wheel so those of you who are keen can have a go!
Beginning with a short introduction to the philosophy, concept and anatomy of Thai Yoga Massage (TYM), we will move our focus onto actual massage techniques. The goal is that the participants get the feeling, understanding of what Thai Yoga massage is, and will be able to perform short (30-45 minutes) Thai Yoga or at least Thai inspired massage and get to know some transitions, and pressure points. No previous experience is required to join.
The act of drawing and drawing itself as an object can be very magical. It has a particular lightness, flexibility and a compelling ability to synchronise thoughts, emotions, body movement, time, tools and material. Not only in art and design but in all the other human activities, drawing can serve as an extraordinary way of thinking and understanding. This workshop proposes a range of methods and strategies which are related to the main singularities of drawing such as spontaneity, experimentation, immediacy, simplicity, personal vision and expressiveness. You will have an opportunity to explore a contemporary approach to various media like charcoal, Chinese ink and gouache as well as different textures and formats of support. You dont need to have any special skills or techniques. The only expectation is being present within the process.
Contact improvisation (CI) is an inclusive dance form that is not bounded to the dance floor or any specific framework. Its fundaments may extend, in subtle ways, into our everyday actions and interactions. Within the unpredictable framework that the present moment holds, we find ourselves in a constant state of flow in which both contact and improvisation are vital. This workshop will therefore, not give much focus to the physical techniques of CI, but rather aim on developing a sensorial experience of CI that can ultimately be embodied and experienced in our everyday life. We will enter a journey in which all participants will be encouraged to explore their embodied self, the space in which the workshop will be held, and finally the embodied conversations that will happen with other moving bodies. This will be a safe and playful space, one in which we will become aware of our sensory sensitivities, and use them to explore in a dynamic and mindful way what is happening in the here and now.
Songlines is a two-day experience of story-telling in several interwoven art modalities and is inspired by the song-lines of the Australian aborigines who see these as geographical as well as poetic paths across the land (or sometimes the sky) which mark the route followed by the original “creator-beings” during the “dreaming” of the world. These paths are recorded in traditional songs, stories, dance, and painting. A knowledgeable person is therefore able to navigate across the land by repeating the words of the song, which describe the location of landmarks, waterholes, and other natural phenomena. Over two days, we will start with our own creation myth and safely navigate through events in our own lives and our creative fantasies to arrive to and sing our very own song-line. The work involves individual as well as group activity. Everyone is welcome to join and it is strongly recommended to participate both days. We ask only for a desire to create and share, and an openness to play and have fun.
In this workshop we will join our perspectives to discuss the ethical and legal aspects surrounding the concept of artificial intelligence. We will look at how the main regulatory actors have been attempting to address the problems and opportunities arising around artificial intelligence, but most of all – outline aspects which require regulating at the earliest, as the lawmakers are “shaping the future” of our relationships with AI systems. We will, among others, raise questions related to the obligations and duties of creators of AI, the problem of pre-programmed servitude of beings and Kantian views on the same, possible property ownership by AI, as well as the field of intellectual property and copyright of works of art independently conceived by AI. From this, we will take a look at the East Asian perspectives related to creation of beings – and how do the East Asian philosophies differ in this regard from the Western approach to the aforementioned ethical aspects.
Confucianism (or perhaps more properly “Ruism”) as well as Buddhism and Taoism all propose paths to physical, mental and ethical growth of individuals – it is just that each of them is overlaid with a different methodology. Their representative philosophers strived to explain our place in the universe, in relation to other living beings and (often seemingly) inanimate objects and discernible phenomena. The relevance of these ways of thought has continued well into modernity, and interest in them has especially boomed in recent years as alternatives to Western moral and philosophical heritage are being sought in hopes of explaining new developments of human civilization. In particular, questions related to artificial intelligence are especially pertinent. Can robots, androids and sentient data be classified as human-like? Should they be accorded complete freedom by their creators? What may be the consequences of their growth and learning processes? In this workshop, we will discuss these and other issues related to extant, proposed and probable forms of artificial intelligence and examine possible answers to them within East Asian intellectual trends – especially Confucianism.
Gisela’s passion for dance and movement has led her to choreograph more than 30 ballets, lead movement workshops all over the world, and she has also travelled to international dance competitions as a member of the jury panel. Parallel to the arts world, she has also dedicated 15 years of her life to expand her knowledge about all forms of self-inquiry and healing techniques: ranging from Buddhism, Kundalini, the metaphysic course in miracles to body therapies. The result is a beautiful combination of art and expansion of consciousness for you to really embody your presence. For Gisela, the practice on resilience is certainly a map to navigate in order to maintain ones mental health.
Calligraffiti is a novel art form which combines the classic traditional handwriting with the different urban styles of graffiti. The aspiration of this course is that you’ll experience the calming and meditative effect of practicing basic forms and strokes of letters and later combine those skills with abstract forms, colors and different kind of techniques into an unique artwork we do together.
During the first part of the course, you will get an insight into the the basics of calligraphy and lettering, which established independently in many different regions all around the world. Later on we’ll use the skills you learned in the previous lessons, to create individual shapes and letters based on a large variety of ancient alphabets and have the opportunity to work with different types of tools on varying materials.
A Swiss throws away 721 kg a year (2015). Are you aware of every single piece you throw away, and think about where does it end up? We will talk about the steps to take to reduce our garbage, one step at the time. This is for everyone. We will also try to make our own products (like beeswax paper and deodorant).
Milan Scheidegger holds an M.D. degree and completed his Ph.D. in functional and molecular neuroimaging at the Institute for Biomedical Engineering (University and ETH Zurich). As a resident physician at the Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, and Psychosomatics (University Hospital of Psychiatry Zurich) he is currently researching the neurobiology and pharmacology of altered states of consciousness. He is member of the Swiss Society for Psycholytic Therapy (SAEPT) and investigates the potential of psychedelics such as ketamine, psilocybin, ayahuasca and DMT to facilitate therapeutic transformation. On his ethnobotanical expeditions to Mexico, Colombia and Brazil he explored the traditional use of psychoactive plants in shamanic rituals. In addition to empirical research, he earned an M.A. degree in History and Philosophy of Knowledge (ETH Zurich). His main interests include biosemiotics, epistemology and phenomenology of consciousness, mindfulness and deep ecology.
I come from Italy and am settled for long here in Switzerland. I have studied engineering and worked for over ten years as scientist. At the same time, I have always been interested in understanding the human beings, our behavior, our nature and what all this is! Because of that, I privately studied psychology and meditation for many years. I am right now a student and practitioner of the Indo-Tibetan Pointing Out meditation, my personal practice mainly follows Dzogchen teachings from the Tibetan Bön tradition. In parallel, I was always focused on physical activities. I am a slackline extreme athlete, founder and president of Zürich’s association and a board member and founder of the Swiss National Slackline Federation. I love to teach and practice Yoga Asanas and AcroYoga as a physical complement and support to my meditation practice. I feel that the practice of extreme sports combined with meditative disciplines establishes the balance between playing and staying. In both activities my ultimate goal is to live here and now, to play here and now, to stay here and now. More info:
Andreas Losch is an award-winning theologian who started his PhD working on a Cambridge quantum physicist and priest (John Polkinghorne), and worked for philosophers (Martin Buber Edition, University of Düsseldorf) and space researchers (Center for Space and Habitability, University of Bern) alike.
His current project on “Ethics of a Planetary Sustainability” continues these intellectual passions. Losch is an expert in the dialogue between science, philosophy and theology and editor-in-chief of a German website on topic (www.theologie-naturwissenschaft.info). He is a member of the COST Action “Life Origins”, the Center of Theological Inquiry (Princeton, NJ) and servers in several societies dedicated to the study of the relation of science and religion. Amongst his publications are contributions like “What is Life? On Earth and Beyond” (Cambridge 2017) and “Kant’s wager. Kant’s strong belief in extra-terrestrial life, the history of this question and its challenge for theology today“ (International Journal of Astrobiology vol. 15 no. 4, 261-270 ).
Dr. Salome Kurth studied biology at the University of Bern and completed a PhD in neuroscience at the Children’s Hospital Zurich (University of Zurich). She accomplished a postdoc at the University of Colorado Boulder (CO, USA) and is now research group leader at the University Hospital Zurich. Dr. Kurth’s research interest focuses on sleep and brain development.
I enjoy challenges and I am curious about all that is unexplored. I get excited about pioneer initiatives that aim for societal progress, that form bridges to connect and that promote understanding for different perspectives.
Angelika Hilbeck is a senior scientist and lecturer at the Institute of Intergrative Biology at ETH Zurich. Since 30 years, her research centers around agroecology and biosafety issues. Her research and conceptual work includes environmental risk assessment, post-release monitoring and fundamental ecological research with genetically modified plants. Through numerous research and capacity building projects she is engaged in several developing countries. Through her international work with UN, governmental and non-governmental organisations, she became increasingly involved in broader issues of technology development towards a democratically legitimated, sustainable global future and actively contributes to the debate on biosafety, international agriculture, hunger and poverty alleviation. She is co-founder and board member of the European Network of Scientists for Social and Environmental Responsibility (ENSSER) and Critical Scientists Switzerland (CSS). She is a member of the board of directors of the Swiss development organisation ‘Bread for All’.
I love to see the whole – the movement and stillness, the flowing and grounding – and our healing in Yoga, from emotional and physical imbalances.
I grew up in Hamburg and moved to Zürich, where I met Yoga for the first time. I have been passionate about movement and body work my whole life. By diving deeper in my yoga practice, I learned to love the connection between the body and the mind, and understood that, integrating – being Yoga – is a life’s work. I work as a nurse in Intensive Care and I integrate my medical knowledge in my yoga teaching by being conscious, aware and focused in our moving and breathing.
Krista Citra Joonas (1979) is born in Estonia. She has M.D. degree of music on saxophone from Estonian Academy of Music and Theatre and was attending Musikhochschule Zürich 2001-2002 as exchange student. Since 2005 she became student of greatest living bansuri legend Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia. Since then attending yearly his classes in Brindavan Gurukul in Mumbai, India and in Codarts University of the Arts in Rotterdam, Netherland. She has been accompanying her teacher over the years on several concerts, recorded on many CD-s, released her solo album “Sundari” and is regularly performing in Estonia and abroad.
Leyla Stuber was born and raised in Zurich and grew up to be a singer/singing teacher and yogini. Years of ongoing self-exploration lead her to believe that living an authentic life is only possible if we can create authentic connections, not only with oneself but also with other people. So she made it her mission to help people finding back to themselves. Singing is one essential way she feels she can help people grow, that’s why she’s been teaching classes for over 10 years now.
Interested in stars and the sky since 1999, I ended up as an honorary member of the AJB (Astronomy Youth of Bern), helped teaching the newly interested members and gave tours in the observatory that has once been used by Albert Einstein. My favourite star constellation is Scorpion which includes many star clusters and nebulae. I love the sky which is why my second hobby is flying gliders as you can see in my picture.
Toni is Palestinian. He lives in Zurich with his wife and two daughters. Tony’s interest lies in the use of drumming to expand awareness, to connect to oneself and to change.
Raised in Switzerland, Saudi-Arabia and the UK, I have been fascinated by the potter’s craft probably even before I can remember. I was one of those kids who spent hours sculpting imaginary creatures and complex tunnel systems in sand, collecting pebbles, shells, twigs to decorate them with or trying my hand at garden cuisine by making mud cakes and baking them in the sun.
After graduating from the Academy of Fine Arts in Poland, I left my hometown of Katowice to come to Switzerland, where I now teach Yoga and do Thai yoga massage. I have always been interested in the human body. At first, it was the external beauty that attracted my attention, therefore studying art allowed me to express this fascination. Simultaneously, I also started practicing Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga, which shifted my perspective towards the inner realm of the body. When my friend invited me to my first yoga class I didn’t have a clue what was hidden behind this oriental name, but I had a feeling that it is exactly what I was looking for. That day I fell in love with the connection between breathing and movement, which I also discovered very beneficial for getting through a stressful time in my life. Therefore, not only external beauty, but the connection of the body, mind and soul has become exciting. Since then, yoga has turned into a crucial part of my life. What followed were a couple of teacher trainings and finally running my own classes, first in Poland and now in Switzerland. Last year I decided to broaden my knowledge and fulfill one of my dreams by traveling to Thailand and studying Thai Yoga Massage, which has become a clear continuation of my path. In order to become a good masseuse, I have learned the physical technique, which is obviously fundamental, but I also consider it vital to develop virtues on a spiritual field, such as loving-kindness, compassion and contentment, which are crucial to being an “artist” of this ancient “healing touch”.
Banu Narciso is an artist who works mainly with drawing. Studied drawing and painting in HEAD, Geneva University of Art and Design from 2003 to 2007 and received her MA Fine Arts from ZHDK, Zurich University of Arts in 2014. She lives in Nyon and works out of her studio in Geneva.
Alicia is a visual anthropologist who focusses on the senses and body. Dancing has been one of her life long passions, and can now combine her interest in dance, embodiment and anthropology in the practice of CI. She will share some of the experiences with us on the festival and looks forward to meeting you in a moving way!
Storytelling, song and poetry go back to the beginning of language- and perhaps the beginning of time. They throw light and open the doorways into experience and towards a deeper understanding of ourselves. Stories can be spoken, sung, played, enacted, drawn or sculpted and inevitably allow for a sharing of the human experience. Songlines is a two-day experience of story-telling in several interwoven art modalities and is inspired by the song-lines of the Australian aborigines who see these as geographical as well as poetic paths across the land (or sometimes the sky) which mark the route followed by the original “creator-beings” during the “dreaming” of the world. These paths are recorded in traditional songs, stories, dance, and painting. A knowledgeable person is therefore able to navigate across the land by repeating the words of the song, which describe the location of landmarks, waterholes, and other natural phenomena. Over two days, we will start with our own creation myth and safely navigate through events in our own lives and our creative fantasies to arrive to and sing our very own song-line. The work involves individual as well as group activity. Everyone is welcome to join and it is strongly recommended to participate both days. We ask only for a desire to create and share, and an openness to play and have fun.
Karolina Sleziak is a lawyer practicing in Zürich, specializing in intellectual property, mainly IT law and law of new technologies, currently active in one of the leading IT-consultancies in the field. She is also completing her PhD within the area of personal liability of directors and officers of companies limited by shares at the University of Zürich. Her research interests include regulatory considerations for big data, artificial intelligence, algorithmic consumers, embedded values and blockchain contracting, as related to and reflective of the ethical principles grounded in the contemporary societies. After hours Karolina usually grabs her sketchbook and canvas and heads to paint in some random places in the world, exchanging energy surplus with kind and chatty people.
Tomasz Sleziak is a PhD student in Korean studies at School of Oriental and African Studies – University of London, conducting research on pre-modern Korean concepts of participation and alienation. Tomasz is a member of the Royal Asiatic Society as well as the British Association for Korean Studies and Society for the Study of Chinese Religions. He lived in Seoul, researching at the Hankuk University of Foreign Studies and studying primary sources at the Academy of Korean Studies. He was also a guest researcher at the University of Zürich. His main academic interest encompasses the traditional heritage – especially Confucian philosophy – and the ways it influences the modern societies of the region. He also enjoys hiking and cycling – especially in northern Europe, Switzerland and South Korea – and observing the “10000 of things” (만물) in nature, far away from civilization.
Gisela’s passion for dance and movement has led her to choreograph more than 30 ballets, lead movement workshops all over the world, and she has also travelled to international dance competitions as a member of the jury panel. Parallel to the arts world, she has also dedicated 15 years of her life to expand her knowledge about all forms of self-inquiry and healing techniques: ranging from Buddhism, Kundalini, the metaphysic course in miracles to body therapies. The result is a beautiful combination of art and expansion of consciousness for you to really embody your presence. For Gisela, the practice on resilience is certainly a map to navigate in order to maintain ones mental health.
I’m Skyrenia. Born into a multicultural family I found myself from the beginning in a struggle between two worlds. I noticed early that I was neither the one or the other. After graduation as a graphic designer I knew that I wanted to focus myself on connecting those different parts inside of me together, in order to find inner peace. And so I started my journey into the healing and therapeutic process of art and found Calligraffiti. To me it is the connection of different cultures all around the world in an harmonic and beautiful way and also the expression of my soul.
I started to question why we throw away so much garbage about four years ago when travelling in the US. Seeing so much fast food garbage and other types of trash everywhere, made me want to try and make a difference. Ever since I have been taking small steps to reduce the footprint we have on earth, like making my own deodorant or buying in bulk. I also learned to say no to disposable shopping bags or unnecessary freebies, that most likely will be thrown away after just three seconds.