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facts about charles eisenstein.html

20 Facts About Charles Eisenstein

facts about charles eisenstein.html1.

Charles Eisenstein was born on 1967 and is an American public speaker, author, and activist.

2.

Charles Eisenstein's books include The Ascent of Humanity, Sacred Economics, and The More Beautiful World Our Hearts Know is Possible.

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Charles Eisenstein has promoted eco-villages, permaculture, local currencies, gift economies, economic degrowth and universal basic income.

4.

Charles Eisenstein lived in Taiwan for nine years, where he became fluent in Mandarin Chinese and worked as a translator.

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Charles Eisenstein married there, had children, and later returned to the United States.

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Charles Eisenstein describes his late 20s through his mid 30s as "a long period of intensifying crisis".

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Charles Eisenstein then spent four years writing The Ascent of Humanity, which was published in 2007 and became his first commercially successful book, launching his writing career.

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Charles Eisenstein has four sons; one with his current wife, Stella, and three with his previous wife, Patsy.

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Charles Eisenstein has published op-ed pieces in The Guardian and The Huffington Post on topics including genetic modification, the patenting of seeds and debt.

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Charles Eisenstein is a contributing editor at the website Reality Sandwich.

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Charles Eisenstein appeared on Oprah Winfrey's Super Soul Sunday on July 16,2017.

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Charles Eisenstein has periodically published essays on his website and in his newsletter.

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On May 15,2023, Eisenstein announced that he had taken an advisor's position in the campaign of then-Democratic Presidential candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr.

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Charles Eisenstein argues that these have a strong, largely unconscious effect on attitudes toward time and the natural world.

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Charles Eisenstein wrote his 2011 book Sacred Economics as part of the New Economy movement.

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Charles Eisenstein asserts that money is created by the conversion of free human interactions into paid services.

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Charles Eisenstein proposes that if we were to feel that the rivers, forests, and creatures of the natural and material world were sacred or at least valuable in their own right, then our response might be more wholesome and ultimately effective.

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Charles Eisenstein decries valuing the living world simply for its carbon credits or for preventing the extinction of one species or another.

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Charles Eisenstein expressed ongoing concern that the pandemic was being used as an excuse for governments to act in an authoritarian manner, and drew on Rene Girard's mimetic theory to argue that those who chose not to be vaccinated were being scapegoated by society and government authorities.

20.

Charles Eisenstein added that Eisenstein is too intelligent to be confrontational but that, through his works, especially The Ascent of Humanity and Sacred Economics, "he's really moved the whole thing along in a number of ways".