Saturday, September 26, 2020
An Online Class Facilitated by Harbert Rice
Part of The Focusing Highlights Series
A Quaker’s View Of Gendlin’s Philosophy - How a Felt Sense Functions in a Group
In this class, participants will learn how a felt sense functions in a Quaker Meeting’s gathering circle.
You will also see how the Quakers modified their gathering circle to fit the needs of working with prison inmates through the Alternatives to Violence Project (AVP), and how a felt sense can lead to change and transformations among inmates within and as a result of the workshops the New York Quakers have been facilitating since the 1970's.
Resources:
Harbert Rice's Second Book - A Quaker’s View Of Gendlin’s Philosophy (2020)
Bio:
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Harbert Rice is a Quaker. His home meeting is the Reno Friends Meeting in Reno, NV, where he served as Clerk of the Meeting. He was a member of the Alternatives to Violence Project (AVP), which brought AVP workshops into the Nevada State Prison System. He is now retired and lives with his wife Rebecca Mueller on a small farm in Northern New Mexico. He studied Gendlin’s A Process Model with Rob Parker. He also served on the Board of Directors of TIFI.
A Quaker’s View Of Gendlin’s Philosophy (2020) is Harbert’s second book on Gendlin’s Philosophy. His first is Language Process Notes (2008).
Website: embudovalleypress.com
To email him directly: [email protected]
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