Category: Meaning, Spirituality & Philosophy

Cancer, Oxygen and Toxic Conditions with Dr. Majid Ali September 11, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Dr. Majid Ali

Dr. Majid Ali, Physician, presents his framework for understanding cancer through three root causes: toxic foods, toxic environment, and toxic thoughts. Broadcast on the anniversary of 9/11, this expanded WBAI fundraising edition covers enzyme therapies, bowel and liver detox, and the case for patient self-education as a counterweight to fear.

The Animal Desire to Get High with Ed Elkin September 5, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Ed Elkin, Roberta Maria Acchi

Every living creature seeks altered states, from caffeine-loving goats to alcohol-raiding elephants. Armand DiMele and guest Ed Elkin, a longtime humanistic psychology colleague living in a shamanic community in California, trace how psychedelics open perceptual doors that yoga, meditation, and creativity can then walk through without chemicals.

The Energy in Hand Touched Food June 6, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Roberta Maria Atti

Food made by hand tastes different because it carries the maker’s energy and intention. Armand and co-host Roberta Maria Atti draw on macrobiotics, Wilhelm Reich’s seedling experiments, and the contrast between homemade dumplings and factory-processed meals to argue that giving and receiving energy is the foundation of nourishment, love, and aliveness.

The Psychology of Activism with Dr. Suzanne Ross March 29, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Dr. Suzanne Ross

What drives a person to spend a lifetime fighting for others, and what does it cost them? Dr. Suzanne Ross, clinical psychologist and lifelong activist, traces her path from wartime refugee to courtroom advocate, exploring how identity, love, and community sustain activists through fear, loss, and exhaustion.

Jazz Creativity and the Creative Spirit with Sonny Fortune March 22, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Kent Robertshaw, Sonny Fortune

Legendary alto saxophonist Sonny Fortune joins Armand DiMele and Dr. Kent Robertshaw, MD, Psychiatrist, to trace how Fortune went from corrugated box factory worker and teenage father in Philadelphia to one of jazz’s most celebrated voices. The conversation moves through early perseverance, the power of mentors, and what separates artists who endure from those who walk away.

Pi Day and the Mind of Einstein March 14, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Roberta Maria Atti

What does a mathematical constant have to do with the nature of reality? On Pi Day, Armand DiMele and co-host Roberta Maria Atti celebrate Einstein’s birthday by tracing how E=mc² cracked open the mechanistic worldview and planted the idea that matter, energy, and all living things are ultimately one.

A Conversation with Sonny Rollins February 20, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Kent Robertshaw, Sonny Rollins

Legendary saxophonist Sonny Rollins talks with Armand and Dr. Kent Robertshaw, MD, Psychiatrist, about growing up on Sugar Hill, marching alongside his activist grandmother, the role of artists in social change, and the deep grief of losing his wife of 40 years, Lucille. Music and loss intertwine throughout.

Free Will Versus Determinism January 10, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Roberta Maria Atin

Do we truly choose our lives, or are we shaped by genes, culture, and forces beyond our awareness? Armand DiMele and co-host Roberta Maria Atti work through fatalism, determinism, and the neuroscience of repeated self-defeating patterns, arguing that understanding these forces can loosen their grip on us.

The Magic of Belief with Eric Walton January 3, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Eric Walton, Roberta Maria Atin

Magic as a human need, not just a trick. Armand DiMele and co-host Roberta Maria Atti welcome conjurer and actor Eric Walton, who performs an original narrative poem about Houdini before discussing how illusion works by engaging all five senses to suggest a sixth, and why audiences hunger to be astonished.

New Year Traditions Around the World December 28, 2006

Host: Armand DiMele

Why do we party hard, eat grapes, burn dolls, and bang pots at midnight? Armand traces New Year customs from ancient Babylon and Rome through modern celebrations in Korea, Colombia, Taiwan, and beyond, weaving in listener calls about Puerto Rican, Black American, and other personal traditions.