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Ho'Oulu : Our Time of Becoming : Collected Early Writings of Manulani Aluli Meyer

By Manulani Aluli Meyer

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Book Id: WPLBN0002096829
Format Type: PDF eBook:
File Size: 70.32 MB
Reproduction Date: 5/10/2011

Title: Ho'Oulu : Our Time of Becoming : Collected Early Writings of Manulani Aluli Meyer  
Author: Manulani Aluli Meyer
Volume:
Language: English
Subject: Non Fiction, History of America, Hawaiian History
Collections: Education, Special Collection Scholastic History, Epistemology, Media Studies, Authors Community, Favorites from the National Library of China, Philosophy, Cultural Studies, Sociology, Literature, Naval Science, Social Sciences, Most Popular Books in China, Language, History, Science
Historic
Publication Date:
2003
Publisher: Ai Pohaku Press
Member Page: Hale Kuamoʻo Hawaiian Language Center

Citation

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Aluli Meyer, B. M. (2003). Ho'Oulu : Our Time of Becoming : Collected Early Writings of Manulani Aluli Meyer. Retrieved from http://gutenberg.us/


Description
This kakau is named Halaloa and it sits on my left shoulder. Many distinct ideas come forth: one is the enduring breath of the sun. The sun, la, her-alds change, growth, and transformation. Ha, breath, is the fundamental animating principle of life that connects us to our mystical origins. Halaloa also holds the image of hala, of death, of change, of stripping away. Inside the circle there are two main images: a wave and a koru, or fern. It represents ocean and earth—elemental forms. There is an outside, exterior knowing, and then there is an inside, interior one. The koru represents our evolution as humans. The five lines around Halaloa represent healing. I believe it is time to heal. Heal ourselves, heal others, heal this world.

Excerpt
Ke welina mai nei. I wanted to spend a few moments with you before you dip into the muliwai—where sea water meets fresh; where theory meets practice. There is life there. As with the ideas you are about to read. They serve as a threshold into which I am now entered—a new seeing of the world that is wider than ever imagined. It began by listening to our people. I learned of our distinctness. Our Light. Our commonality with the world. Because I am a philosopher by passion, it was named epistemology. It was a word I did not fully understand because there was nothing dimensional about the term. Nothing. But this is no longer the case. It is now fully dimensioned in every single moment of my day.

Table of Contents
Hawaiian Culture: Alive, Relevant and Ready. 4 -- A New Standard in Hawaiian Education. 7 -- Developing Our Human Potential. 11 -- Missionary Influence on Hawai?i's Educational Philosophy. 20 -- John Dewey and Hawaiian Aesthetics. 30 -- An Outward Bound Paper. 36 -- To Set Right—Ho?oponopono: A Native Hawaiian Way of Peacemaking.. 42 -- The Role of History, Intention and Function: More Thoughts on Hawaiian Epistemology. 52 -- Hawaiian Hermeneutics and the Triangulation of Meaning: Gross, Subde, Causal. 60 -- (Unedited Doctoral Thesis). 76 -- References. 210 -- Hawaiian Language Glossary. 234 -- English Language Glossary/Philosophy Definitions. 236 --

 
 



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