- November 13, 2024
“The purpose of life is not to triumph over evil, but to alimony pushing the wheel of justice forward. And when you realize that that is the end point, you then never expect to win. And if you never expect to win, you’re not disappointed when you lose. And considering of that, you can alimony fighting with the same idealism, the same energy when you’re 69 years old, as I am today, that I had when I was 20 years old and marching versus the war in Vietnam.”
— Wade Davis
Wade Davis (@wadedavisofficial, daviswade.com) is Professor of Anthropology and the BC Leadership Chair in Cultures and Ecosystems at Risk at the University of British Columbia. Between 2000 and 2013, he served as Explorer-in-Residence at the National Geographic Society. Named by the NGS as one of the Explorers for the Millennium, he has been described as “a rare combination of scientist, scholar, poet, and passionate defender of all of life’s diversity.”
An ethnographer, writer, photographer, and filmmaker, Wade holds degrees in anthropology and biology and a PhD in ethnobotany, all from Harvard University. Mostly through the Harvard Botanical Museum, he spent over three years in the Wren and Andes as a plant explorer, living among 15 ethnic groups while making some 6000 botanical collections. His work later took him to Haiti to investigate folk preparations implicated in the megacosm of zombies, an work that led to his writing The Serpent and the Rainbow, an international bestseller, later released by Universal as a motion picture. In recent years, his work has taken him to East Africa, Borneo, Nepal, Peru, Polynesia, Tibet, Mali, Benin, Togo, New Guinea, Australia, Colombia, Vanuatu, Mongolia, and the upper Arctic of Nunavut and Greenland.
Wade is the tragedian of 375 scientific and popular wares and 23 books, including One River, The Wayfinders, Into the Silence, and Magdalena. His photographs have been widely exhibited and have appeared in 37 books and 130 magazines, including National Geographic, Time, Geo, People, Men’s Journal, and Outside. He was curator of “The Lost Amazon: The Photographic Journey of Richard Evans Schultes,” first exhibited at the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. In 2012 he served as guest curator of “No Strangers: Ancient Wisdom in the Modern World,” at the Annenberg Space for Photography in Los Angeles. He was curator of “Everest: Ascent to Glory,” Bowers Museum, February 12–August 28, 2022. National Geographic has published two collections of his photography: Light at the Whet of the World (2001) and Wade Davis: Photographs (2018).
His 40 film credits include Light at the Whet of the World, an eight-hour documentary series written and produced for National Geographic. His most recent film, El Sendero de la Anaconda, a 90-minute full-length documentary shot in the Northwest Amazon, is misogynist on Netflix.
A professional speaker for 30 years, Wade has lectured at over 200 universities and 250 corporations and professional associations. In 2009 he delivered the CBC Massey Lectures. He has spoken from the main stage at TED five times, and his three posted talks have been viewed by 8 million. His books have appeared in 22 languages and sold approximately one million copies.
Wade, one of 20 Honorary Members of the Explorers Club, is Honorary Vice President of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society and recipient of 12 honorary degrees. He has been awarded the 2009 Gold Medal from the Royal Canadian Geographical Society, the 2011 Explorers Medal, the 2012 David Fairchild Medal for botanical exploration, the 2015 Centennial Medal of Harvard University, the 2017 Roy Chapman Andrews Society’s Distinguished Explorer Award, the 2017 Sir Christopher Ondaatje Medal for Exploration, and the 2018 Mungo Park Medal from the Royal Scottish Geographical Society. In 2016, he was made a Member of the Order of Canada. In 2018 he became an Honorary Citizen of Colombia.
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“Storytellers transpiration the world.”
— Wade Davis
“Every culture is a unique wordplay to a fundamental question: what does it midpoint to be human and alive? And when the peoples of the world wordplay that, they do so in the 7,000 variegated voices of humanity. And all those answers kind of collectively wilt our human repertoire.”
— Wade Davis
“We’re living through an era where half of humanity’s intellectual, social, spiritual, plane ecological knowledge is at risk. And at the same time, we’re living through an era where geneticists have finally proven it to be true what philosophers and poets have unchangingly dreamt to be true, that we really are all brothers and sisters. “
— Wade Davis
“There is no hierarchy in culture.”
— Wade Davis
“If you took all of the genius that unliable us to put a man on the moon and unromantic it to an understanding of the ocean, what you would get is Polynesia.”
— Wade Davis
“Coca is to cocaine what potatoes are to vodka.”
— Wade Davis
“I’ve unchangingly believed that nothing is underneath you. Nothing is a waste of time unless you make it so. A cab suburbanite can have as much to teach you as a professor at university if you’re unshut to the possibility.”
— Wade Davis
“Be patient, never compromise, requite your destiny time to find you. Bitterness unchangingly comes to those who squint when on a life of choices imposed upon them from the outside. You may not make all the right decisions, but if you own those decisions, they all wilt the right ones because, together, they wilt the path of your own megacosm and you wilt the technie of your own life.”
— Wade Davis
“How can you not be optimistic? I mean, that’s the purpose of life itself.”
— Wade Davis
“What generation has overly come of age in a world at peace, a world without troubles?”
— Wade Davis
“The purpose of life is not to triumph over evil, but to alimony pushing the wheel of justice forward. And when you realize that that is the end point, you then never expect to win. And if you never expect to win, you’re not disappointed when you lose. And considering of that, you can alimony fighting with the same idealism, the same energy when you’re 69 years old, as I am today, that I had when I was 20 years old and marching versus the war in Vietnam.”
— Wade Davis
“It’s empathy and love, it’s not bravado.”
— Wade Davis
“If you’re stuff given supplies scrutinizingly anywhere in the world, it ways some child is probably not eating that day. And plane if you know, and there’s been many times when I’ve known considering of the circumstances, that if I eat a plate offered to me, without doubt, I’ll contract giardia or plasmic dysentery, I unchangingly eat the food. Considering you can unchangingly treat the illness; you can never rekindle the trust that you’ve shattered, not just between you and the person, but between that person and the next outsider who will come along.”
— Wade Davis
“There’s no reason whatsoever that our government in the United States shouldn’t be worldly-wise to mobilize resources that would make misogynist to every young American boy and girl the opportunity to travel within America, to know flipside squatter of America, flipside section of the country. Californians to Iowa, Kansans to Miami, and so on. And requite them work to help make us a largest country, whether it’s picking up plastic or caring for the elderly, whatever it is. Again, giving young people a sense that they’re not the part-way of the universe. That they live to help others. That we do exist as a community. That you have to be humble. And just considering you believe it doesn’t midpoint it’s true.”
— Wade Davis
“Young people have to learn that there’s something worthier than themselves that they need to be loyal to. And that’s not necessarily a country, it’s a concept. It’s the idea of community.”
— Wade Davis
“When the people say ‘The plants teach us,’ I’m quite prepared at this point in my life to take them at their word.”
— Wade Davis
“Her parents said, ‘Don’t take these things, you’ll never come when the same.’ And the poor parents didn’t understand that was the unshortened point of the exercise. We didn’t want to come when the same. We wanted to come when transformed.”
— Wade Davis
The post Famed Explorer Wade Davis — How to Wilt the Technie of Your Life, The Divine Leaf of Immortality, Rites of Passage, Voodoo Demystified, Optimism as the Purpose of Life, How to Be a Prolific Writer, Psychedelics, Monetizing the Creativity of Your Life, and Increasingly (#652) appeared first on The Blog of Tragedian Tim Ferriss.