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華府書友會五月份演講 金慶松博士主講「北京法源寺」
2018/04/24 12:01:20瀏覽1629|回應2|推薦26

華府書友會五月份演講

金慶松博士主講「北京法源寺」

《華府書友會 - 4/23/2018新聞稿》  

歷史小說《北京法源寺》是李敖的第一部長篇小說作品。小說以北京城的法源寺為故事背景,描述了1898年(二甲子前)戊戌變法前後,康有為、梁啓超、譚嗣同、大刀王五等一批中國志士為中國的未來與振興所做的思索與行動。七年代李敖在獄中構思小說架構、故事梗概,1976年出獄後開始寫作,並於19916月成書並出版。2000月此作品獲推薦為諾貝爾文學獎提名,同時修訂出版。隨後有不同的版本,英文版是由英國牛津大學出版社刋行,書名是:「Martyrs' shrine: the story of the reform movement of 1898 in China2015年《北京法源寺》被大陸舞台劇導演田沁鑫改編為同名話劇。

《北京法源寺》是一本思想性的鉅著,一部思辯性的小說。小說引領讀者回到百年多前的中國大地,走過憫忠古剎、八國聯軍、戊戍政變、監獄刑場;細品文化、歷史、人物、政治、生活、哲思、中醫、詩詞、生死、鬼神、僧俗、出入、仕隱、朝野、家國、君臣、忠奸、夷夏、中外、強弱、群己、人我、公私、榮枯、情理、去留、因果、經濟;尋思改良與革命、死君與死事、豪俠與忠義、決絕與悲壯。上個月剛逝世的作家李敖,其內心深處與思想境界,就在這本《北京法源寺》裡。

金慶松是李敖的長期書迷,專硏其著作數十餘本,並曾經於2013年十月返台親訪李敖大師、李敖書房。華府書友會五月份的講座,很榮幸地請到金慶松前來與聽眾分享李敖的《北京法源寺》。演講精彩可期,歡迎會友同好、舊雨新知共襄盛會!


講題:「北京法源寺」

講者:金慶松博士

時間:2018519(星期六)下午1:304:00

地點:Twinbrook Library(雙溪圖書館)

地址:202 Meadow Hall Drive, Rockville, MD 20851

络:請洽會長Vivian Li240-406-7686

講者簡歷:金慶松,筆名金大俠,擁有管理學士、工程博士,允文允武,俠行藝遊於華府社團,曾任華府台大校友會會長、華府成大校友會會長、美洲鄭和學會會長、三個國際演講協會(Toastmasters)的分會會長、多個中文學校老師、志工等;現任華府華文作家協會會長、金大俠部落格格主等。工作之餘,在海外推展中華文化、藝文活動不遺餘力!

每月第三個星期六下午固定舉行一次藝文聚會的華府書友會,其宗旨是:「以藝靜心、以文會友」,一月一次的書友藝文聚會,為華府友好提供知識的、文化的、藝術的、文學的心靈盛宴。華府書友會「書卷頻開饗心靈,友朋偶聚享藝文。」期能為華府的舊雨新知提供耳目一新的心靈滌濾、精神提升,更祈盼會員、會友、同好們共襄盛會,隨時提供建言!華府書友會會費每年25元、永久會員費150元,參與每月演講的非會員酌收五元以貼補場地租金等。

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引用網址:https://classic-blog.udn.com/article/trackback.jsp?uid=chin8673&aid=111626009

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金大俠
等級:8
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2018/05/11 22:13
how to present it ... 懷疑
柿事如意(世界日報家園版)

好女婿
開啟斜槓人生
柿柿如意 金塊高掛
金大俠(chin8673) 於 2018-05-11 22:15 回覆:

here ...

From: Pusapati, Anantha
Sent: Friday, May 11, 2018 7:37 AM
To:
Subject: Leadership Articles: Jeff Bezos Banned PowerPoint in Meetings. His Replacement Is Brilliant !

 

Hi Team – Good Morning,  Interesting article on the how a presentation will be effective. Thank you.

 

In his 2018 annual letter, Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos repeated his rule that PowerPoint is banned in executive meetings. What Bezos replaced it with provides even more valuable insight for entrepreneurs and leaders. In his letter, and in a recent discussion at the Forum on Leadership at the Bush Center, Bezos revealed that "narrative structure" is more effective than PowerPoint. According to Bezos, new executives are in for a culture shock in their first Amazon meetings. Instead of reading bullet points on a PowerPoint slide, everyone sits silently for about 30 minutes to read a "six-page memo that's narratively structured with real sentences, topic sentences, verbs, and nouns. "After everyone's done reading, they discuss the topic. "It's so much better than the typical PowerPoint presentation for so many reasons," Bezos added.

 

As a student of narrative storytelling in business for the past 20 years, I can tell you exactly why it's so much better.

 

·         Our brains are hardwired for narrative.

Narrative storytelling might not have been as critical for our survival as a species as food, but it comes close. Anthropologists say when humans gained control of fire, it marked a major milestone in human development. Our ancestors were able to cook food, which was a big plus. But it also had a second benefit. People sat around campfires swapping stories. Stories served as instruction, warning, and inspiration. Recently, I've talked to prominent neuroscientists whose experiments confirm what we've known for centuries: The human brain is wired for story. We process our world in narrative, we talk in narrative and--most important for leadership--people recall and retain information more effectively when it's presented in the form of a story, not bullet points.

·         Stories are persuasive.

Aristotle is the father of persuasion. More than 2,000 years ago he revealed the three elements that all persuasive arguments must have to be effective. He called these elements "appeals." They are: ethos, logos, and pathos. Ethos is character and credibility. Logos is logic--an argument must appeal to reason. But ethos and logos are irrelevant in the absence of pathos--emotion. Emotion is not a bad thing. The greatest movements in history were triggered by speakers who were gifted at making rational and emotional appeals: Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King, Jr.; and John F. Kennedy, who blended science and emotion to inspire America's moon program. Neuroscientists have found emotion is the fastest path to the brain. In other words, if you want your ideas to spread, story is the single best vehicle we have to transfer that idea to another person. "I'm actually a big fan of anecdotes in business," Bezos said at the leadership forum as he explained why he reads customer emails and forwards them to the appropriate executive. Often, he says, the customer anecdotes are more insightful than data. Amazon uses "a ton of metrics" to measure success, explained Bezos. "I've noticed when the anecdotes and the metrics disagree, the anecdotes are usually right," he noted. "That's why it's so important to check that data with your intuition and instincts, and you need to teach that to executives and junior executives. "Bezos clearly understands that logic (data) must be married with pathos (narrative) to be successful.

·         Bullet points are the least effective way of sharing ideas.

I wrote an article last year titled "Google's CEO Doesn't Use Bullet Points and Neither Should You." He still doesn't. Neither do Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, Richard Branson, or most of the world's most inspiring speakers. Bullets don't inspire. Stories do.

Simply put, the brain is not built to retain information that's structured as bullet points on a slide. It's well-known among neuroscientists that we recall things much better when we see pictures of the object or topic than when we read text on a slide. Visuals are much, much more powerful than text alone. That's why, if you choose to use slides, use more pictures than words--and don't use bullet points. Ever. During his discussion at the forum, Bezos said he could have spent the entire event talking about narrative. That means he really studies this topic and is passionate about it. You should be too. Stories inform, illuminate, and inspire--all the things entrepreneurs strive to do. 

 

Article Link : https://www.inc.com/carmine-gallo/jeff-bezos-bans-powerpoint-in-meetings-his-replacement-is-brilliant.html


老魔王
等級:8
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2018/04/25 05:11

我大學時有看過這本書, 可是, 印象中好像很沉悶, 悶到我現在竟然想不起來書裡寫了些甚麼?

(慚愧~~  我當時可能沒看完這本書.........)

金大俠(chin8673) 於 2018-04-26 10:15 回覆:

分享一些讀書雜錄⋯⋯

「佛法的真義告訴我們:人相、我相、眾生相既一無可取,而我們猶現身於世界者,乃由性海渾圓、眾生一體、慈悲為度、無有已時之故。是故以智為體、以悲為用,不染一切、亦不捨一切。又以願力無盡故,與其布施於將來,不如布施於現在;又以大小平等故,與其惻隱於他界,不如惻隱於最近。於是淒然出世而又浩然人世,縱橫四顧,有澄清天下之志。『華嚴經』談『回向』,說以十住所得諸佛之智、十行所行出世之行,濟以悲願,處俗利生。回真向俗、回智向悲,使真俗圓融、智悲不二,而回向菩提實際。佛法的真髓、佛法的真精神,正在這裡啊!這些啊,才是佛法的實際。其他那些吃齋拜佛。手寫『大悲』、手數念珠的動作啊,全是假的!」(第149頁)

金大俠(chin8673) 於 2018-04-26 10:16 回覆:

是很「沉悶」啦

為了這個演講,我又看了五六回誰理你