- 1 giorno fa
In Pursuit of Silence (2015) is a visually stunning and meditative documentary that explores the importance and beauty of silence in our busy, modern world. Through breathtaking landscapes, serene environments, and quiet moments captured across the globe, the film encourages viewers to slow down, reflect, and reconnect with themselves.
With minimal narration and a focus on immersive soundscapes, In Pursuit of Silence highlights the power of quiet to inspire mindfulness, creativity, and inner peace. The documentary invites audiences to experience the calming and restorative effects of silence, offering a contemplative journey that resonates deeply with anyone seeking balance in a fast-paced life.
Perfect for fans of nature, meditation, and visually engaging documentaries, this 2015 film provides a thought-provoking and calming cinematic experience.
With minimal narration and a focus on immersive soundscapes, In Pursuit of Silence highlights the power of quiet to inspire mindfulness, creativity, and inner peace. The documentary invites audiences to experience the calming and restorative effects of silence, offering a contemplative journey that resonates deeply with anyone seeking balance in a fast-paced life.
Perfect for fans of nature, meditation, and visually engaging documentaries, this 2015 film provides a thought-provoking and calming cinematic experience.
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00:00:00Grazie.
00:00:30Grazie.
00:01:00Grazie.
00:01:30Grazie.
00:02:00Grazie.
00:02:30Grazie.
00:03:00Grazie.
00:03:30Grazie.
00:04:00Grazie.
00:04:30Grazie.
00:05:00Grazie.
00:05:30Grazie.
00:06:00Grazie.
00:06:30Grazie.
00:07:00Grazie.
00:07:02I was lucky to live in a house when I was growing up as a child, that was located in quite
00:07:10a silent location. There was also a good view out my bedroom window. And I guess as a young
00:07:21child I fell in love with it. But I didn't know what that meant at all. I didn't even
00:07:27know what it was, to be honest.
00:07:49So how do you talk coherently about silence? We can talk about silence. Does it exist in
00:07:57a decibel sense? A noise sense or a lack of noise sense? And the literature is clear that
00:08:04silence doesn't exist in that sense.
00:08:11the etymological roots are somewhat contested. There are two words in particular that people
00:08:18go back to. There's a Gothic term, anasidon, and then desonere. One of them has to do with
00:08:23the wind dying down, and the other has to do with a kind of stopping of motion. They're both
00:08:30to do with an interruption, not just of sound. But the roots of silence are also to do with
00:08:35the interruption of our own, the imposition of our own egos on the world.
00:08:42.
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00:09:43Almost all of the early theologians talk about the ultimate worship of God is silence,
00:09:49and that God dwells in the silence of eternity.
00:09:56.
00:10:01The history of monastic life is as old as the history of the human race.
00:10:06I think that the whole history of shamans is a history of a kind of proto-monasticism
00:10:12where someone in the tribe has clearly, evidently, a facility with silence and a facility with
00:10:18understanding the unspoken processes of the world.
00:10:22.
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00:11:16.
00:11:17Grazie.
00:11:47Grazie.
00:12:17Grazie.
00:12:47Grazie.
00:13:01Retreating from the cacophony of the world is stepping towards everything that's essential.
00:13:11It's about stepping towards the world and really about learning how to love the world again.
00:13:17Historically, solitude has always had an exalted place in our culture.
00:13:26And it's really only recently that it has fallen from grace and now needs to be restored to its rightful place.
00:13:33You look at all the religious traditions, Buddha, and Jesus, and Mohammed, and Moses.
00:13:38These were all seekers who would go off into the woods, think their thoughts, have their revelations,
00:13:44and then come back and share those revelations with the wider world.
00:13:53We lose a lot when we don't allow people, and not just allow, but encourage people to go off by themselves.
00:14:00You know, whether literally into the woods or metaphorically, to just go and chart your own journey and do it by yourself.
00:14:06And there are certain paths in this life that you've got to walk alone, and that's the only way to do them.
00:14:12And that's why people are the way to do them.
00:14:14So I said it's like the world's head.
00:14:15When you're on the bridge, don't worry.
00:14:17There's no way to relax.
00:14:18And when you're walking around, you're walking around the bridge.
00:14:20And, you know, if you're on the bridge and down.
00:14:21Grazie a tutti.
00:14:51Grazie a tutti.
00:15:21Grazie a tutti.
00:15:51Grazie a tutti.
00:16:21Grazie a tutti.
00:16:51Grazie a tutti.
00:17:21Grazie a tutti.
00:18:51Grazie a tutti.
00:20:51Grazie a tutti.
00:21:51Grazie a tutti.
00:22:21Grazie a tutti.
00:22:51Grazie a tutti.
00:26:51Grazie a tutti.
00:27:51Grazie a tutti.
00:28:21Grazie a tutti.
00:28:23Grazie a tutti.
00:28:25Grazie a tutti.
00:28:27Grazie a tutti.
00:28:29Grazie a tutti.
00:28:31Grazie a tutti.
00:29:01Grazie a tutti.
00:29:31Grazie a tutti.
00:30:01Grazie a tutti.
00:30:31Grazie a tutti.
00:31:31a tutti.
00:31:33Grazie a tutti.
00:32:03a tutti.
00:32:33,
00:33:03a tutti.
00:33:05a tutti.
00:33:07a tutti.
00:33:09e a tutti.
00:33:39a tutti.
00:34:09a tutti.
00:34:11a tutti.
00:34:13a tutti.
00:35:15a tutti.
00:35:17a tutti.
00:35:19a tutti.
00:35:21a tutti.
00:35:23a tutti.
00:35:25a tutti.
00:35:27a tutti.
00:35:29a tutti.
00:35:59a tutti.
00:36:29a tutti.
00:36:30a tutti.
00:36:31a tutti.
00:36:33a tutti.
00:36:34a tutti.
00:36:36a tutti.
00:36:37a tutti.
00:36:38a tutti.
00:36:39a tutti.
00:36:40a tutti.
00:36:40a tutti.
00:36:41a tutti.
00:36:43A Tua Hub 2016
00:36:43I heard the sound of a bird bathing in a woods finora in a woods pool,
00:36:46behind my house in Virginia.
00:36:48and I did sort of a jungle crawl under all this cat driar shaft.
00:36:49I came out onto this little blueing war bonguodman bathing in a forest pool,
00:36:54and it was the most beautiful thing I've ever seen.
00:36:58I really like being in quiet places because I use my ears for everything.
00:37:06Primavera, se non si non si non si non si non si non si non si non si non si non si non si non si non si non si non si non si è mai difficile.
00:37:15E per me è un questione di contare con i primi instinti e sempre essere preparato per quello che si non si è avuto.
00:37:25I call what I do the Art of Disappearing.
00:37:31It's a situational awareness, it's a richness of being,
00:37:35it's a tapping into this great show that's going on all around you.
00:37:47There's that Harry.
00:37:55These very quiet environments offer tremendous opportunities for listening,
00:38:03but they're also the most fragile resources we have.
00:38:09Certainly the physical beings we are, we're built to function in these places
00:38:14and to hear those distant sounds.
00:38:17If we really lose touch with our senses, with our capacity for sort of deep listening,
00:38:30I think we'll lose a large piece of who we are, certainly of the animals we once were.
00:38:37It's just like our muscles, and if it happens over time across generations,
00:38:42it may not be easily reversed.
00:38:48To lose our connection with the world through our senses,
00:38:51I think would be a terrible loss, and everyone knows this.
00:38:54I mean, the prospect of being blinded or deafened,
00:38:58I think would be terrifying to most people.
00:39:00But in fact, it may be happening in a much more subtle way already.
00:39:17The prospect of being blinded is a lot of people who live in the world through our senses and the world through our senses.
00:39:24We're in the midst of 700 million years, we're in the midst of that.
00:39:28And there is a lot of people that live in the world through our senses.
00:39:30Siamo tutti i nostri modelli.
00:40:00Un anno, un anno, un anno, un anno, un anno.
00:40:30che si sono un'occhiata di un'occhiata di un'occhiata
00:40:34che si sono un'occhiata di un'occhiata
00:41:00Il nostro corso gratuito è www.mesmerism.info
00:41:30Il nostro corso gratuito è www.mesmerism.info
00:42:00Il nostro corso gratuito è www.mesmerism.info
00:42:30Il nostro corso gratuito è www.mesmerism.info
00:42:34Il nostro corso gratuito è www.mesmerism.info
00:42:38www.mesmerism.info
00:42:40Il nostro corso gratuito è www.mesmerism.info
00:42:46Il nostro corso gratuito è www.mesmerism.info
00:42:50Il nostro corso gratuito è www.mesmerism.info
00:43:02Il nostro corso gratuito è 11 anni
00:43:04la situazione in cui viviamo è silenzio
00:43:09e che i soni che ci vediamo
00:43:13sono solo bubbeli
00:43:14sulla superficie di silenzio
00:43:16che vengono
00:43:34spazzola
00:44:04Il silenzio non esiste, il silenzio è il sonore.
00:44:30Il silenzio è diffuso il nostro cervello, il nostro cervello, il nostro cervello, il nostro cervello, il nostro cervello, il nostro rythmsismo è diffuso di un'altra storia.
00:44:49a sudden noise for example
00:44:52so anybody watching that
00:44:55probably had a little shot of cortisol
00:44:57fight flight hormone
00:44:58and that happens to us a lot in cities
00:45:01on the other hand if you imagine surf
00:45:04that would calm you down
00:45:06in fact even send you to sleep
00:45:07many people will go to sleep to surf
00:45:09so physiologically sound affects us
00:45:12that's the first way
00:45:13second is psychologically
00:45:14changes our mood, our feelings
00:45:16music does that
00:45:17so do other things like birdsong
00:45:24the third way sound affects us is cognitively
00:45:26so you can't understand two people talking at the same time
00:45:29we've got a huge storage space in our brain
00:45:31but the auditory input channel is quite limited in its bandwidth
00:45:35roughly 1.6 human conversations
00:45:38of course we have no earlets
00:45:39and therefore if we're in an office
00:45:41and we just hear somebody talking
00:45:43and they're taking away one of our 1.6
00:45:45it doesn't leave us with much bandwidth
00:45:47we'll just move away from unpleasant sound
00:45:48to our little internal voice
00:45:49when we try to write something
00:45:50or calculate something
00:45:51and the final way sound affects us is behaviourally
00:45:54we'll move away from unpleasant sound
00:45:58we'll move if we can towards pleasant sound
00:46:00here in London
00:46:03they have about 140 tube stations
00:46:05with classical music playing in them now
00:46:07because the research has shown that classical music reduces vandalism
00:46:13if you put pounding music on and you're driving
00:46:16then suddenly you'll drive faster
00:46:17that kind of behavioural change happens to us all the time
00:46:20sound is a physical phenomenon
00:46:35right?
00:46:36and when the sound hits the ear
00:46:38the ear physiologically picks up the sound
00:46:41brings it to the brain
00:46:43and the sound is identified
00:46:45when does it become noise?
00:46:49that's a different part of the brain
00:46:52that's what part of the brain says
00:47:00you know this particular sound
00:47:02is intruding on what I'm trying to do
00:47:05this is unwanted unpleasant sound
00:47:08it is official
00:47:17Arrowhead Stadium is again
00:47:19the loudest outdoor stadium in the world
00:47:21fans reached 142.2 decibels
00:47:24beating the Seattle Seahawks fans
00:47:26who previously had that record
00:47:27to put this amount of noise in perspective for you
00:47:30it is more than a jet engine
00:47:32and far more than the human pain tolerance of the ear
00:47:34which is why the Chiefs passed out
00:47:36about 36,000 ear plugs
00:47:39but that's only enough for half of all these people
00:47:41that were inside tonight
00:47:43I came to feel that
00:47:48one way of articulating the presence of noise
00:47:53is to think about sound
00:47:58that gets inside of you
00:48:00and for the time it's there
00:48:01dominates all of your perceptual apparatus
00:48:03it might be bad or it might be good
00:48:05you might be in the mood for it or not
00:48:07but it's consuming you
00:48:08it's taking over your heartbeat
00:48:10or at least taking over your attention
00:48:12but it might be good
00:48:13it might be good
00:48:14you might have to invest in it
00:48:15in the way
00:48:16we rank for it
00:48:17we rank for it
00:48:18for it
00:48:19you can also find it
00:48:20that WWUVC
00:48:21is too much
00:48:22for it
00:48:23to be the last one
00:48:24you may have to pass
00:48:25you may have to pass
00:48:26and that's all
00:48:27you may have to pass
00:48:28you may have to pass
00:48:29you may have to pass
00:48:30it
00:48:31to the other
00:48:32the other
00:48:33the other
00:48:34cars
00:48:35it's
00:48:36there
00:48:37it's
00:48:38Allora, tutti conoscono che l'educazione è molto, molto importante, ma con il treno
00:48:57passando ogni due minuti, non puoi sentire cose che possono essere molto, molto important
00:49:04quando si cresce più oltre.
00:49:09For schools, l'interno maximo che la città recommends è 35 decimali.
00:49:15È routinely over 85, con le windows closed, quando le windows sono aperte, è routinely
00:49:20in the 90's, e questa scuola non ha nessuna air-conditioning, quindi in August, September, May, June,
00:49:26queste windows devono essere aperte o è unbearabile in le classi.
00:49:53Molte persone facono decisioni nel ruolo, e questo è stato visto sempre e sempre.
00:49:59Le loro decisioni sono reattive.
00:50:09Ruolo è un grande problema, perché è costantemente sviluppo tutto ciò che facciamo, ci si circondiamo.
00:50:15Ci sono elementi tecniche, dispositivi, pumpi, alarmi, l'ambiente fisica, in combinazione
00:50:22con gli uomini che facciano errori.
00:50:25Abbiamo visto molto chiaramente l'anxietà ,
00:50:28delay in decision-making,
00:50:30errori nel ricevere informazioni,
00:50:32errori nel trasmettere informazioni,
00:50:34errori nel calcolazione delle dosazioni di medici,
00:50:39e una serie di altri problemi all'interno dell'interno,
00:50:43perché la confusione causata dall'interno dell'interno dell'interno.
00:50:47Mombai è la più singola in giro.
00:51:00Mumbai è la più loudestia del mondo, according a un statement official
00:51:15del Centro Pollution Control Board.
00:51:18Abbiamo un paese di festivali in India.
00:51:22Siamo chiamati tradizionali, ma tradizionalmente non avevamo loudspeakers.
00:51:30I could say in terms of decibel levels, but I think I should just say that if you were
00:51:41to stand right next to a jet engine for a long period of time, that's what your house
00:51:46would be like for at least three months during the festival season.
00:51:50And people can't bear it.
00:51:51People in hospital, there have been instances of people who have died due to heart attacks.
00:51:55The Supreme Court of India first took notice of noise when a 10-year-old girl was raped during
00:52:06a festival and her screams couldn't be heard because of the noise.
00:52:09If you look at what's happening today, I think we're in a kind of frenzied echo chamber.
00:52:26Visually, it's busier.
00:52:28Acoustically, it's busier and louder.
00:52:30You just want to go buy a sweater and you're bombarded with live music.
00:52:34There are decibel ratings in New York in restaurants of 90 now.
00:52:37You're screaming at somebody from a foot away to be heard.
00:52:47Technically, in those New York restaurants, all the waiters should be going around with
00:52:50hearing protectors on.
00:52:54Obviously, when you move to New York, you're moving to a loud city.
00:52:57It's the biggest, most vibrant city in the country.
00:52:59It's famously loud.
00:53:01Famously never sleeps.
00:53:02But what has seemed to happen over the years, what has changed, is noise has become more
00:53:07ubiquitous and we seem to be almost desensitized to it.
00:53:12Why should we always be stimulated or more and more stimulated so it reach a fever pitch?
00:53:29Then what happens?
00:53:30Where do you go next?
00:53:31There is a tinier and tinier space for reflective thought.
00:53:39The planes start at 6 or 3 in the morning.
00:53:41They usually stop at midnight, but sometimes they go to 2 or 3 in the morning.
00:53:46I did not sign up for this kind of noise.
00:53:53Nobody did.
00:53:56They are making these precision lanes in the sky.
00:53:59Right now, that lane is over my house.
00:54:03Five years from now, it's going to be over your house because those lanes are going to be
00:54:07multiplied tenfold, twentyfold, fiftyfold.
00:54:11Recent research, building on a foundation of really now almost 50 years of research, has
00:54:23suggested that there are more serious health effects related to noise.
00:54:27Hypertension of high blood pressure.
00:54:30And even more recently, there is a very convincing effect of particularly transport noise, road traffic
00:54:38noise, on a risk of cardiovascular disease, heart attacks, myocardial infarction, and even
00:54:44death from noise.
00:54:45Noise kills, and that's right, and this is what we have shown, that noise causes heart disease.
00:54:51People don't die from one day to another because they visit a noisy area.
00:54:56If the noise stress becomes chronic, if it's persistent over many years, all of a sudden you
00:55:03may have a heart attack due to the chronic stress.
00:55:06You don't get used to it.
00:55:09You cope with it.
00:55:11Something in your brain is having to go, I'm not listening to that.
00:55:14I'm still not listening to that.
00:55:16I'm definitely not listening to that.
00:55:18And it takes effort.
00:55:19Somewhere there's mental effort going on to screen it out.
00:55:21That's 102 decibels going out.
00:55:34That's 107 decibels keeping.
00:55:36That's 102.
00:55:52That's 103.
00:55:55Yeah.
00:55:57That's 104.
00:55:57Grazie a tutti.
00:56:27Grazie a tutti.
00:56:57Grazie a tutti.
00:57:27Grazie a tutti.
00:57:57Grazie a tutti.
00:58:27Grazie a tutti.
00:59:27Grazie a tutti.
01:00:27Grazie a tutti.
01:00:57Do you like it?
01:00:59And often people say no.
01:01:09I guess that I would argue in defence of pursuing the experience regardless
01:01:15that we have such a deficit of that kind of encounter in our lives right now.
01:01:21We have so little that is opening out onto something larger.
01:01:27We tend to have substituted human experience with technological experience.
01:01:33We think all this noise and artifice is human.
01:01:38But it's not.
01:01:40It takes us away from what is human.
01:01:45There's nothing wrong with it.
01:01:47But we tend to live via our ingenuity instead of being our own truth.
01:01:54So much in the ways that we exist, particularly our forms of digital connectivity, take us out of ourselves all the time, all the time.
01:02:06And that's a different kind of desert.
01:02:10And ultimately to me, it's a much more frightening desert.
01:02:13Because that's a desert in which our individual self is just obliterated in a circuit of constant, very, very surface level communication with others.
01:02:26The information revolution came without a manual.
01:02:31And I think we are all noticing that machines can give us pretty much everything except a sense of how to make discerning use of machines.
01:02:39And that at some level, we have to go offline to collect ourselves to begin to know how to navigate the ever more complicated and accelerating online world.
01:02:50In the 21st century, I think the need for silence is more urgent than it's ever been.
01:02:55There tends to be a big technological discussion about computers and whether they're good or they're bad.
01:03:01And I think that's sort of a silly discussion.
01:03:03But there should be a discussion about how much time you spend in the real world and how much time you withdraw.
01:03:09And I think that's going to be a very significant predictor of the earlier onset of dementia and other declines in aging than has ever happened before.
01:03:39I think that's where the first time I am.
01:03:41This is a huge problem.
01:03:43I think that's why I'm able to relax and feel your attention.
01:03:46It's not that I'm able to relax and enjoy my life.
01:03:49And that's why I'm able to relax and pray for the moment.
01:03:52I think that's why I don't have any of these things.
01:03:53I think that's why I'm able to relax and be able to relax.
01:03:58I think that's why I do not have any difficulties, and that's why I'm able to relax.
01:04:03This is what I feel is.
01:04:04Noi abbiamo meno silenzio
01:04:22e per questo diciamo che la fabbrica del ruolo è più costante e pervasiva
01:04:29Questo schifto a costante enveloppere in una band di noise che è molto molto, è quello che è davvero lo spazio
01:04:39Abbiamo construito queste città , dire noi, diesel sound, tutto ciò che è all'aroundo tutto il tempo
01:04:48L'architettura, a grande dimensione, è per la visuale impacte di cose
01:04:57So it's about the visual impact of the façade, it's about the visual impact of the big public spaces.
01:05:03It's really not about the user's experience, it's really not about perceptual comfort, it's really not about the user preference.
01:05:09You know in the UK architects train for five years and they spend one day on sound in five years.
01:05:15It's no wonder they're entirely ocular.
01:05:18You ask an architect what's he working on, he'll show you a picture.
01:05:20People speak at somewhere between 55 and 65 decibels usually, and often the heating and cooling system in a building is louder than that.
01:05:29This is absolutely not an argument for everywhere being quiet, or everywhere being the same,
01:05:34or that there's some sort of panacea magic soundscape, or that we want to manipulate citizens into a 1984 zombie state, or anything like that.
01:05:42If we all start taking on designing with sound, we will have a huge profusion of amazing sound to enjoy.
01:05:49Just like we have a huge profusion of furniture to enjoy.
01:05:53And just in the same way, I think we have a million different soundscapes that you'll be able to buy, or download, or stream.
01:05:58So Quiet Mark is the new award program from the UK's Noise Abatement Society that awards the quietest, high-performance, low-noise technology across over 35 categories of product design,
01:06:21and also solutions to unwanted noise, everything from home appliances, aeroplanes, cars, to the way we build houses with the materials.
01:06:30I think ultimately consumers want more peace and quiet, and we've reached a point where we have got so many extraordinary layers of technology around us helping us, like a technology golden age.
01:06:44But the noise of those machines have become almost too much for us to really cope with, or we don't really know what we're coping with.
01:06:51A lot of items are made these days without an awareness of their volume.
01:07:04Put them all together, it's a cacophony, it's not a symphony.
01:07:10It's a cacophony, it's not a symphony.
01:07:31We made this car the smallest mobile anechoic chamber.
01:07:36We put a lot of effort in modifying the materials which are used in the car to get a very quiet and relaxing atmosphere in the car.
01:07:49It's not only the design outside the appliances, it's not only the user interface, it's the whole package.
01:08:08And sound is very, very important these days for the whole package.
01:08:12It's not only the decibels we measure, but it's also the quality of the sound we measure.
01:08:19We are hoping that we can reduce our noise impact through our aircraft for the people in our neighbourhoods by 75% by 2020.
01:08:31We're hoping that's a little bit faster than the pickup of the Yuki Dun & he is the same as she comes up here.
01:08:33We need to re Higher Express Directed a little bit and to go forward.
01:08:34.
01:08:35Then we have to keep our aircraft of the car.
01:08:38We see how this other aircraft is facing to the vehicle, but we have to carry it so that we can use the aircraft on the ground.
01:08:44After doing the aircraft of the aircraft, the aircraft has been formed a lot of small aircraft in the vehicle.
01:08:49No, we can use the aircraft to the aircraft fleet as well as possible.
01:08:52We can use them for the aircraft, but we can use the aircraft to the aircraft that are big, but on the aircraft that are bigç›® by the aircraft.
01:08:57Grazie a tutti.
01:09:27Grazie a tutti.
01:09:57Grazie a tutti.
01:10:27Grazie a tutti.
01:10:57Grazie a tutti.
01:11:27Grazie a tutti.
01:12:57Grazie a tutti.
01:12:59Grazie a tutti.
01:13:01Well, that's one of the most extraordinary performances I've ever experienced here in the Barbican Hall.
01:13:20Four minutes and 33 seconds by John Cage.
01:13:50Grazie a tutti.
01:14:20Grazie a tutti.
01:14:50Grazie a tutti.
01:15:52Grazie a tutti.
01:15:54It's this process of ungrasping.
01:16:04It's the process of ungrasping.
01:16:05It's the process of opening your hand.
01:16:07It's the process of unclenching a fist.
01:16:11It's the process of ungrasping.
01:16:13It's the process of ungrasping.
01:16:15It's the process of ungrasping.
01:16:17Yeah.
01:16:18Grazie a tutti.
01:16:48Grazie a tutti.
01:17:18Grazie a tutti.
01:17:48Grazie a tutti.
01:18:18Grazie a tutti.
01:18:48Grazie a tutti.
01:19:18Grazie a tutti.
01:19:48Grazie a tutti.
01:20:18Grazie a tutti.
01:20:48Grazie a tutti.
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