

Knowing and Being | Tyson Yunkaporta
50 snips Aug 14, 2025
In a thought-provoking discussion, Tyson Yunkaporta, an Aboriginal scholar and author, dives into the interplay between Indigenous knowledge and Western scientific methods. He emphasizes the importance of learning through living and critiques how neoliberalism has shaped individualism. Tyson urges a return to community, kinship, and environmental interconnectedness, calling out the separation caused by modern narratives. He also explores the significance of dialogue across cultures, the interdependence in ecosystems, and the wisdom found in nature, advocating for a more holistic understanding of our world.
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Follow Cultural Conversation Protocols
- Respect conversational protocols: not everyone should speak in every formal governance circle.
- Listen for specialists and defer when someone has contextual knowledge tied to place and law.
Indigenous Knowledge As Rigorous Process
- Indigenous knowledge production mirrors scientific method through continuous peer review and alignment with land law.
- Tyson Yunkaporta emphasises that Indigenous epistemology is adaptive, peer-checked and not mere mythologising.
Thinking Must Match Shared Reality
- Epistemology and ontology must map together so thinking matches the shared reality of a community.
- Tyson argues that consensus reality and ways of knowing should be integrated, not divergent.