Category Archives: Influences

What is Crazy Wisdom?

Crazy wisdom is a term used in some Eastern spiritual traditions to describe a type of spiritual realization that is characterized by unconventional and seemingly irrational behavior. It is believed that individuals who have attained crazy wisdom have achieved a deep understanding of the true nature of reality and have broken through the limitations of the ego and the intellect.

Crazy Wisdom by Chögyam Trungpa

In some traditions, crazy wisdom is associated with enlightened masters or spiritual teachers who exhibit unconventional or seemingly bizarre behavior as a way of challenging their students’ preconceptions and helping them to see beyond their ordinary ways of thinking. This behavior may include acts of defiance, irreverence, or even apparent insanity, and is believed to be a way of pointing students toward a deeper understanding of reality.

Examples of modern crazy wisdom might include:

    • Using humor or absurdity to challenge traditional beliefs or perspectives
    • Using seemingly irrational or counterintuitive methods to achieve goals or solve problems
    • Embracing paradoxes or contradictions as a means of transcending dualistic thinking
    • Using shock or surprise to disrupt habitual patterns of thought or behavior
    • Using playfulness or irreverence to subvert conventional wisdom or authority

    It is important to note that the concept of crazy wisdom is often controversial and subject to interpretation, and what might be seen as crazy wisdom by some people may be seen as foolish or inappropriate by others.

    While the concept of crazy wisdom is often associated with Eastern spiritual traditions, it has also been adopted by some Western spiritual seekers and has influenced certain movements within contemporary spirituality.

    Is Drunken Master an example of crazy Wisdom?

    Drunken kung fu does really exist – moves using lurching movements and falling have been incorporated into Shaolin kung fu, for instance – although it is not a style in its own right, and does not actually involve alcohol. I have always seen this film as a modern representation of the concept of crazy wisdom, which can be enjoyed by contemporary audiences.

    To see beyond ordinary ways of thinking

    Drunken Master is a 1978 Hong Kong martial arts comedy film directed by Yuen Woo-ping, starring Jackie Chan, Yuen Siu-tien, and Hwang Jang-lee. The film was a breakthrough for Chan, and it helped to establish him as a leading actor in the Hong Kong film industry.

    In the film, Chan plays a character named Wong Fei-hung, who is a talented martial artist and the son of a famous doctor. Wong is trained in the “Drunken Fist” style of kung fu, which involves pretending to be drunk in order to throw off an opponent’s balance and timing. Wong is initially reluctant to use his skills, but he is eventually forced to defend himself and his family against a group of villains who are trying to steal a valuable treasure.

    What examples can you share? Please leave in comments below.

    My Father the Astronomer – Peter S. Conti

    Peter Selby Conti, PhD

    September 5, 1934 – June 21, 2021

    Peter Selby Conti departed during summer solstice from injuries sustained in an auto accident in his hometown, Longmont, Colorado.


    Conti studied the spectra, mass loss and evolution of the large variety of massive stars, in particular O-type and Wolf Rayet stars. This led to the famous “Conti-scenario” that describes the evolutionary connections between the different types of massive stars. He also discovered a new class of galaxies, so-called “Wolf-Rayet galaxies” which are interacting galaxies with a recent short-duration starbursts.

    When I look at your heavens, the work of your fingers,
        the moon and the stars that you have established;
    what are human beings that you are mindful of them,
        mortals that you care for them?
    Yet you have made them a little lower than God,
        and crowned them with glory and honour.
    
    Psalm 8

    Peter Selby Conti was born on September 5, 1934, in White Plains, New York to Marie and Attilio Conti. He was an only child but enjoyed the company of many cousins and other relatives in the extended families of his parents. His mother was an elementary school teacher and his father was a career businessman.

    1943 – Mayfair Acres, Valhalla, NY – Peter S. Conti (left) & Allan Newcomb

    Early Life

    As a young boy Peter was an avid reader of science-fiction. The stories fueled his imagination, allowing him to travel beyond his surroundings and the world. His interest in astronomy increased when he received from his aunt Jean – sister of his mother and herself interested in astronomy – a small telescope for his 10th birthday.

    SEEING FIRST LIGHT was a living tribute in 2002 to my father.  For me, there was something special about having a father whose job it is to study the heavens.  His love of work made a big impact on my own career,  not just the stars of Hollywood but the stars of mystical knowledge. 

    Peter attended Briarcliff High School where he was a member of the chorus and starred in a play during his senior year. He enjoyed chess and invented, together with friends, an advanced 4-level chess game.  Many years later he was amused to find that “their” game had been rediscovered and was commercially marketed by a major firm.

    Peter Conti (left) is about to move in the “four-dimensional “chess game he and his opponent, Charles Anderson, seated at the right, invented and built. (1952)

    After graduation in 1952, he received a Regent’s Scholarship from the State of New York and entered the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York. Professor Robert Fleischer and a visiting professor from Harvard encouraged his interest in astronomy and Peter became president of the school’s astronomy group. In May 1956 he graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in physics.

    After receiving his bachelor degree Peter began three years of military service with the U.S. Navy. He was stationed aboard the USS Finch, a destroyer escort, first based in Seattle, Washington and then in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. He was an operations officer and attained the rank of Lieutenant Commander by the end of his service. His tour of duty had taken him from patrols near the Aleutian Islands in the north to Guam in the south.

    Ensign Peter S. Conti off Diamond Head, Honolulu, Hawaii – 1958

    During his Naval career, he narrowly escaped death while climbing the 6,300-foot Chair Peak in the Pacific Northwest’s Cascades range. While leading a roped ascent, Peter slipped while only 200 feet away from the summit. He fell 100 feet and landed in proximity to the edge of a massive drop-off.  Although injured, it would take Peter six hours of walking to meet a rescue team. He was carried on a stretcher for three hours until they reached a road to be transported to a local hospital.

    Injured mountain climber Ensign Peter Conti lies on stretches
    Injured mountain climber Ensign Peter Conti lies on stretcher in Nelem Memorial hospital North Bend after 100-foot fall Sunday near Snoqualmie pass summit. September 9, 1957

    In 1959 Peter enrolled in the graduate program for astronomy at the University of California, Berkeley where he was George Wallerstein’s first PhD student. In 1961 he married J. Carolyn Safford and in 1963 he obtained his PhD on the dissertation “The atmospheres of metallic-line stars in the Hyades star cluster”. From 1963 to 1966 he was a research fellow at Mount Wilson and Palomar Observatories (California Institute of Technology, Pasadena) where he worked with and was inspired by Jesse Greenstein.

    His talent for innovative research already showed in 1965 where he discovered a new class of sharp-lined early-A-type stars with peculiar abundances, resembling those of the metallic-line stars. This major breakthrough inspired new theoretical ideas for the origin of abundance anomalies in A-star atmospheres.

    Dr. Conti received his doctorate in astronomy from the University of California at Berkeley in September 1963.

    Through 1966, he was a research fellow at Mount Wilson and Palomar In 1966 he became staff astronomer and assistant professor at Lick Observatory of the University of California, Santa Cruz, a position he held until 1971. In Santa Cruz and later in Boulder, Peter and Carolyn hosted many dinners and gatherings of astronomers, both visiting and local, at their home.

    “The atmosphere was usually exciting; one could almost see sparks of light released as ideas and academic references sped about the room. The creative energy was amazing.”

    – Carolyn Conti

    Peter’s early research interests were metallic-line stars and peculiar A stars, and the abundances of Li and Be in stars of different types. In 1969 Wallerstein and Peter co-authored a landmark review article about these light elements in stars for Annual Reviews of Astronomy and Astrophysics.

    In 1969-1970, supported by a Fullbright fellowship, Peter was a visiting professor at Utrecht University (The Netherlands) where he worked with Anne Underhill, a specialist on the spectra and atmospheres of hot stars. His family joined him and his children attended Dutch schools. Here his interest moved from A-type stars to massive hot stars, a field in which he was to become one of the world’s foremost research leaders.

    In 1971 he began innovative research with William Alschuler on the properties of massive stars. The spectral sub-types of O-type stars were quantized through measured line strengths, rather than eye estimates. They showed that the ratio of helium line strengths could be used to determine effective temperatures of the O-types through calculations of these line strengths from model stellar atmospheres.

    In 1971 he was offered a position at the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics (JILA) and a full professorship in the Department of Astrophysical, Planetary and Atmospheric Sciences (APAS) at the University of Colorado in Boulder. He would later serve as chairman of both JILA and APAS. He formally retired as a professor at the University of Colorado in 1996 but remained actively involved in astronomy until his untimely death.

    Throughout his career, Peter proposed and led observing programs at the major ground-based observatories in Chile, Hawaii, and the US and with the Hubble Space Telescope to unravel the evolution of massive stars.

    Star Maps Here: Dr. Peter S. Conti in Hollywood, Photo by Michael M. Conti. 1991

    A Lifetime of Influence

    One of Peter’s most significant traits was his talent for identifying new research areas and problems where major advances in understanding them could be made by applying his unique observation methods.

    “The Conti Scenario”

    One of Peter’s most important traits was his remarkable talent for identifying new research areas where major advances in understanding could be made by applying clever observing techniques.

    Together with his many students, and postdocs, Peter started a number of observing programs to disentangle the evolution of O-stars and Wolf-Rayet stars. He collaborated with many international colleagues, observers as well as theorists, in studying the connection between mass loss and stellar evolution. This large group became known as “the O-star mafia” with Peter as “Godfather”. The group met every few years at conferences such as the Boulder-Munich workshops and the “IAU beach-symposia” to discuss the rapid progress in this field and make plans for follow-up observations.

    In 1975 this led to the famous “Conti scenario” for the evolution of massive stars, that describes evolutionary connections and properties of the many subtypes of O-stars and Wolf-Rayet stars with their different luminosities, temperatures and atmospheric chemical composition, and the resulting supernova types. Peter presented this scenario during a conference in Liege (Belgium) in 1975, where he was awarded the “Gold medal of the University of Liege”. In 1977 he spent half a sabbatical as guest professor at the Universities of Amsterdam and Utrecht. In 1993 on the occasion of the 350th anniversary of astronomy at Utrecht University, he was awarded an honorary doctorate degree (honorary promotor Henny Lamers) “in recognition for his important contributions to our understanding of the physics and evolution of massive stars”. In 1995-1996 he spent another 6 months in Utrecht as a “Minnaert guest professor”.

    In 1990 Peter turned his interest to “Wolf-Rayet galaxies”, which in their integrated spectra show the broad emission feature at 4686Å that is commonly attributed to HeII emission from Wolf-Rayet stars. A major observational program to study these galaxies, in collaboration with many colleagues, revealed that almost all are galaxies with recent, huge, short-duration starbursts. This work was summarized in a graduate-level textbook, From Luminous Hot Stars to Starburst Galaxies (Conti, Crowther and Leitherer, 2008 and 2012).
    ——————————–
    Peter described his work on his website (colorado.edu/aps/peter-conti) as follows:


    “My research deals with understanding the nature and evolution of massive luminous stars, those of the hottest spectral types. These are primarily O-type and Wolf-Rayet stars found in the Galactic plane and in other galaxies. In starburst galaxies, the numbers of these stars are sufficient that they may be detected collectively, even in those objects at very large redshift. I am currently emphasizing photometry and spectroscopy of luminous stars in our Galaxy in the near infra-red, at about two microns, where the absorption of the intervening Galactic dust is low.”

    Conti-fest

    Peter retired from JILA in 1996. In 2008 he was celebrated with the “Conti-fest” a 4-day workshop entitled “Hot Massive Stars, A Lifetime of Influence” at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, organized by his former graduate students Kelsey Johnson, Margaret Hanson and Phil Massey. Here many of his national and international colleagues and former students and postdocs paid tribute to the godfather of the O-star mafia.

    During his career Peter Conti served on many national and international organizations and committees, often as chairman:

    1980 – 1986: Chair of the Dept of Astrophysical, Planetary and Atmospheric Science (LASP), University of Colorado
    1983 – 1986: Chair of the Board of the Associations of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA)
    1988 – 1991: President of Commission 29 “Stellar Spectra” of the International Astronomical Union (IAU)
    1989 – 1990: Chair of the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics (JILA), University of Colorado

    Between 1971 and 2001 he supervised the work of nine PhD students and a number of postdocs at the University of Colorado, many of whom would later obtain important research positions.

    Minor Planet Conti

    Peter is represented in the sky: in 2019 the International Astronomical Union named minor planet 25961 officially “Conti”.

    As asteroids go, Minor Planet 25961 Conti is fairly average in size. The asteroid is 4.5 kilometers, about 2.79 miles, in diameter. Conti sits about 2.6 astronomical units from the sun, between Mars and Jupiter. The asteroid takes a little more than 4 years to make one trip around the sun, traveling in a pretty circular orbit.

    Since 2018, Peter has been featured as a Who’s Who on the Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement website in recognition of his outstanding contributions to science.

    A giant has fallen

    Peter’s desire for exploration continued into his retirement. He and Carolyn enjoyed many diverse travels and explorations during this time. They lived in Maui for a while and made trips to Europe and Russia to renew contacts with friends. They loved the South Pacific and the Eastern Canadian Arctic.

    Carolyn and Peter in Maui, Hawaii 2003

    Part of one summer was spent camping on the land with Inuit friends near the Arctic Circle.

    A photo collage of Inuit sculptures & Carolyn and Peter at-sea dress-up party -2002

    He will be remembered with admiration as a friendly and modest man by his students and colleagues, many of whom became good friends with his family.

    Peter S. Conti is survived by his wife Carolyn, his three grown children Michael, Karen, and Kathe, and seven grandchildren.

    Thank you to Henny J.G.L.M. Lamers and Ed P.J. van den Heuvel for writing and providing so many wonderful words and descriptions of Peter’s professional life.

    Peter’s obituary has been published by American Astronomical Society and to The International Astronomical Union.

    https://www.iau.org/administration/membership/individual/2609/

    https://baas.aas.org/pub/2021i0326/release/3

    Memorial Service

    Legacy Continues…

    “A Toast to Peter” Lunch. Left to right: Trudi, Henny, Michael, Ed, AnneMike in January 2023, Bilthoven Netherlands.