Mind & Life Europe Podcast

“A question of wisdom”: Improvisation, ethics, and the permeability of being alive

Mar 25, 2026
Stephen Nachmanovitch, improvisational violinist and author who blends music, Zen, and systems thinking. He discusses how improvisation shapes perception and ethics. Short reflections range from relearning the violin and babies as natural improvisers to creativity as worldmaking, the limits of play, technology’s role, and how small acts and discernment tune our openness to others.
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ANECDOTE

Duets With Ernie Revealed Animal Musical Conversation

  • Stephen spent weeks improvising duets with a babysat dog named Ernie, discovering mutual pitch, timing, and conversational play.
  • He recorded pieces, called the interactions genuine two-way musical conversations, and links it to playing with birds and rainforest sounds.
ADVICE

Teach Improvisation With Baby Talk Exercises

  • Teach improvisation by recreating baby talk: get people to make noise and move with no prompts.
  • Stephen's workshops use 'baby talk' to let participants refine sounds into communicative collaborative pieces without instructions.
INSIGHT

Art Always Carries Ethical Weight

  • Ethics, aesthetics, and epistemology are inseparable in creative acts; artistic choices always carry ethical implications.
  • Stephen rejects value-neutral art/science and argues creators must face ethics amid climate and social crises.
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