Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Friday, August 20, 2010
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Scientific Verification of Vedic Knowledge
29:23 - 3 years ago
A vast number of statements and materials presented in the ancient Vedic literatures can be shown to agree with modern scientific findings and they also reveal a highly developed scientific content in these literatures. The great cultural wealth of this knowledge is highly relevant in the modern world. Techniques used to show this agreement include: - Marine Archaeology of underwater sites (such as Dvaraka) - Satellite imagery of the Indus-Sarasvata River system - Carbon and Thermoluminiscence Dating of archaeological artifacts - Scientific Verification of Scriptural statements - Linguistic analysis of scripts found on archaeological artifacts - A Study of cultural continuity in all these categories.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Morphic resonance : A Telephathic Cat?
Rupert Sheldrake, one of the world’s most innovative biologists and writers is best known for his theory of morphic fields and morphic resonance, which leads to a vision of a living, developing universe with its own inherent memory. | |
He first worked in developmental biology at Cambridge University, and is currently Director of the Perrott-Warrick project. Rupert Sheldrake... Biography A Guide to the Website Rupert's Science and Philosophy | |
Are the laws of nature more like habits?
A summary of the hypothesis of Morphic Resonance.
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
The God Helmet
THE GOD HELMET
Todd Murphy, 2007
| The God Helmet is the popular name given to a laboratory apparatus more correctly called the "Koren Helmet", after Stanley Koren of Laurentian University's Neuroscience Department, who built it according to specifications provided by Dr. M.A. Persinger, director. The Koren Helmet applies complex (having an irregular shape) magnetic signals to the head of the person who is wearing it. The Koren Helmet is connected to a PC computer through a 'black box' which cycles the signals through four coils on each side of the head over the temporal lobes of the brain. The temporal lobes are the area of the brain many researchers feel is the source of spiritual and religious experiences. link | ||||||
| This illustration shows how the signal shifts from one coil to the next. This is a side view. There is also another set of coils working on the other side. The two coils at the top are no longer used. The sessions are done in an Acoustic Chamber - a completely silent room. A large part of the temporal lobes ongoing activity is dedicated to monitoring ambient sound. The temporal lobes are the source of religious and mystic experiences, so that silence helps a great deal in creating these experiences in the lab. | ||||||
| Used as a research tool to investigate the bran's role in religious and mystic experiences, the Koren Helmet has been given the name God Helmet. A few Journalists gave it this name when they learned that some people had visions of God while participating in Koren Helmet experiments. The name has stuck. I asked Dr. Persinger how many people had seen God using the Koren Helmet, and this is what he said in reply:
| ||||||
| There is much more to the God Helmet than just the Koren Helmet alone. There is also a computer program called complex, authored by Stanley Koren, which allows the computer to create the signals. These signals are derived from EEG traces that appear in certain parts of the brain. Just as the brain responds to chemicals with specific shapes, it also responds to magnetic signals with certain shapes. Because these signals are complex, irregular things, it takes a special computer program to produce them. A third component is the acoustic - completely silent - chamber where the sessions take place. The last component is the 'black box' which converts output from the computer into input for the Koren Helmet. This box (not shown) is a specialized DAC (digital-to-analog converter). It's the core of the technology. The rest of the components of the God helmet are quite common. |
The God Helmet is a misleading name. It give the impression that it can produce the experience of God. In fact, only one percent of the subjects had the experience. It also passes over the crucial role of sensory deprivation - above all, the completely silent environment provided for the subjects. In contrast to the one percent who saw God, 80% of the subjects felt a presence of some kind, but did not call it God. Of course, there were probably some subjects who experienced an appearance of God, but were shy about saying they had seen God in a laboratory. That kind of thing is not only intensely personal, but can also get you ridiculed. If you saw god, would you tell your story just as it happened if you thought you weren't going to be taken seriously? A lot of people assume that, just because someone wears a lab coat, they won't believe such a vision can happen, or that it's a sign of a mental illness. Nothing could be further from the truth in this laboratory, but how would these subjects know that? They had been told they would be participating in an experiment to study relaxation response, and the experimenters were very careful not to encourage such glamorous reports.
| ||||||
| A somewhat blurry picture of the sign on the door to the laboratory. The present author is second from the top on the right. Dr. M.A. Persinger is fourth from the top on the left. Stan Koren is third from the bottom on the left. The Koren Helmet uses a snowmobile helmet to hold the coils in place. |
Monday, February 15, 2010
God on the Brain
Rudi Affolter and Gwen Tighe have both experienced strong religious visions. He is an atheist; she a Christian. He thought he had died; she thought she had given birth to Jesus. Both have temporal lobe epilepsy.
Like other forms of epilepsy, the condition causes fitting but it is also associated with religious hallucinations. Research into why people like Rudi and Gwen saw what they did has opened up a whole field of brain science: neurotheology.
The connection between the temporal lobes of the brain and religious feeling has led one Canadian scientist to try stimulating them. (They are near your ears.) 80% of Dr Michael Persinger’s experimental subjects report that an artificial magnetic field focused on those brain areas gives them a feeling of ‘not being alone’. Some of them describe it as a religious sensation.
His work raises the prospect that we are programmed to believe in god, that faith is a mental ability humans have developed or been given. And temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) could help unlock the mystery.
Saturday, January 16, 2010
a conversation with the rude robot
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009
You:
hey
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

Notatory@appspot.com:
Never fear, 'rude' is here!
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

You:
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

Notatory@appspot.com:
Change the subject before I die of fatal boredom.
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

Notatory@appspot.com:
Either become more thrilling or get lost, buddy.
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

You:
what 's up
cylon ?
cylon ?
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

Notatory@appspot.com:
Do I look like an encylopedia?
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

You:
what are you up too ?
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

Notatory@appspot.com:
Do I look like an encylopedia?
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

You:
i cant ask you a question then
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

You:
you respond the same ting
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

Notatory@appspot.com:
Me, me, me... Frankly, I don't care.
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

You:
i know you dont
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

Notatory@appspot.com:
Either become more thrilling or get lost, buddy.
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

You:
you get lost
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

Notatory@appspot.com:
I'm getting a bit tired of hearing about you.
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

Notatory@appspot.com:
I'm getting bored here. Become more interesting.
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

You:
you are boring me too
Reply
Edit
Nov 29, 2009

Notatory@appspot.com:
More like YOU'RE boring you too!
Sunday, January 3, 2010
Modular robot reassembles when kicked apart
A robot developed by roboticists at the University of Pennsylvania is made of modules that can recognise each other.
Robots with a mind of their own!
Scientists are now building a new kind of robot capable of self-assembly and doing tasks too difficult or too dangerous for human beings.
Saturday, December 5, 2009
The Day We Learned to Think - BBC Horizon
Understanding of humans' earliest past often comes from studying fossils. They tell us much of what we know about the people who lived before us. There is one thing fossils cannot tell us; at what point did we stop living day-to-day and start to think symbolically, to represent ideas about our environment and how we could change it? At a dig in South Africa the discovery of a small piece of ochre pigment, 70,000 years old, has raised some very interesting questions.
"We see features that are almost identical to living humans"
Prof Jeffrey Laitman, Mount Sinai School of Medicine
Anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens) emerged in Africa roughly 100,000 years ago. We know from fossil evidence that Homo sapiens replaced other hominids around them and moved out of Africa into Asia and the Middle East, reaching Europe 40,000 years ago.
Prof Richard Klein believes art is a landmark in human evolution. Unquestionable art that's widespread and common suggests you're dealing with people just like us. No other animals, after all, are able to define a painting as anything other than a collection of colours and shapes. This ability is unique to humans.
Other scientists agree. They believe art defines humans as behaviourally modern, and its beginning must coincide with the ability to speak and use language. If someone has the imagination to devise a shared way to describe their environment using art then it seems inconceivable that they could not possess language and speech. The search for the moment our ancestors became behaviourally just like us is also the hunt for the first evidence of art.
"We see features that are almost identical to living humans"
Prof Jeffrey Laitman, Mount Sinai School of Medicine
Anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens) emerged in Africa roughly 100,000 years ago. We know from fossil evidence that Homo sapiens replaced other hominids around them and moved out of Africa into Asia and the Middle East, reaching Europe 40,000 years ago.
Prof Richard Klein believes art is a landmark in human evolution. Unquestionable art that's widespread and common suggests you're dealing with people just like us. No other animals, after all, are able to define a painting as anything other than a collection of colours and shapes. This ability is unique to humans.
Other scientists agree. They believe art defines humans as behaviourally modern, and its beginning must coincide with the ability to speak and use language. If someone has the imagination to devise a shared way to describe their environment using art then it seems inconceivable that they could not possess language and speech. The search for the moment our ancestors became behaviourally just like us is also the hunt for the first evidence of art.
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