The Practice of “Controlled Dreams” in the Alchemical Tradition of Taoism

2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (10) ◽  
pp. 9-23
Author(s):  
Alexey A. Maslov

The paper focuses on the Taoist concept of “dreams”, which is considered from the point of view of the meditative practice of “realized dreams” or “controlled visions”. Famous Taoist masters Chen Tuan (10th cent.), Ma Danyang (12th cent.), Bai Yuchan (12th cent.) and many others implemented techniques of “controlled dreams” as a type of meditative alchemical practice: erasing the frontier between sleep and reality, long periods of vigil in a state of “almost sleep” lead to deactualization of the own “ego”. Deliverance from the conventions of the “dream world” leads to the beginning of the mystical transformations inside the body, and the practitioner passes through several stages: to set up breathing, calm consciousness, the beginning of the “copulation” inside the body of two agents (analogs of alchemical lead and mercury), concluding with the formation of a “miracle remedy”. With the control of the spirit-shen, overnight visions were the continuation of the Taoist self-control during the day, while due to various psychosomatic methods, dreams and reality were perceived as a single indistinguishable continuum, and various “lustful desires” were expelled from consciousness. In this regard, the popular idea of a “dream” in Taoist practice, just as a philosophical and aesthetic category, seemed to be too one-sided. The technique of “controlled dreams” did not exist in separation from the general alchemical practice and was rather an additional than the central part of it. Dreams themselves, in other words, the uncontrolled immersion of a person into the world of images and traces of consciousness, at that moment turned into his opposite – a similar, but not identical – in the colossal work of the spirit for the complete transformation into an “immortal”.

2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (S277) ◽  
pp. 224-229
Author(s):  
Christian Surace ◽  

AbstractIn 2002 the International Virtual Observatory Alliance (IVOA) has been created in order to gather efforts on data standardization and dissemination. Since then, the virtual Observatory allowed to spread validated data all over the world and to use data from everywhere from earth. From the standards definitions to development of tools, developers have set up a technical infrastructure used by astronomers to easily search for data and make science with all available products, more tools and more confidence on the quality of data. The goal of this review is to present the state of the art of the VO data, standards and tools. This review focuses on basic astronomer's questions : what kind of data are accessible, how to deal with these data and how to use them.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 4
Author(s):  
Muhammad Alhada Fuadilah Habib ◽  
Asik Putri Ayusari Ratnaningsih ◽  
Kanita Khoirun Nisa

As Michael Foucault had said that the human body is not really free; the concept of the body as well as the concept of the human sexuality in fact are ruled by and obey the great power behind them. A great narrative about the body and also the sexuality that has been agreed by societies, consciously or unconsciously has successfully dictated societies’ point of view in placing their body and sexuality. The concept of a male body that has been characterized by its perfunctory appearance, in the sense of not necessary to primp, actually is a great narrative that is considered as a true necessity. This topic is unique and interesting to study because Mister International pageant as the representation of world’s male masculinity offers the different great narrative masculinity concept that has been shackling the traditional masculinity concept of Indonesian society. This study will analyze the signs of masculinity shown in Mister International pageant as the ideal men’s quest in the world. The result of this study indicates that the ideal male masculinity constructed in Mister International pageant if viewed from the concept of traditional sexuality is a combination between the concept of femininity and the concept of masculinity that then brought out to a new terminology about the concept of masculinity called as metrosexual. The concept of masculinity constructed by this ideal men’s quest in the world, if examined by Herbert Marcuse’s point of view, actually is a concept uniformity of the world's ideal male body in one dimension. Furthermore, the great narrative behind this uniformed ideal male construction is a world’s major capitalists’ project to expand their market share, especially male cosmetics and clothes products.Keywords: Construction, Masculinity, Ideal Male Body, One-Dimensional Man.


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 533-539
Author(s):  
Vasily Sesemann

This publication presents manuscript of the famous Russian-Lithuanian philosopher Vasily Seseman (1884-1963) accompanied by a preface. The manuscript "Sport and Contemporary Culture" is the text of Seseman's manuscript collection, which is located in Vilnius University (F122-79). Manuscript is a preparatory text for the article "Time, Culture and Body" (first published in 1931 under the pen name "V. Chukhnin", and then in 1935 under his real name). In "Time, Culture and Body" Sesemann develops his ideas concerning the objectifying attitude, which leads to human's alienation towards body and time. Sesemann claims that the time is perceived as a meaningful entirety only when the time is contemplated from the point of view of work. Work is a purpose-attaining activity where subjective creativity is oriented towards an objective result in future. Working in pursuit of one's goals helps to avoid facing the emptiness of time, but at the same time it alienates the present. Work helps the subject to overcome his individual limitations and to become a part of the objective culture. By hiding behind the results of an objective activity people avoid direct contact with the time because it may appear as an interruption of meaningful relations and as a boredom. The tendency to objectify time is accompanied by the process of objectification of body. Previously, a primitive person could trust his body more than tools. In the modern culture body is gradually downgraded because tools, machinery and even separate institutions take over its functions. In this way the centre of culture is moved to the world of objects which is beyond a subject's control and body plays a merely auxiliary part. A person can overcome his alienation towards time and body only by being wakeful - here and now, by self-knowledge and self-control. Sesemann describes the self-control as the practical ability and mood, which he called "presence of mind". In this state of mind person is able to fing oneself, concentrate and mobilise all his strength to his utmost, maintain inner composure, calmness and balance of spirit.


Human Arenas ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amelia Manuti ◽  
Giuseppe Mininni ◽  
Rosa Scardigno ◽  
Ignazio Grattagliano

Abstract In line with the general aims of scientific textuality, research papers in the biomedical and psychiatric academic domains mostly attempt to demonstrate the validity of their assumptions and to contrast with the sense of uncertainty that sometimes frames their conclusions. Moving from this premise, the present paper aimed to focus on these features and to investigate if and the extent to which biomedical and psychiatric texts convey different social-epistemic rhetoric of uncertainty. In view of this, a qualitative study was conducted adopting diatextual analysis to investigate a corpus of 298 scientific articles taken from the British Medical Journal and from the British Journal of Psychiatry published in 2013. Our analytical approach led to identifying two different types of social-epistemic rhetoric. The first one was mostly oriented to “describing” the world, accounting for the body-mind nexus as conceptualized within the “medical” point of view. On the other hand, the second one was oriented to “interpreting” the world, debating the problematic and critical features of the body-mind relationship as developed within the psychiatry discursive realm.


ILUMINURAS ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (43) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vanessa Marx ◽  
Lilian Celiberti

A atuação dos movimentos sociais pode ser sentida em vários lugares do mundo intervindo nas mais diversas esferas: local, nacional ou internacional. O movimento de mulheres e a fronteira se insere neste contexto de disputas de significados, agendas e novas metodologias de diálogos e troca de experiências. Estas trocas podem dar-se a partir de uma perspectiva decolonial com agendas pautadas a partir das autonomias: do corpo, econômica, política e territoriais. A metodologia consiste no intercambio de saberes acadêmico e popular por meio da ecologia de saberes empregada a partir da Universidade Popular dos Movimentos Sociais (UPMS). Neste trabalho propomos discutir o processo da UPMS a partir do diálogo de mulheres de fronteira e para isto faremos a discussão deste processo a partir de três pontos neste artigo: 1) contextualização da geopolítica mundial e latino-americana, 2) construção de novas pedagogias e epistemologias a partir do diálogo e 3) a experiência da Universidade Popular dos Movimentos Sociais: mulheres em diálogo de fronteira.Palavras-chave: Movimentos sociais. Feminismo. Mulheres. Ecologia de saberes.Border women's dialogue in the popular university of social movements context: new methologies and agendas.AbstractThe activities of social movements have an impact in several places of the world intervening in the most diverse spheres: local, national or international. The women's movement and the border are inserted in this context of disputes of meanings, agendas and new dialogue's methodologies and exchange of experiences. These exchanges can take place from a decolonial perspective with agendas based on the autonomies: of the body, economic, political and territorial. The methodology consists of the exchange of academic and popular knowledge through the ecology of knowledges employed by the Popular University of Social Movements (UPMS). In this article, we propose to discuss the UPMS' process from the border women's dialogue point of view and for this propose we divide this article in three parts: 1) contextualization of global and Latin American geopolitics, 2) construction of new pedagogies and epistemologies through dialogue and 3) the Popular University of Social Movements’ experience: women in border’s dialogue.Key words: Social movements. Feminism. Women. Ecology of knowledge.


2020 ◽  
Vol 99 (6) ◽  
pp. 32-51
Author(s):  
L.S. Namazova-Baranova ◽  
◽  
A.A. Baranov ◽  
◽  

A year ago, the world heard about an outbreak of a new severe coronavirus infection in China, which later, after its rapid spread across the globe, WHO defined as a pandemic. Pediatricians, of course, expected the worst-case scenario and mass illness of the most vulnerable patients – children and people of older age groups with a new infectious disease. From the immunological point of view, everything is obvious – the new pathogen is most dangerous for those who have not yet formed a defense against it, or for those with weakened defense. But it quickly became clear that, unlike, for example, a flu pandemic, there is an unexpected situation when adults, including elderly and senile patients, become seriously ill and die, and children remain practically outside the spread of the infectious process. During a year of living «in a new reality», not only physicians, but all of humanity learned to respond to a new infectious challenge, empirically looking for possible therapeutic or diagnostic interventions and at the same time trying to plan and implement scientific research that would help shed light on the questions posed. For the first time, the international medical community united to perform serious clinical trials of drugs that were proposed for the treatment or prevention of COVID-19. As a result of actions of scientists and clinicians around the world, answers to some questions were obtained, however, most of the information on the impact of the new coronavirus on the human body, including children, is still unavailable to medical practitioners. The review presents latest data on the causative agent of the new coronavirus infection, its effect on the body of children and adults, describes peculiarities of immune response to the new virus, and outlines basic principles of managing such patients in real clinical practice.


Author(s):  
Colin Chamberlain

Malebranche holds that sensory experience represents the world from the body’s point of view. The chapter argues that Malebranche gives a systematic analysis of this bodily perspective in terms of the claim that the five external senses and bodily awareness represent nothing but relations to the body. The external senses represent relations between external objects and the perceiver’s body. Bodily awareness represents relations between parts of the perceiver’s body and her body as a whole, and the way she is related to her body. The senses thus represent the perceiver’s body as standing in two very different sets of relations. The external senses relate the body to a world of external objects, while bodily awareness relates this same body to the perceiver herself. The perceiver’s body, for Malebranche, is the center of the system of relations that make up her sensory world, bridging the gap between self and external objects.


1949 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-34
Author(s):  
Magnus Stevns

Grundtvig and Kingo's Hymns. By Magnus Stevns When Grundtvig began writing hymns he definitely took Thomas Kingo, the greatest Danish hymn-writer of the 17th century, as his model. From childhood Grundtvig had loved “ Kingos Salmebog” (“ Kingo’s Hymn-book” , 1699) and the living interpretation of Bible history which its hymns contained. He was therefore in dire distress when as a clergyman he was obliged to use the new so-called “ Evangelisk christelig Psalmebog” (“ Evangelical Christian Hymnbook”, 1798), a book of extremely poor quality from both the Christian and the poetic point of view. Kingo’s hymns on the Passion, describing the sufferings and death of Jesus with intense feeling, and his genuinely Lutheran hymns about the battle against the Devil, the world and our flesh which the child of God has to fight, were replaced by insipid moral verses about the Christian virtues. Lifeless abstract terminology was universally substituted for the concrete, personal phraseology of the Bible, e. g., “evil” instead of “ the Evil one” or “ the Devil” , “ the Lord God” instead of the personal “ thy Saviour”. Grundtvig wished to renew Danish hymn-writing with the support of what was best in the past; but in spite of his love for Kingo’s hymns, with their historical stamp and evangelical imagery, he found it necessary, partly to shorten most of them, and partly to alter those things in them which did not agree with his own conception of Christianity. In Grundtvig’s adaptations of Kingo’s hymns one notices how he tones down or omits Kingo’s forceful descriptions of the humiliation and mocking of Jesus; while Kingo dwells chiefly on the sufferings of Good Friday, and pictures the agony of Jesus as He drank the cup of God’s anger to the dregs, for Grundtvig the central point is the victory over death which Jesus won for us, and His rising again to life for us. In Grundtvig’s opinion, Kingo’s hymns overstress the distance between God and man; Grundtvig stresses the view that in baptism the Christian comes into fellowship with God and thereby has received grace and has shared in the Atonement. Nor can Grundtvig share Kingo’s conception of the death of the body as a release which helps the soul out of the body’s wretched “worm-bag”. In Grundtvig’s view death is the last enemy which we shall overcome with God’s help, and therefore the Christian hope attaches itself first and foremost to the risen Saviour. In his revision of Kingo Grundtvig usually preserves his intonation and many words and images, but in other respects permits himself such extensive alterations that the poet Ingemann, with good reason, was obliged to say of i t : “ However closely akin to Kingo’s your spirit may be, I find that your strongly-marked characteristics will not blend together with his sufficiently to prevent me from hearing now the voice of one, now that of the other” . All the same Grundtvig often shows himself as the remodeller with a touch of genius, who not only remodels the hymn, but makes a new creation of it (this is the case with Grundtvig’s “ I Nasareth, i trange Kaar”, “ In Nasareth, in needy state” ). In many cases Grundtvig’s relation to Kingo’s hymns is one of reaction rather than of imitation, as may be seen from a comparison between Kingo’s “ Kommer, I som vil ledsage” (“Come, ye who will accompany. . . ” ) and Grundtvig’s “Tag det sorte Kors fra Graven!” (“ Take the black cross from the grave!” . . . ). Here Grundtvig “sings against” Kingo almost line by line. In one of his best known poems, “ Jeg kender et Land” (“ I know a land” — later rewritten as the hymn “ O Kristelighed”, “ O Christian faith!”), Grundtvig uses the metre which Kingo employed in his great hymn “ Far Verden Farvel” (“ Farewell to the world” ), but for Kingo’s renunciation of the life of the world Grundtvig substitutes his positive confession of faith in God’s kingdom of love. The relation between the two hymn-writers may be summed up thus: both constantly seek for union with the Deity through an imitation which — though feebly — makes the way of man resemble that of the Deity. But for Kingo the Deity Himself, Who is God and man, is most human (and therefore capable of being imitated) before Golgotha, and most divine (far removed from man) after the Resurrection, while the opposite is the case with Grundtvig, for whom the Risen One is “ flesh in heaven, spirit on earth”. For Grundtvig it would be unreasonable to believe that man’s powers were equal to imitating the Deity, “ Christ, Who died upon the cross”, before he could imitate the man, “ Jesus, Who rose from the grave”. Kingo reaches the following conclusion: “ Only when by death I truly bid the world farewell, then only shall I be at home with God,” while Grundtvig arrives at another, namely: “ Only when God is at home in me, then only can I truly bid the world farewell.” When Kingo has first learnt to know the power of Jesus’ Passion, he will afterwards learn to know the community and fellowship of His Resurrection. But Grundtvig says, “The Lord wishes all who believe in Him to learn to know the power of His Resurrection before they feel themselves called to the community and fellowship of His sufferings.” (Cp. Philipp, ch. 3, v. 10.) Therefore it is the first task of Grundtvig’s hymns to renew the song of praise to the risen Saviour, who through the Holy Spirit is present in the Church; in Grundtvig’s hymns it is Whitsun before it is Easter. But Grundtvig (as he himself stresses) has not “ concealed the fact that Our Lord Jesus Christ in His Passion and death must stand for us both as our Saviour and as our example”. In Grundtvig’s poetic activity this gives rise to “a song of the secret chamber”, which sounds more subdued, but in purity & depth of tone excels both the festal hymns of “ Sangværket” (“The Hymn-Book” ) and Kingo’s “ trumpet songs” .


Author(s):  
K. N. Belogai ◽  
◽  
Yu. V. Borisenko ◽  
N. A. Bugrova ◽  
◽  
...  

Positive body image is a construct that has actively been formed in the last two decades. Its appearance in the psychological discourse was a kind of response to the spreading of the practice of studying the body image from the point of view of pathology in the context of clinical studies of the second half of the XX century. Currently, the world has accumulated some experience in studying a positive body image, which is especially relevant in the pandemic era. The paper analyzes contemporary foreign publications considering a positive body image published in English-language journals on developmental, clinical, and social psychology from 2001 to 2021. The research allows monitoring the transformation of the studied construct in the context of humanistic and positive psychology that considers the body image both through the concept of appearance and through such definition as body functionality. The emphasis on the functionality within the analysis of the embodiment problematics allowed shifting the focus of the psychologists’ attention from the strategies of object attitude to a body to the strategies of taking care of a body as a value. The authors highlight the key areas of studying a positive body image at the current stage of development of science: the characteristics of a structure and components of the phenomenon under the study; the search for the sociocultural, family, and individual-psychological factors influencing the formation of positive body image; the assessment of the efficiency of prevention and correction programs aimed at the promotion of healthy body image; the analysis of positive body image as a recourse of a personality in the pandemic epoch.


1972 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 445-458
Author(s):  
Paul Winand

This study concentrates on the impact of this major symbol on teenagers, as may be perceived in the religious context through free associations and impromptu stories, and in the religious context through biblical and liturgical references. The sampling was done according to three variables (sex, age, school) and hoped to reach the highest degree of homo geneity concerning life environment and curricula. For computational reasons, 400 answers were examined so as to have 200 for each series. The aim of this paper is to introduce briefly our findings, taking into consideration the two variables, sex and school. The prospections of the secular context through the analysis of free associations and impromptu stories reveal, from the point of view of sex, that boys experience the world of things as means or obstacles. Girls, on the other hand, being more sensitive to the surroundings and aesthetic overtones perceive the world as values and enter the symbolic domain more easily. As far as ' school ' is concerned, it appears that the evocation of the Fire Symbol is experienced by students according to the characteristic trends of each set up. In the religious context one sees that in general teenagers have a better knowledge of the Bible than of the Liturgy. Courage and strength being attractive, boys refer to « power theophanies » while girls stress the quality and depth of theophanies which may be termed « personal and intimate ». They know the liturgy better and are touched by the words of the liturgy, whereas the boys lose themselves in the rite itself and its materiality. As for the educational variable, the biblical and liturgical culture of state school students is characterised by a statistically broader amplitude. The pupils of the denominational network seem to be more under the influence of a primary-school-level catechesis. Comparison of the two contexts : The symbolic structure in tegrates the same harmonics in both contexts. On the contrary, the choice and polarization of the harmonics differ. The religious overdetermination smoothes out the sexual and educational differential stresses which come out in the natural context. Conclusion : In our contemporary culture, the young are alive to symbols. The Firc Symbol, in the Bible as well as in the Liturgy, has a powerful and positive impact, but its resonance is relative to various stresses in both contexts. secular or religious.


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