scholarly journals Nostalgia of the Beginnings

2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreea Popescu

Henry David’s Thoreau book Walden recreates in a literary form the period that the author spent in the woods near Walden Pond. Being a transcendentalist influenced by Emerson’s philosophy, Thoreau reiterates the essential role that nature has in the spiritual and moral development of man. In Walden the author describes a return to a primordial age in which man lived in a state of wonder before the beauty of the universe and in a permanent communion with it. The sacredness of nature is rendered through ritual gestures that accompany man on his road to revelation. Thus, the period of time spent by Thoreau near Walden Pond acquires the qualities of an initiation during which man rediscovers his self and undergoes a spiritual awakening.

Author(s):  
Carlton M Baugh

Cosmologists regularly generate synthetic universes of galaxies using computer simulations. Such catalogues have an essential role to play in the analysis and exploitation of current and forthcoming galaxy surveys. I review the different ways in which synthetic or ‘mock’ catalogues are produced and discuss the different physical processes that the models attempt to follow, explaining why it is important to be as realistic as possible when trying to forge the Universe.


A neurotheological approach suggests an analysis of spiritual awakening experiences by combining phenomenological data with neuroscience. This paper presents a synthesis combining information on the thoughts, feelings, and experiences associated with spiritual awakening experiences and neurophysiological data, primarily from neuroimaging studies, to help assess which brain structures might be associated with these experiences. Brain structures involved with emotions correlate with emotional responses while areas of the brain associated with the sense of self appear to correlate with the key feature of these experiences in which an individual loses the sense of self and feels intimately connected with God, universal consciousness, or the universe. This paper also seeks to address the assumption whether awakened states as described in popular spirituality are similar or different compared to spiritual enlightenment as described in Eastern spiritual traditions. Thus, the implications of such a neurotheological analysis are also considered.


Genome ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Delong Feng ◽  
Zhaoqiang Li ◽  
Litao Qin ◽  
Bingtao Hao

T cells recognize the universe of foreign antigens with a diverse repertoire of T cell receptors generated by V (D)J recombination. Special AT-rich binding protein 1 (Satb1) is a chromatin organizer that plays an essential role in T cell development. The previous study showed that Satb1 regulates the re-induction of recombinase Rag1 and Rag2 in CD4+CD8+ thymocytes, affecting the secondary rearrangement of the Tcra gene. Here, we detected the repertoires of four TCR genes, Tcrd, Tcrg, Tcrb, and Tcra in the adult thymus, and explored the role of the Satb1 in shaping the TCR repertoires. We observed a strong bias in the V and J gene usages of the Tcrd and Tcrg repertoires in WT and Satb1-deleted thymocytes. Satb1 deletion had few effects on the V(D)J rearrangement and repertoire of the Tcrg, Tcrd, and Tcrb genes. The Tcra repertoire was severely impaired in Satb1-deleted thymocytes, while the primary rearrangement was relatively normal. We also found the CDR3 length of TCRα chain was significantly longer in Satb1-deleted thymocytes, which can be explained by the strong bias of the proximal Jα usage. Our results showed that Satb1 plays an essential role in shaping TCR repertoires in αβ T cells.


Author(s):  
Carolina Ponce Hernández

Eberhard the German’s Laborintus is one of the artes poetriae that has been influenced by Geoffrey de Vinsauf’s Poetria nova. In line with Greoffrey de Vinsauf’s teaching on prosopopoeia, i.e. one of the most important figures that an author must use, in the first 252 lines of his Laborintus Eberhard the German introduces at least four discourses in which Nature, Fate/Fortune, Philosophy and Grammar expose and argue their importance in man’s life. The analysis of both the reasons and actions and the form in which they are exposed (elocution) contains the author’s vision of the universe and opposes positive and negative things (res), which are represented by rhetorical elements such as docere, commovere and persuadere. Such elements can define the essential role the knowledge of grammar, rhetoric and philosophy plays in the education and salvation of men.


2021 ◽  
Vol 103 (2) ◽  
pp. 208-219
Author(s):  
Margaret Bullitt-Jonas

Many preachers avoid delivering sermons about the climate crisis. Bullitt-Jonas reflects on the power of sermons to awaken moral courage, arguing that strong sermons on climate change create the conditions for spiritual awakening and prophetic action. She considers six ideas for preachers, starting with how to frame the climate emergency in terms of Christian theology. She reflects on how to approach the lectionary; how to be adequately informed about climate science; how to connect climate change with other issues, such as coronavirus and racial and economic justice; why and how to infuse sermons with the empowering love of God; and individual and collective actions to encourage. Preachers play an essential role in helping Christians understand the climate crisis as a religious and moral issue and in creating a social “tipping point” that propels rapid change. The article includes resources for “best practices” in climate preaching and communication.


2012 ◽  
Vol 21 (26) ◽  
pp. 59-70
Author(s):  
Maxim Shadurski

Utopian thought, conventionally seeking to harmonize the world, witnessed an essential revision in the 20th century. This period of grand political and social upheavals, world wars, an arms race, scientific and technological progress, ecological concerns, and globalization radically undermined mankind’s faith in the humanistic potential of utopian projects. However, in Aldous Huxley’s writings, the intention to summon up a utopian experiment superseded any agonies of doubt about programmes of social reconstruction. Huxley turned to utopia when mass distrust in the constructive impulse of the genre had become notable in the socio-cultural climate. In Huxley’s last novel, Island (1962), “the poetry of silence” can be seen to render an optimistic response to the unholy state of the world.This article examines the novel’s lyrical interspersions, which arguably create a specific concept of silence through a series of thematic explorations comprising the ideas of noiselessness, speechlessness, and peace. The idea of noiselessness endorses a form of overcoming the world’s invincible cacophony. This kind of omnipotent dissonance can be diminished only by a supernatural power which integrates man’s disparate relationships with the universe. Like Nature for Wordsworth, Huxley’s image of the noiseless movement of the world unveils an image of unity to those who bring with them “a heart that watches and receives.” The idea of speechlessness surfaces in the lyrical fragments of the novel that touch upon intuition. Intuitive discoveries lie at the heart of a religion unfettered from dogma, and allow access to the perennial wisdom which becomes “suddenly visible” through the act of elevation to the summit of the universe. The idea of peace is placed outside the conventional frame of existential discrepancies. For this reason, the image of Shiva is meant to transcend the opposition of life and death. As long as Shiva dances simultaneously in all the planes of reality, the Palanese can learn from him how to exist in non-attachment. The acceptance of the world’s entropic progression checked by the poetry of silence leads the protagonist to a spiritual awakening and stirs his empathy for the utopian order realized in Pala.The poetry of silence embraces the beauty of the world which comes into existence from what Huxley calls a “pregnant emptiness.” The mystery of this creation cannot be subjected to any scientific, philosophical, or even theological systems of reference. One may only sense this mystery without reasoning. Wisdom converges with the skyin emptiness, dubbed “the womb of love,” and creates a universe from the poetry of silence. In Island, utopian thought, traditionally focusing on the regular patterns of a perfect society and state, attains a mystical profile promoted by the poetry of silence.


2000 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-71
Author(s):  
Ronald Mann

This article considers the dynamic that may arise between two individuals when one of them has "unconscious shadow material" surfacing during the process of spiritual growth—a phenomenon that can occur between Yoga student or client and Yoga teacher or therapist. Individuals may experience spiritual awakening in a variety of ways. Historically it has been reported that an individual, like Gautama the Buddha, can sit alone and obtain full realization. Or one can be walking down the "road to Damascus"and be struck by the power of God and realize his or her oneness with the universe.


1994 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 339-342
Author(s):  
V. N. Dermendjiev ◽  
Z. Mouradian ◽  
J.- L. Leroy ◽  
P. Duchlev

AbstractThe relation between episodically observed in the solar corona faint Hαemission structures and the long lived prominences was studied. Particular consideration was given for cases in which the corresponding prominences had undergone DB process. An MHD interpretation of the phenomenon “emissions froides” (cool emission) is proposed in which an essential role plays the prominence supporting magnetic field.


Author(s):  
N. Seki ◽  
Y. Toyama ◽  
T. Nagano

It is believed that i ntramembra.nous sterols play an essential role in membrane stability and permeability. To investigate the distribution changes of sterols in sperm membrane during epididymal maturation and capacitation, filipin has been used as a cytochemical probe for the detection for membrane sterols. Using this technique in combination with freeze fracturing, we examined the boar spermatozoa under various physiological conditions.The spermatozoa were collected from: 1) caput, corpus and cauda epididymides, 2) sperm rich fraction of ejaculates, and 3)the uterus 2hr after natural coition. They were fixed with 2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.05M cacodylate buffer (pH 7.4), and treated with the filipin solution (final concentration : 0.02.0.05%) for 24hr at 4°C with constant agitation. After the filipin treatment, replicas were made by conventional freeze-fracture technique. The density of filipin-sterol complexes (FSCs) was determined in the E face of the plasma membrane of head regions.


2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A126-A126
Author(s):  
F TAKESHIMA ◽  
T SHIBATA ◽  
F CHEN ◽  
C LIU ◽  
D NGUYEN ◽  
...  

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