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How much has education really advanced us?
We have long viewed education as a positive force in our society, one leading to progress and better, more civilized lives. But is that really true? From headhunting to pornography . . . how far have we really advanced from what we think of as our ‘primitive’ selves? How are we breeding desensitization to violence in our kids?
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The Alexandrian Library
The Alexandrian Library was one of the largest and most celebrated libraries in the ancient world which held as its core the teachings of The Ageless Wisdom.
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Eat to not feel
A personal experience of what it means to eat to not feel what is really going on, and how to stop emotional eating.
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Scientific shaky ground
Mainstream published science is experiencing a crisis in credibility with a large number of high profile cases of scientific fraud recently surfacing.
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Studying a PhD with a difference makes a difference
Can there be a simple and nurturing way to study without ending up frazzled? Absolutely! The Way of The Livingness and Teachings of Serge Benhayon offer a new way – one where self-care is at the forefront, and with self-care as our foundation, even the sky is not the limit with what we can accomplish.
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Zoroaster
A great Persian teacher whose role it was to shine light on the source of our ignorance and the ‘shimmering illusions’ offered by the astral plane – the shadows that keeps us in darkness and separate from our Soul.
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Publish and perish
“Publish and perish” describes what is really happening in science. We have made it about results and money, not people and truth, and it is worth exploring how this impacts all of humanity.
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Our breath as a tool of connection
The way we breathe, affects us on all levels; physiologically, mentally, emotionally and energetically. The opportunity to develop a relationship with our breath is there with every breath, in every minute.
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Outfoxed
Leicester City just won the English Premier League. What does this really mean to a city whose inhabitants’ future is more likely to involve diabetes, dementia, or heart disease than it is a repeat victory for the Foxes. Or maybe it will involve both. Either way, have we got our priorities a little mixed up?
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Signed, sealed, delivered . . . I’m yours – what more proof do we need to know about the effects of music?
With every cell of our body affected by an unremitting soundtrack, how long are we going to accept the imposition of music as part and parcel of everyday retail, or in fact everyday life?
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Parenting as a same-sex couple
A compelling insight on how raising a child in a same-sex relationship is no different to any other family.
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The struggle we create
There is a certain man for whom struggle is part of getting ahead in life. “If you don’t have to struggle for something, it’s not worthwhile.” For others, the struggle is just an inevitable part of life. Does it need to be this way? Is it simply a choice?
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A skin rash tells its story
What if a skin rash could tell its story of what it’s like being a rash all over its host – that is, a human body? Joan Calder offers us this tantalising article and insight into how she overcame a painful skin rash and what she learnt along the way about herself.
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Play it again Sam
Reproducible science is regarded as the gold standard of reliability and high quality. This challenging article explores what reproducibility means and asks us to place science in a broader, universal context that has meaning to the whole.
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Red Shift – life in an expanding Universe
The Universe is expanding. We know this is so because of a phenomenon called red shift. What does this mean to ordinary people like you and I?
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International Women’s Day: In the pledge for parity, we’re fighting a war we cannot win
The theme of this year’s International Women’s Day is parity, and even though equal rights and opportunities are an enormous achievement for women, there is something far greater that we’ve been missing along the way.
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The Roseto Effect – A lesson on the true cause of heart disease
The Roseto Effect was a study conducted in the 1950s that has the potential to blow the lid on the true cause of heart disease. Yet the question remains, why has this study not changed the way we think about heart disease?
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Living religion: a relationship with self, love and God
I used to hate religion and now I love it. Religion for me is fundamentally about love. My religion means taking responsibility for myself, my life and my choices in the knowing that I have within me much more power than I ever realised – and knowing that it starts with my relationship with me.
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Why wait? Let’s discard out-of-date and abusive attitudes about gender now!
The battle of the sexes has become a world war. Domestic violence is currently headline news, publicly exposing the horrendous abuse kept hidden behind the closed doors of our very own homes. The media is now onto it, but are we fully addressing our part in it?
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The Universal Medicine New Year’s Message 2016
Before we get into the details and descriptions of this year’s message, and what it means, we must first and foremost understand that we live in and by an immutable order that details the fact that we cannot escape living in cycles.