Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | In terms of life in the universe, I'm an optimist, because I think there is life on other planets in our solar system, not to mention the other solar systems in other galaxies in our universe. I think life is very successful, and that if there's any possible way to exist in a climate, you will find life there.
I do support caution when it comes to possible cross-contamination between Earth and Mars, but let's realize it is this cross-contamination that is most likely responsible for seeding life on Earth, Mars, and other planets in other solar systems. Comets carry the seeds of microbial life. | Herbert Ross, DC with Keri Brenner, L.Ac. See book keywords and concepts | Feng Shui for Fostering Sleep
The term feng shui, which literally means "wind and water," is drawn from the ancient Chinese philosophy of Taoism, which linked energies of the solar system and earth with human habitation and activities. Feng shui embodies ideals for placement of objects and structures in inhabited environments. It can also be used to document the flow or impedance of basic life force energy, or qi, through environments, homes and other structures, and rooms and their benefits or disadvantages for inhabitants. | Alex Vilenkin See book keywords and concepts | For observers to exist, it would be enough to turn chaos into order on the scale of the solar system. This would have a much higher probability than a fluctuation on the scale of billions of light-years that would be needed to account for the observed universe.
Another problem, having an even longer pedigree, arises if one assumes that the universe is infinite and that stars (or galaxies) are distributed more or less uniformly throughout the infinite space. If this were the case, then no matter where you looked in the sky, your line of sight would eventually hit upon a star. | | Not only is the Earth not the center of the solar system, but the Sun itself is an unremarkable star at the outskirts of a rather typical galaxy. And yet, we could still hold on to the idea that there was something distinctly special about our Earth—that it was the only planet with this particular set of life forms, and that our human civilization, with its art, culture, and history, was unique in the entire universe. One might think that that alone was reason enough to treasure our little planet like a precious work of art.
Now, we have been robbed of this last claim to uniqueness. | | This effect can be used to test yet another prediction of inflation: we should be bathing in gravitational waves with a very wide spectrum of lengths, ranging from less than the size of the solar system up to the largest observable scales.3 The amplitude of the waves is determined by the energy of the false vacuum that drives inflation: the higher the vacuum energy, the larger the waves. Thus, if Clover detects gravitational waves, we should be able to deduce the energy of the false vacuum that drove the inflationary expansion. | Joseph Campbell See book keywords and concepts | | The goddess is red with the fire of life; the earth, the solar system, the galaxies of far-extending space, all swell within her womb. For she is the world creatrix, ever mother, ever virgin. She encompasses the encompassing, nourishes the nourishing, and is the life of everything that lives.
She is also the death of everything that dies. The whole round of existence is accomplished within her sway, from birth, through adolescence, maturity, and senescence, to the grave. She is the womb and the tomb: the sow that eats her farrow. | Peter h. Fraser and Harry Massey See book keywords and concepts | For all practical purposes, the number of possible targets was nearly infinite, because the target could be anything: a planet in the solar system, a person, an exotic new technology, a secret document, a building, or a location. Setting up an intention seemed to connect a remote viewer to an energy web in the universe over which information could be imparted. However, Harry reasoned, "intention seems to be more of a link to information; it doesn't tell us much about how the information is transferred or captured. | Mehmet C. Oz., M.D. and Michael F. Roizen, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | But you'd really have to be living in the dark not to know the value of the largest object in our solar system. It helps us see. It helps plants grow. It makes a mighty fine name for newspapers, yoga positions, and basketball teams from Phoenix. And it can also help you prevent cancer and osteoporosis.
Yet we also know that that bright little bugger can be a real sun of a gun.
Stare into it, and you'll be blinded by the light (just try to get that song out of your head now). Or bathe in it, and you'll be lobstered in no time at all. | Brigitte Mars, A.H.G. See book keywords and concepts | It is the heart of the solar system and also governs the physical heart of the human body, as well as the spinal column and eyes. The Sun governs herbs that have large golden or yellow blossoms with radiating petals that may turn toward the sun. These herbs often affect the heart and are hot and drying.
Moon
The Moon corresponds to cool, moist, and feminine energy. In plants, this energy is reflected in juice, soft leaves with a mild flavor; a preference for growing in or near water; and whitish or pale yellow flowers and fruits. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | Of course, you'll need lights, but I do recall there's a large thermonuclear-powered lighting device located somewhere in our solar system that provides light for free. | Lynne Mctaggart See book keywords and concepts | At the moment, travelling to the nearest star outside our solar system would require a rocket as large as the sun to carry the necessary fuel.
But there was also a larger implication of a vast underlying sea of energy. The existence of the Zero Point Field implied that all matter in the universe was interconnected by waves, which are spread out through time and space and can carry on to infinity, tying one part of the universe to every other part. | | In the solar system, gravity accounts for the stable orbit. But in the atomic world, any moving electron, which carries a charge, wouldn't be stable like an orbiting planet, but would eventually radiate away, or exhaust, its energy and then spiral into the nucleus, causing the entire atomic structure of the object to collapse.
Danish physicist Niels Bohr, another of the founding fathers of quantum theory, sorted the problem by declaring that he wouldn't allow it.1? | | From this perspective, as the earth traded places in and out of view with the rest of the solar system, sky didn't exist only above the astronauts, as we ordinarily view it, but as an all-encompassing entity that cradled the earth from all sides.
It was then, while staring out of the window, that Ed experienced the strangest feeling he would ever have: a feeling of connectedness, as if all the planets and all the people of all time were attached by some invisible web. He could hardly breathe from the majesty of the moment. | Sophie D. Coe and Michael D. Coe See book keywords and concepts | This technique, used by the pre-Conquest Mesoamericans persisted for centuries in Europe. the solar system, while William Harvey began the demolition of Galenic medicine by discovering the circulation of the blood.
Such was the context in which English men and women first took up the three great alkaloid-bearing drinks: tea, coffee, and chocolate. Although these drinks originated in three different continents—Asia, Africa, and America respectively—and came to England by different routes, they arrived virtually simultaneously (coffee being the earliest by only a few years).
„. , . . | Dawson Church See book keywords and concepts | Strings are also very small; if the image of an atom illustrated at the start of this section was magnified to the size of our solar system, a string would be the size of a tree.
The eleventh dimension is the dimension that may contain within it, in the words of one BBC reporter: "any number of parallel universes. Physicists say that this dimension may be only a millimeter away from us yet we have no awareness of its existence."17 This is because the other universes are vibrating out of phase with ours, at a frequency that we cannot perceive. | Gregg Braden See book keywords and concepts | When Copernicus's book De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium was finally published after his death in 1543, everyone from the leaders of the Roman Catholic Church down to the average person on the street had to adjust their way of thinking to make room for a sun-centered solar system (even that term is part of the change that took place). Like Michael Hedges, all Copernicus did was share his knowledge.
The key in both of these instances is that the belief regarding an established way of seeing things was changed, seemingly overnight. | | In 1983, Pioneer 10 became the first artificial object from Earth to pass Pluto and leave our solar system. It was last heard from on January 22, 2003, when the sensors of the Deep Space Network picked up the final faint signal as the tiny craft hurtled deep into interstellar space. Although its power source has weakened over the last 35 years, scientists believe that Pioneer 10 is still intact and on course, heading toward the star Aldebaran, where it should arrive in about two million years. | | Just as the axiom "As above, so below; as below, so above" describes how the orbits of an electron can help us understand those of a solar system, Zuse's analogy offers a powerful metaphor that may go a long way toward doing the same thing for reality itself. It is simple. It is elegant. Perhaps most important, it works.
In a 1996 paper titled "A Computer Scientist's View of Life, the Universe, and Everything," Jiirgen Schmidhuber of Dalle Molle Institute for Artificial Intelligence elaborated on Zuse's ideas. | | Having done so, they will then fly them to a new home in another solar system that looks, feels, and works just like their soon-to-be-destroyed planet. When the people wake up from their sleep, they'll never know what's happened. They won't know that they're hurtling through space at a gazillion miles per hour in the virtual reality of a simulated world. And if they should suspect that anything has happened, it will just seem like a dream. To them, everything will appear to be business as usual. They'll soon find themselves in a safe, familiar world and never know any differently. | | What makes this event so significant is that it's happening in a solar system with an Earth-like planet that supports human life—people who are certain to be destroyed within a few short hours by the exploding sun.
The problem comes from the desire of the Enterprise's crew to save the humans, which opposes their prime directive to avoid disturbing the development of any less-advanced civilizations at all costs. | | The bottom image on the right is a graphic depiction of our solar system, and at top is a mechanical model of the atom. Both sets of images illustrate how self-similar, repeating patterns can be used to describe the universe from the very small to the very large, differing only in scale.
If the universe is the output of an unimaginably long-running computer program, then the computer must be producing the fractal patterns that we see as nature. For the first time, this new mathematics removes the stumbling block of how such a program may be possible. | Lynne McTaggart See book keywords and concepts | Any changes in our solar system (the activity of the sun, the movement of the planets, the daily oscillation of the Earth in its rotation) or geological changes on Earth (the presence of groundwater or the movement of the Earth's molten inner core) can alter the strength of the Earth's GMF on a daily basis. Storms in space transfer some of the energy of the solar wind to the Earth's magnetosphere, causing wild fluctuations of direction and speed in the particles in the Earth's magnetic field. | Alex Steffen See book keywords and concepts | Like Galileo's notion of a solar system with the sun at its center, Darwin's long argument makes sense of their subject. Ideas of origin were once, like Moby Dick, allegories. They helped to comprehend not the structure but the meaning of the universe. Some still hope to find symbolic significance in Darwinism. They will not: but his work turned the study of life into science rather than a collection of unrelated anecdotes."
Sustainable Forestry
¦¦¦¦l Wood and paper products might seem to be an environmentalist's best friends. | David Steinman See book keywords and concepts | Today, in California, where we are famous for the sun, we are going to put the positive benefits of that sun to good use," Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger said in February 2005 when he announced his political support for SB 1, the state solar power bill that offers California a great deal of energy independence. His ambitious plan has been the passage of legislation that would invest billions of dollars in tax credits and private funds to put electricity-producing solar panels on a million California rooftops. | Gary E. Schwartz and Linda G. S. Russek See book keywords and concepts | ELEVEN LEVELS OF SYSTEMIC ORGANIZATION
Level 11 Level 10 Level 9 Level 8 Level 7 Level 6 Level 5 Level 4 Level 3
Level 2 Level 1
Cells Molecules Atoms
Energy/Information
Organs
Groups Individuals
Galaxies solar system Earth
Universe
Every level includes the levels below it. Everything begins with energy and information (Level 1). Atoms (Level 2) contain energy and information (Level 1). Molecules (Level 3) contain atoms (Level 2),which contain energy and information (Level 1). | Alex Vilenkin See book keywords and concepts | A natural place to look for the origin of elements is in the interiors of stars. Stars are giant, hot, gaseous spheres held together by gravity. Our Sun consists mainly of hydrogen—the simplest element whose nucleus is made of a single proton. The temperature in the central regions of the Sun is higher than 10 million degrees, high enough for nuclear reactions to occur. A chain of reactions transforms hydrogen into helium, releasing the energy that fuels the Sun. | Win Wenger, Ph.D. and Richard Poe See book keywords and concepts | It bursts and, of course, a dragon, a black dragon in typical medieval form with wings, and it stretches its wings and it flies, and it flies out from the earth off into space and it flies out into the galaxy, into the solar system, between the planets and I'm riding on its back out into deep space....
WHAT IF IT STILL DOESN'T WORK?
By this point, most readers have put down the book at least once and attempted to Image Stream. At least 30 percent have had dismal results. Some may have become so discouraged that they've already decided, "I'm just one of those people who can't get images. | | As for the dragon's sudden departure into space, Richard notes that the creature left the solar system in a leftward direction, at an angle of about "10 o'clock," taking an imaginary course that Richard has linked since childhood with the route to Alpha Centauri, the setting of a science fiction novel he enjoyed as a boy He also associated the space scene with Einstein's Theory of Relativity and with hard science in general.
Because these were the clearest, strongest, and most obvious associations that Richard could discern, we will regard them as the key associations in his Image Stream. | Alex Steffen See book keywords and concepts | The decline of the dinos shows that we live in a dangerous solar system, but unlike the dinosaurs, we can see trouble coming and, perhaps, avert it—if we're wise enough to look, jc
¦¦1 RESOURCE
Entering Space: Creating a Spacefaring
Civilization by Robert Zubrin
(Jeremy R Tarcher/Putnam, 1999)
Entering Space is engineer-visionary Robert Zubrin's manifesto for a new age of space exploration. "This is a book about creating a spacefaring civilizationthe next step in the development of human society. | David Bodanis See book keywords and concepts | This happens to human beings-the heat from our intricately churning brain cells ending up just amorphously in the air around our head-and given the entropy concept it must happen to cities, planets, the solar system, and indeed our whole universe. The sun at the center of our solar system will in time cool down, as indeed will the other suns that make up the rest of our galaxy. In time everything in the universe will even out, settle down in an undifferentiated haze at one temperature and, from that position, be unable to change, create stars or life, ever again. |
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ABOUT THE CREATOR OF NATURALPEDIA: Mike Adams, the creator of this NaturalNews Naturalpedia, is the editor of NaturalNews.com, the internet's top natural health news site, creator of the Honest Food Guide (www.HonestFoodGuide.org), a free downloadable consumer food guide based on natural health principles, author of Grocery Warning, The 7 Laws of Nutrition, Natural Health Solutions, and many other books available at www.TruthPublishing.com, creator of the earth-friendly EcoLEDs company (www.EcoLEDs.com) that manufactures energy-efficient LED lighting products, founder of Arial Software (www.ArialSoftware.com), a permission e-mail technology company, creator of the CounterThink Cartoon series (www.NaturalNews.com/index-cartoons.html) and author of over 1,500 articles, interviews, special reports and reference guides available at www.NaturalNews.com. Adams' personal philosophy and health statistics are available at www.HealthRanger.org.
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