tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-69887697495750521922024-03-18T21:53:07.395-07:00Blossom of Heartunderwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.comBlogger16125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-11534351096384663352014-01-04T02:39:00.001-08:002014-01-04T02:39:10.040-08:00The Philosophy of Science<div style="text-align: center;">
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Science deals with descriptions of phenomena; it does not deal with the explanation of matters beyond. Explanation is the realm of metaphysics and is known as the “<b>philosophy of science</b>.”<br />How we explain things depends on our beliefs and world view.</blockquote>
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Science is the systematic study of the behavior of certain phenomena (that is, regularities, uniformities) in the physical universe. Scientific study is based on observation, experimentation, measurement, and the formulation of universal laws that describe these facts and phenomena in general terms and enable prediction. <br /><br />The process of describing regularities (i.e. things that happen in a particular way) is incomplete and never exhaustive because regularities are not exact and deterministic. There is actually quite a lot of approximation and simplification involved in this process. If an exact equation is desired, then these scientific laws, which are useful for prediction, must be formulated in mathematical terms; this represents the whole business of science. <br /><br />The huge popularity of science is due to its practical results, such as the previous technological examples stated previously. Science is about studying regularities in the material world and describing those regularities in order to make predictions and to make possible the technology that we use daily possible. <br /><br />It is important to stress that describing and making use of science is not about explaining, but rather using it to make sense of something; here, description is not to be confused with explanation. Therefore, science is about describing, not explaining. The moment a scientist talks about the meaning behind a law or regularity in nature and our ability to benefit from it, he is no longer talking science and he is venturing into the realm of metaphysics and the philosophy of science. Just because someone is a great scientist, it does not mean that he has a deeper insight into the meaning of the laws of the physical world and universe. <br /><br />What science seeks to explain<br />Science does not answer questions of meaning or questions of agency (like, who is doing what for what reason? What is responsible for a given regularity?) and we cannot criticize science for not dealing with these questions. They may be important questions but it’s not the responsibility of the field of science to answer these questions. For example, consider the Law of Gravity. We drop a pen and it falls. Why did it fall? Because of gravity.<br /><br />We observe that, without exception, the pen always falls when we lift it and drop it. Then we call the conjunction between performing an action and its regularity the law of gravity. This means that the law of gravity is simply the name we have given to this regularity; however, it does not mean that the pen is falling because of gravity. Gravity is the name given to the process, not an explanation for it, but in our minds both the name and the explanation for the phenomenon have become one and the same.<br /><br />The question arises: Is it logically justified to explain an experience through a causal law that is derived through the same experience? <br /><br />In the beginning, when scientists started asking these questions, it was unclear what the difference was between description and explanation. For a long time science was thought to be a venture competing with religion in providing answers for life.<br /><br />Regarding natural laws, 19th century American philosopher Charles Peirce stresses on the point that natural laws serve as a description of natural events, not as explanations of these very events: “no law of nature makes a stone fall, or a Leyden jar to discharge, or a steam engine to work.” 1<br /><br />A law of nature left to its self would be quite analogous to a court without a sheriff. A court in that predicament might probably be able to induce some citizen to act as sheriff; but until it had so provided itself with an officer who, unlike itself, could not discourse authoritatively but who could put forth the strong arm, its law might be the perfection of human reason but would remain mere fireworks. Just so, let a law of nature – say the law of gravitation – remain a mere uniformity – a mere formula establishing a relation between terms – and what in the world would induce a stone, which is not a term nor a concept but just a plain thing, to act in conformity to that uniformity? 2 <br /><br />The law of gravity is just a formula, just a name. It cannot make a stone act in accordance to it. <br /><br />It is important to note that the notion of law is closely related to issues of agency and also to the affinity of the human mind to perceive natural phenomena and the possibility of finding patterns in nature beyond science (i.e. how is it that we are so in tune to what is happening in the world that we can pick up all these regularities?). These issues announce the “greatness” of science. When it comes to the affinity of the human mind to realize recurrent patterns in the universe, Peirce says:<br /><br />. . . the mind of man is strongly adapted to the comprehension of the world; at least, so far as this goes, that certain conceptions, highly important for such a comprehension, naturally arise in the mind; and, without such a tendency, the mind could never have had any development at all. 3<br /><br />Therefore, there would be no science if one could not grasp the regularities. <br /><br />In our scientific inquiry, it is reasonable for us to be searching out these regularities and hoping that they will remain stable, but we cannot assume that we have explained how or why such regularities or laws are in effect. It may also be reasonable to say that there are regularities and we hope that these regularities and so-called universal laws will come into effect in the future so that technology can be made from predictions. There can only be hope, and not certainty, because science is based on observation and there may be some instances where the same observation may not occur.Even though science is based on exactitude, there is still a measure of hope and faith involved. <br /><br />A scientific law states a repeated observation about nature. How do we come to the conclusion that we have a scientific law? Several events occur, (not just to the researcher) that hold to certain regularities, according to a certain pattern, and a generalized statement is formed. The process of generalization from a limited number of observations to form a universal statement or law is called the process of induction, or looking at a certain number of events and saying that things are going to happen all the time. The assumption under the process of induction is that the more observations made about a particular phenomenon, the more it will reinforce the law. <br /><br />There is only one way for such an assumption to be true, and it has nothing to do with the number of observations. We assume a relationship or connection between the object and what occurs, the cause and effect. The assumption is that there is a necessary connection between the cause and the effect. One must be able to explain this connection in a logical way, not as something that depends solely on observation but something that necessitates the event. If this is unable to be done, if it is only based on observations, then induction is a problem. In formulating a scientific law, generalizations made through the method of induction are problematic. <br /><br />Because of induction, the basic application of our inductive reasoning is twofold: firstly we think we can describe what we have seen by the use of universal laws, and secondly, that we can use these established laws in predicting what we will see. There is, however, a problem with the mechanics of the inductive process. Are we justified in formulating these universal laws simply on the basis of a discrete number of past observations that have been made? <br /><br />For example, based on the scientific observation of planetary motion, we could suggest that “the sun will rise every day.” However, just because the sun has risen in the past, it does not mean that it will continue to do so either tomorrow or the next day. So the induction based on the number of occurrences of a particular phenomenon is illogical. There is no guarantee that we will ever see the sun rise again. The sense of faith we have in the scientific laws of planetary motions is based on the supposition that some kind of necessity has caused the sun to rise in the past and will therefore continue to cause the sun to rise in the future. We assume that the connection between the cause and the effect are necessarily related. To use another common example, everyone in Europe thought the statement “All swans are white” was true because every swan that they had ever seen was white. However, when travelers came back from Australia and New Zealand, they reported having seen black swans, thus providing a real life example of how induction can falter. This observation negated the previous generalizations.This brings us to the issue of causality.<br /><br />Causality is the relationship between an event (the cause) and a second event (the effect), where the second event is understood as a consequence of the first. In relation to one another, induction only has to work sometimes whereas causality always has to work. It has little to do with the number of occurrences; it has to work for each cause-effect relationship. The consequence of this model of the world is that empirical knowledge is connected to the causal relations between objects and events. According to this view, the logic of scientific discovery is inductive. In other words, it infers universal laws from particular statements. <br /><br />The logic of induction proceeds as follows: First, it conjectures that induction is valid, and then concludes that causation is true. Whereas, from the point of view of logic, it is just the other way around; induction can be justified only by proving that causation is logically valid i.e., that the relation between cause and effect is necessary. Induction is therefore logically not a justified method to attain universality. As the Australian-British philosopher of science Sir Karl Popper observes, scientific induction is “logically inadmissible,” that scientific “theories are, therefore, never empirically verifiable.”4<br /><br />Can we count on the laws of nature? It depends. We can have faith in them; we can hope that they will continue to hold in the future but there exists no logical certainty. But we cannot prove that they will remain true because we cannot observe something that will occur in the future (the dogma of the experiment).<br /><br />The British philosopher Bertrand Russell calls the dogma of induction, the “biggest scandal of philosophy.” He provides the example of a farmer and his chicken. The chicken notices that the farmer comes every day to feed it. It predicts that the farmer would continue to bring food every day. According to the principle of induction, each feeding event added justification to its prediction. Then one day the farmer came and wrung the chicken's neck. Russell's point is that induction cannot justify any conclusions!<br /><br /> Critical problems with the method of induction have been in discussion long before the more recent debates, and are often connected with the concept of causality. The same issue was also at the center of a heated debate among Muslim philosophers and theologians as early as the 12th century. This critical problem with the method of induction was also pointed out earlier by the 18th century Scottish philosopher David Hume. Hume stated that when we observe two events to be causally related, say a seed (a) resulting in the growth of a shoot or tree (b), what we in fact observe is only a contingent conjunction of two events. That is, the causation that we think we perceive is not actually “out there in the world” for us to observe. When we see two events and judge them to be causally related, it is merely through a habit of the mind, something we project onto the world. A necessary causal link, as such, is not guaranteed. Hume writes:<br /> <br />Were any object presented to us, and were we required to pronounce concerning the effect, which will result from it, without consulting past observation; after what manner, I beseech you, must the mind proceed in this operation? It must invent or imagine some event, which it ascribes to the object as its effect; and it is plain that this invention must be entirely arbitrary. The mind can never possibly find the effect in the supposed cause, by the most accurate scrutiny and examination. For the effect is totally different from the cause, and consequently can never be discovered in it.5<br /><br />This means that causal laws of nature are not true logically and there is no concrete evidence that these will continue to hold in the future. We simply cannot postulate universal laws that tell us the way the world irrefutably is and will always be unless we have some good reason to trust such generalizations. And even if we could trust such universal laws as “the sun will always rise,” it is not clear how many times we would need to see the sun rise in order to justify proposing this law. Scientific observation, although detailed and informative, has no claim to being the irrefutable truth of the matter. <br /> <br />The solution<br /><br />Sir Karl Popper offered a potential solution to this problem by thinking about the way we do science in a new light. Popper turned science on its head by claiming that we are looking at science in the wrong way. Instead of looking to science to provide us with theories that are definitive and true, Popper said that we should be looking to science to provide us with theories that we have failed to prove false for a very long time. This approach to science is referred to as “Falsificationism.” Less of a solution and more of a shortcut, it is a tool which we are allowed to use in the game of science. He describes the Falsification approach by noting that for the scientific method to be rational, it must make claims to knowledge that is logically sound. That is, science is not about making grand universal laws, but about the examination of individual observations. According to the model of falsification, science is concerned with evaluating and refining. What we commonly think of as scientific claims to knowledge, are only hypotheses that we accept till they are proved wrong. <br /><br />Fundamentally, Popper accepts that science can never provide us with complete 100% certainty, but he claims that this is not really a problem because it is not actually science’s job. The purpose of science is to provide us with a theory that is likely to be true based on the fact that we haven’t yet managed to prove it wrong. One unfortunate consequence of this, however, is that you can only ever be certain of the things that you have proved wrong. We know, for example, that the world definitely is not flat. The problem with this fact is that, although certain, it is not particularly useful to know that something is definitely false. For Popper, the best we can hope for is that a given claim is corroborated at one instance in time and if we presume otherwise, we are begging the question of the uniformity of nature: that what has always been, will (for apparently no good reason) continue to be. <br /><br />To recapitulate, science does not deal with explanation; this is the realm of metaphysics. How we explain things depends on our beliefs and world view. <br /><br />Dipnot<br /><br />1. Online Past Masters text, The Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, (University of Virginia E-text Center), 1.323. (The online texts is drawn from The Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, Vols. I-VI ed. Charles Hartshorne and Paul Weiss (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1931-1935), Vols. VII-VIII ed. Arthur W. Burks (same publisher, 1958).<br /><br />2. Ibid., 5.48.<br /><br />3. Ibid., 6. 417.<br /><br />4. Popper, Karl. (1959). The Logic of Scientific Discovery. Hutchinson & Co. (Original work published in 1935).<br /><br />5. Hume, David. (1772). An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding. Hackett Publishing Co.</div>
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Via Fountain Magazine (By Yamina Mermer & Eren Tatari)</div>
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<br />Dr. Yamina Mermer is a member of the Scriptural Reasoning Group based at the Faculty of Divinity, University of Cambridge, UK.<br /><br />Dr. Eren Tatari is Assistant Professor of Political Science, Rollins College, Florida. </div>
underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-33979986637103592682013-12-17T03:39:00.001-08:002013-12-17T03:39:16.439-08:00Religious Inspirations and Scientific Inventions<div style="text-align: justify;">
What exactly is it that inspires us, say, to write a beautiful poem or an article, or the next big idea that will change our life? There is no short answer for this question, for inspirations may come from many sources. Sometimes a dream, reading a text, a small organism in nature, or a random thought can be the source of inspiration that we have been seeking for a long time. The inspiration itself does not necessarily have to be a complex form of information. It can be the simplest piece of a large puzzle waiting to be solved.<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjY5E8DjvoY9keHHSDDsi6YP0zITu68frzlwe1bfaFActoM1JeY6imewcwjzw2TEpPS0LbRA0fbWs4eDXoQJJuGKH_AavGY5hq3a1kJggpF1BuuKL-kSzfrehvaO7ccPF4b_KbZ3qbHIsBB/s1600/forgotten-history-muslim-scientists_1.jpg" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="Religious Inspirations and Scientific Inventions" border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjY5E8DjvoY9keHHSDDsi6YP0zITu68frzlwe1bfaFActoM1JeY6imewcwjzw2TEpPS0LbRA0fbWs4eDXoQJJuGKH_AavGY5hq3a1kJggpF1BuuKL-kSzfrehvaO7ccPF4b_KbZ3qbHIsBB/s1600/forgotten-history-muslim-scientists_1.jpg" title="Religious Inspirations and Scientific Inventions" /></a>There are many examples of inspirations in history. Sometimes it comes with a dream, as it happened to famous chemist, Friedrich Kekule (1829-1896), helping him to make one of the most amazing discoveries of his time. He saw atoms in his dream whirling, dancing and reassembling themselves in a snake-like motion, and the snake snapping its own tail. This dream provided him with the inspiration to discover the benzene ring. Benzene, a colorless and highly flammable liquid, is an important industrial solvent in the production of drugs, plastics, and dyes. Kekule is not the only person who found inspiration to an important question in his dream. For example, Otto Loewi, a famous German scientist, was inspired by a dream about an experiment that became the foundation for the theory of chemical transmission of the nervous impulse and led to a Nobel Prize. Once you contemplate on a question long enough, it becomes an important part of your life. You start seeing things in a different way, and everything becomes related to that question.<br /><br />Ten years ago, a close friend of mine asked me a very interesting question. He said, "Did you ever read or witness any inspiration from Holy Scriptures, like the Qur'an, pointing to the Internet? After this question, I started to think deeply about the texts I had read, or the things I saw in my environment, and selected my readings more carefully. This helped me to capture more inspirations from my life. <br /><br />It did not take long for me to relate many verses from scriptures to the question posed by my friend. It was an easy process to go backwards from the result to the possible starting ideas (verses). The hard thing about inspiration is that both the starting point and the result are unknown. Once we know the result that we wanted to achieve, it is easy to relate many things and find similarities around us that might get us to the same point. This can be either a scientific fact or a religious belief.<br /><br />The relationship between science and religion, and inspirations from scriptures are the two most common controversial topics. Science and religion are the two strongest forces influencing humans. Some people use science to justify religious claims, while others start from religious information to reach unknown scientific points. Both approaches have many challenges, and may lead to consequences that conflict with one's belief. Scriptures can help us think outside of the box, and provide many inspirations for science. However, it is important to keep the balance between both worlds, while working hard on understanding science and building our faith on a solid ground.<br /><br />So, how did I find the verses that pointed to the idea of the Internet in the Scriptures? I started to think of the core properties that make up the Internet. What will be my first words if I wanted to define the Internet? Some of the key definitions or features of the Internet that came to my mind was "a world-wide network of computers," "connecting people to each other," "storing or accessing world of information," "removing physical boundaries," "easy and cheap communication," or "freedom of speech."<br /><br />Which feature of the Internet would sound too intricate to ever exist a thousand years ago? Probably, the possibility of storing and accessing all the information available throughout the history of mankind would be the most challenging feature. We haven't reached that point with the Internet yet, but so much ground has been covered towards this goal. Let's see how much progress is made on this road of storage and retrieval.<br /><br />Wikipedia, a free web-based multilingual encyclopedia project, has over 22 million articles (over four million in the English Wikipedia). There are roughly 40 million books in US libraries. Google is building the largest online library in the history of the world, and already scanned over 20 million books. ISI Web of Knowledge, an online scientific database, is a source for thousands of journals with millions of articles published from 1900s to present. Everything published in the last couple of centuries becoming available online from handwritten books to newspaper archives, magazines, and journals.<br /><br />Chemistry databases list information (e.g. structures, spectra, reactions, syntheses, and thermo-physical data) for tens of millions of organic and inorganic compounds known to man that are used in various industries. Biological databases provide information (e.g. gene sequences, textual descriptions, attributes and ontology classifications, citations, and tabular data) for living and even extinct organisms. <br /><br />Besides the published information, other types of data from various types of arts, music and picture libraries are becoming an important part of the Internet. More and more museums provide virtual galleries that make all paintings, sculptures and other art pieces accessible to remote users. E-government projects make personal records, health and financial data of all citizens available to related parties. More personal information is available online through personal blogs, image galleries, video sharing, and discussion forums. <br /><br />Could you make a person, fifty years or even fourteen hundred years ago, believe that one day all the information would be available in a book, a box or a device? This was my starting point to find clues about the Internet in the scriptures. This journey led to many interesting ideas and understanding of my environment. In the middle of the search, the Holy Qur'an provided an important message to summarize this journey:<br /><br />"With clear arguments and scriptures; and We have revealed to you the Reminder, that you may explain clearly to men what is sent for them, and that they may think and reflect." (Qur'an 16:44)<br /><br />As an explanation to this verse, Ibn Mas`ud, the sixth person to embrace Islam, said "[Allah] made it clear that in this Qur'an there is complete knowledge of and about everything." The Holy Qur'an contains many verses about events in the past and future, what is lawful and unlawful, and information about the religion, our life in this world, and our destiny in the afterlife. Divinely inspired Scriptures, Prophets, and laws were sent successively, in part as an assurance of the true knowledge.<br /><br />Fethullah Gülen, a Turkish Muslim scholar, lists the types of knowledge and understanding as follows; "... that is based on beholding or actively seeing something, inner (comprehensive knowledge) or outer (description and measurement), implementation of the lesser understanding (technology) or of the spiritual understanding (contemplation and worship, which yield wisdom), learning and teaching, self-based or other-based, the learner's or teacher's belief in independence of action or being, and of the believer's surrender and trust to the Creator ..." [1]. We need to learn how to "read" the universe and scriptures consciously to acquire true understanding and wisdom.<br /><br />My search for the inspiration for an idea of the Internet led me to find many verses from the Holy Qur'an. Here are some of the verses that I personally think is a starting point to inspire the idea of storing all the information known to mankind.<br /><br />"... there is not a grain in the darkness (or depths) of the earth, nor anything fresh or dry (green or withered), but is (inscribed) in a clear record (to those who can read)" (Qur'an 6:59)<br /><br />"... nor is hidden from the Lord (so much as) the weight of an atom on the earth or in heaven. And not the smallest and not the greatest of these things but are recorded in a clear record" (Qur'an 10:61)<br /><br />"... and there is nothing hidden, in heaven or earth, but is (recorded) in a clear record" (Quran 27:75)<br /><br />These verses can be interpreted in different ways. Some scholars refer these verses to the knowledge of the All-Knowing God, or a book called Lawh al-Mahfuz that stores the information on the destiny of mankind. Actually relating these verses with the Internet, and the traditional interpretations have a very interesting connection. With ever-growing capacity and capabilities, the Internet is like a small book of destiny that stores our everyday life. However, it is far from storing every single event in the universe. This helps us to realize how mighty and vast the knowledge of the God is, and the capacity of Lawh al-Mahfuz.<br /><br />When I recited the verses from Qur'an that related to the idea of the Internet, my friend was surprised. As in this example, scientific discoveries and inspirations can be connected with the verses from the Qur'an in many ways. It is important to make this connection for the greater good. Gülen says, "... Recent scientific discoveries have clarified certain Qur'anic verses. Such advances in knowledge occur successively, as the universe proceeds upon its decreed course and in the measure of understanding appointed for us. We must acknowledge and praise the efforts and achievements of researchers and scientists, but they should not lead us to ingratitude and insolence (the roots of unbelief). Rather, we should reaffirm our dependence upon the Creator for guidance both in our quest for and application of knowledge..." [1]. There is no doubt that the Qur'an drives us to deep thoughts, creativity, inspirations and great ideas.<br /><br />Our further discussion raised another important question, "What is the purpose of reading scriptures?" To know why we read scriptures is as important as reading itself. The Qur'an explains the meaning of reading and draws attention to creation [2] by saying: "Read, in the name of your Lord, Who created" [Qur'an 96:1]. The Qur'an suggests us to observe the universe and learn from its laws and processes so we do not repeat the mistakes of the previous generations, and instead, build a better future. <br /><br />Acknowledgment: This article was produced at MERGEOUS [3], an online article and project development service for authors and publishers dedicated to the advancement of technologies in the merging realm of science and religion.<br /><br />References<br />1. Gülen, Fethullah. Questions and Answers about Islam, NJ: The Light, Inc.<br />2. Gülen. Fethullah Religious Education of the Child, NJ: The Light, Inc.<br />3. Mergeous, http://www.mergeous.com</div>
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By Halil I. Demir (Via Fountain Magazine)</div>
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<br />Halil I. Demir is an internet entrepreneur and freelance writer. </div>
underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-37267323462762123252013-12-05T04:20:00.001-08:002013-12-05T04:21:45.415-08:00What AL-Quran says about Time?<div style="text-align: justify;">
All things in the universe, with their specific and suitable outfits
obtained from the spiritual world, gain an image and flow in the river
of time.</div>
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<i>The sun and the moon are by an exact calculation (of the All-Merciful) (55:5).</i><br />
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<i>He has made the night for repose, and the sun and the moon a means for reckoning (the divisions of time). (6:96)</i><br />
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<i>He
it is Who has made the sun a radiant, illuminating light, and the moon a
light reflected, and has determined for it stations, that you might
know (how to compute) the number of the years and to measure (time).
(10:5)</i><br />
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<i>The number of the months, in God's sight, is twelve, as
determined and decreed by God on the day when He created the heavens and
the earth (and set them moving in the present conditions). (9:36)</i><br />
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<i>They
ask you (O Messenger) about the new moons (because of the month of
Ramadan). Say: "They are appointed times (markers) for the people (to
determine time periods) and for the Pilgrimage." (2:189)</i></blockquote>
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The
concept of time is not mentioned directly in the Qur’an. But there are
numerous verses reporting a time period in which many words are
repeatedly used to allude to it. “Age” (karn – plural: kurun), “month”
(shahr), and “year” (sana, am, hijaj, and havlayn) are mentioned 20, 21,
and 30 times respectively [1]. Regarding the concept of time,
al-Taftazani says in his book Aqaidu’n Nasafi, “Time is used to describe
things that have a beginning. Things that have a beginning depend on
certain conditions. God is beyond all measurements and limitations” [2].<br />
<br />
Islamic
scholars divide time into two, “earthly-physical” and
“spiritual-metaphysical,” and they describe current time as
“psychological time,” “expanding time,” or “existential time.” According
to Bediuzzaman Said Nursi, time is a mysterious coordinate that is in
charge of regulating the material world and events. He describes
biologic time as activity, growth, development, and speed: “However
unmoving, constant, and static a clock outwardly appears, it is in a
state of continuous movement in essence and inwardly. Likewise the
world, which is a huge clock of the Divine Power, rolls or revolves
unceasingly in continuous change and upheaval. Its two ‘hands’ of night
and day show the passage of its seconds, and its ‘hands’ of years and
centuries show the passage of its minutes and hours respectively. Time
plunges the world into waves of decay and, leaving the past and future
to non-existence, allows existence for the present only” (Twenty-Fifth
Word, p. 455) [3].<br />
<br />
From this conclusion of Bediuzzaman, we
understand that different times are generated through perpetual flow of
the heavenly bodies in space (moon, sun, planets and stars.)
Bediuzzaman, in his evaluation of the metaphysical time, also states
that all the existence in the universe, with their specific and suitable
outfits obtained from the spiritual world, gains an image and flow in
the river of time. He points to the fact that all beings continuously
come from the future, arrive at current time for a rest, and join with
the past, therefore allowing the formation of the time river: “What we
call time, a mighty river flowing in creation, has a reality like
everything else. Its reality is like the ink and pages of the writing of
Power on the Tablet of Effacement and Reaffirmation. Only God knows the
Unseen” (Tenth Letter, p. 59) [4]. Every moment of the reality of time
is a stage of creation under the divine command of “Be, and it is”
(Qur’an 2:117). <br />
<br />
The creation of things and events in the present
cosmos is initiated in the quantum world by the union of each particle
to the existence in a chain of countless contingencies. The state before
a matter enters the visible, sensible form (macroscopic state) is
described, by Bediuzzaman, as the “sphere of contingency,” i.e. the
realm of creation, while modern science names it as the quantum world
and reality which is composed by n number of micro states in which
contingent realities overlap. <br />
<br />
The tablets (phases) that host the
characteristic contingencies of creation via the instant transition of
phases and increasing number of microstates are described as “the
Tablet of Effacement and Reaffirmation [Lawh Mahw wa Ithbat])” by
Bediuzzaman: <br />
<br />
[T]hrough the Manifest Record’s dictates (namely,
Divine Destiny’s decree and instruction), Divine Power uses particles to
create or write the chain of beings, each link of which is a sign in
the creation of things, on the metaphorical page of time (the Tablet of
Effacement and Reaffirmation). Thus particles move because of that
writing’s vibration and motion, which occurs while beings pass from the
Unseen world to the manifest (material) world, from Knowledge to Power.
The Tablet of Effacement and Reaffirmation is a slate for writing and
erasing, an ever-changing notebook of the fixed and constant Supreme
Preserved Tablet, and this latter Tablet’s notebook in the sphere of
contingencies, where all things are unceasing manifestations of life and
death, existence and ephemerality. This is the reality of time. What we
call time, a mighty river flowing in creation, has a reality like
everything else. Its reality is like the ink and pages of the writing of
Power on the Tablet of Effacement and Reaffirmation. (Tenth Letter,
Risale-i Nur Collection, pp. 58-59) [4]<br />
<br />
In the Islamic philosophy
of existence, the universe is represented as a book; the space-time
union is as the union of pen and ink. The nature of existence and
phenomena are explained with these representations. <br />
<br />
The Preserved Tablet<br />
Mentioned
several times in the Qur’an, the Preserved Tablet (Imamun Mubin) and
Manifest Record (Kitabun Mubin) (these are considered by some to refer
to the same thing), encompass the present world with all its details and
fineness, and each particle with their original and true forms that
circulate within the infinite sphere of contingency. The transmission of
registered events and particles in this book of knowledge through the
sphere of contingency to the world of particles takes place in the
Tablet of Effacement and Reaffirmation, or the quantum world that can be
likened to a scratch pad. Phase transformations – the intercrossing of
possible scenarios and overlapping representative images – here are not
the reality itself but a variable, transitional, possible micro state
reflection of it. The transition of the originals in the Supreme
Preserved Book from a state of possibility to a present form, as from
the spiritual to the material world, from unknown to the known, require
particles to transform from one state to another (tahawwulat-i zarrat).
These transitions of phases (vibrations) on the edges of the visible,
determined world (space) generate the phenomenon of time. In fact, time
follows creation in space (kawn). All of the images and the formations
that are called existence in the cosmos are determiners of space. <br />
<br />
In
other words, space is a cosmos which transforms continuously from
non-existence to existence. This way the universe becomes like a scratch
pad and always new manifestations occur in the time river that flows
through it. “Now is the time, now is the moment” is a mystical
expression of this truth, which, for Ibn Arabi, is composed of a
constant moment (an-i daim) and the true reality of time corresponds
with the moment of manifestations of Divine Names over existence [5].
According to him, with the extreme power of Divine singular oneness over
multiple beings, the earth gets terminated via the hand of
non-existence every moment, because the existence of a world means that
the non-existence of it has become a “moment.” This way, the Manifest
One (al-Zahir) imposes His manifestation first on the hidden, then the
Immanent One (al-Batin) imposes His immanence on the manifest; therefore
the world continuously get terminated and created. At this stage, the
Almighty wraps the current moment of things and events under His names
the First (al-Awwal) and the Last (al-Akhir) into the past and the
future. Later, the Manifest takes the authority, followed by the
Immanent, allowing creation renewed until the doomsday.<br />
<br />
<br />
Time,
within its own relative nature, is thus a complex manifestation of the
Divine names the First and the Last, the Manifest and the Immanent
through the vibrations and movements of particles. The measurement of
time is carried out over the movement and speed of the particles and
objects. According to Ibn Arabi again, the continual renewal of
similarities determined over time happens in such a way that as one
thing gets terminated another similar thing (fractal) begins to get
created instantaneously [5]. While, for instance, the color white
disappears in the form of continual phase transitions, another white
that is similar but not the same gets created. If an opposite black were
to be created upon termination of the white color, this would disrupt
the nature of the things. Existence and creation get renewed together,
within the mysterious flow of time and the formation of space, every
instant: “Every (moment of every) day, He is in a new manifestation
(with all His Attributes and Names as the Divine Being)” (Qur’an 55:29).
<br />
<br />
Behind the fact that images are temporary and truth is eternal,
stands the question of what the mysterious works of time and the
reality of the matter really are. Every particle being created in the
smallest frame of time, and therefore generating time and eventually
flowing in this river that it has caused bears a wisdom of a divine law
intertwined with a fine secret, a purpose that reads a universal
meaning, an integrity among the opposites, existence in non-existence,
and purpose in what seems to be without a purpose. There is no absurdity
or anything that is against wisdom emerging from these states that rise
as a result of deceptive conflict and limited willpower that seem as
transforming, deforming, and dispersing formations and visual images in
the sphere of contingencies. The expression of Imam Ghazali; “Nothing is
better than what comes out of the sphere of contingencies,” is a
beautiful declaration of the perfect wisdom and integrity of continual
creation of all things in the page of the time.<br />
<br />
<b>References</b><br />
1. Canan, Ibrahim. 2009. Islam’da Zaman Tanzimi [Time Management in Islam] Izmir: Akademi Yay. Third edition. p. 38.<br />
2. Goodman, L. A. 1997. “Time in Islam,” Asian Philosophy, 2:1, 17.<br />
3. Nursi, Bediuzzaman Said. 2010. The Words: The Reconstruction of Islamic Belief and Thought. NJ: The Light, Inc.<br />
4. Nursi, Bediuzzaman Said. 2007. The Letters: Epistles on Islamic Thought, Belief, and Life. NJ: The Light, Inc.<br />
5.
Ibn-i Arabi. The Universal Tree and the Four Birds – Treatise on
Unification (al-Ittihad al-kawni). Translated by Angela Jaffray. Anqa
Publishing in association with Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi Society.<br />
<br />
By Firat Celik (Via Fountain Magazine)</div>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04007123885785204831noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-80450993460127024002013-10-22T07:39:00.001-07:002013-10-22T07:39:26.808-07:00Horizons ~ Beyond the Immediate and the Obvious<div style="text-align: justify;">
</div>
<blockquote>
<em>No matter how fast or how far a person runs, the horizon will always
be beyond them. This being the case, the real distance and depth of the
horizon is inside a person, it is in their mind and perception…</em></blockquote>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiZX81Xf9i5Rf1ynqmIJ5LI07SAmHQo1gXGxkEp_sXLB5tzx45uJa14QFXs88fXDYxSnmUX0qp8FRDhudxEq2tbmL7JTPjkr5_xtOOX8eddqUkhmB_VdCa43GGOXARAwySDpp0MkvFp7dDH/s1600/horizon.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="Horizon" border="0" height="160" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiZX81Xf9i5Rf1ynqmIJ5LI07SAmHQo1gXGxkEp_sXLB5tzx45uJa14QFXs88fXDYxSnmUX0qp8FRDhudxEq2tbmL7JTPjkr5_xtOOX8eddqUkhmB_VdCa43GGOXARAwySDpp0MkvFp7dDH/s400/horizon.jpg" title="Prespective of Horizon" width="400" /></a></div>
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<br />
<b>A race I will always remember</b><br />
Not too long ago, when I was still a little boy, I found myself running
from my father’s village to my mother’s, and from my mother’s to another
and to another, in the hope of catching up with something that was
neither a ball, some other toy, nor a bird, but rather the point, the
line where the sky seemed to touch the earth. We call it the
“horizon.” That line, that “place,” first presented itself to me hiding
right behind the trees to the left of my father’s house. I started out
that day walking rather leisurely because the distance between me and
the horizon seemed so short. When I observed that the sky had moved, or
rather seemed to have moved further away, I hastened my steps. Then I
noticed that the sky moved further and further away. Well, being
determined to reach the place where the sky certainly touched the
ground, I kept walking faster and faster until I found myself running. <br />
<br />
I ran for quite a while until I realized that “there”, where the sky and
the earth met, was still further away, that it would take me more time
and effort than I had thought. I went back—I had to go back—to my
father’s village, back to my usual village life because I saw that
perhaps much more was involved, that maybe much more effort was called
for in order to achieve what I desired, namely, to get to the point
where I could touch the sky, where I could climb the sky. I went back
to the ordinary, the normal life and experience of the village and of my
people. But I did not tell anyone, I did not discuss the experience
with anyone, even though I did not stop and could not stop thinking
about it. I thought to myself that perhaps a week, a month, maybe a
year would suffice for me to reach the place where the sky and the earth
embraced. I was absolutely certain that right there in front of me,
over there, not too far away, the sky touched the ground. And I
thought that perhaps all I needed to do was keep walking, keep running,
and keep racing forward, without stopping, without interruptions,
without distractions in order to get to where the sky kissed the ground.<br />
<br />
Today, thirty-five years later, I have realized that I was not wrong. I
was right. The sky did touch the ground. It touches the ground all
the time. You may ask “but where and how?” The sky touches the
ground in our perception. Look across from your window into the
distance. What do you see? Or, go outside and look in the distance.
What do you see? The sky is right there, over there, touching the
ground, the road, the houses, the trees, the mountains, the sea, and
remaining there. But keep in mind that this is all happening in our
perception. In perception, things are the way they appear, the way
they seem. No rigorous, critical thinking is involved. And this
happens so many times, and in fact is happening now; it happens every
time that we are not thinking deeply, with attention and effort. It
happens every time we fail to allow other perspectives, other
possibilities and other possible interpretations to emerge. <br />
The sky touches the earth, embraces and kisses the ground, right there
in a fixed position, as long as you do not move. Once you move, it
moves. And when you run after it, it too runs, not towards you though,
but rather away from you. If you stand still, it stands still. If you
stay where you are, it remains where it is. If you move even an inch,
it will move. It will never allow you to catch up with it, to touch it;
it will never allow you to possess it, to tame it; it will never allow
you to take possession of it. And yet, it is always there, “putting
everything into perspective.” By that I mean the horizon enables us to
see, for without horizon one cannot see much of anything. Think about
it! Everything presents itself in horizon. Everything dwells in the
horizon, everything is within the confines of the horizon, and depends
more or less on this phenomenon. And if I may borrow an expression from
Saint Paul’s speech at the Areopagus (Acts 17:28) and be at liberty to
use it as I see fit in this context (just as some scholars say he
himself was at liberty to do with the same expression from the writing
of Epimenides of Knossos (6th Century B.C.)), one can say that “that in
which we live and move and have our being” is the horizon.<br />
<br />
Standing still, remaining in one fixed position is not in the nature of
the horizon. Its every stop (or what appears to be its end, its
boundary) is temporary and transitory, like a pilgrim’s stop on a
journey whose destination is still far away. It keeps moving, and it
invites us to keep moving too, keep working, keep meeting people, keep
exploring, keep digging, keep sowing, keep cultivating, keep harvesting,
keep looking, keep reading, keep writing, keep thinking, keep talking,
keep wondering. <br />
<br />
We hear, not infrequently, the expression, “on the horizon/in the
horizon.” What does it mean? It means in view, in the possible
future, in sight. That which is in or on the horizon appears close,
and seems to be approaching; it is as if it’s right there among the
things that one hopes to do soon, as something squarely within one’s
reach, among the things that one’s abilities can handle. What is in the
horizon, then, is something that appears “present” and seems quite
achievable. <br />
<br />
<b>What is a horizon? And what does it do?</b><br />
A horizon is inseparable from a living, perceiving human being who is in
the open or in the frontier of the open. There are no horizons in
closed spaces, closed places. The distance between a living human being
and the line where the sky and the earth meet is very wide. It is
infinite. It is far, far away. You can only measure it with your eyes,
your mind and your soul. You can figure out how long it is only to the
extent that your eyes, your mind and your soul can go. An application
of any other measuring device will only frustrate you because the moment
you start going after it to measure it, it will recede. But the truth
is that what you are actually seeing of the horizon is only a small part
of it. The bigger part is on the other side of the horizon. Every
horizon has at least two parts: a front and a back. The front of the
horizon consists of the part you are seeing, and its back consists of
the part hidden from you because of the hills and mountains, the earth,
the road, the trees, the sea. In fact, the line where the sky seems to
touch the earth is really only a perceived curve or a perceived point of
contact, but the horizon really goes far and farther away, without end:
it stretches into infinity.<br />
<br />
All the things we are seeing are in fact standing in the way of the
horizon. Similarly, all the things we are thinking right now, all our
thoughts and ideas, everything that is presently on our minds can be an
obstacle to a deeper and fuller understanding and appreciation of the
horizon. We have to let go of all of these things in order to begin to
have an idea of the depth and richness of the horizon.<br />
<br />
For now, let us focus on the part of the horizon that is visible to us.
It is a world, the world that we live in or would like to live in.
Normally, it consists of people, people of different religions and/or of
no religion at all, people of different languages and cultures,
different experiences, different states and walks of life, different
situations and aspirations, people driven by different desires, values
and visions, people of very deep opinions, inspirations, beliefs and
deep convictions other than our own, people heading in a thousand and
one directions. This world, this visible side of the horizon also
includes animals of many different types and habitats, which eat
different kinds of food and have different spans of life. It also
includes many different trees, bushes and flowers, and different types
of grasses, etc. Mountains and hills and valleys too, rivers and big
oceans, streams and creeks, are all part of this side of the horizon.
Small and big houses, low and high buildings, shelters and palaces, mud
houses and ghettoes are all part of this side of the horizon that we are
seeing. But we do not actually see everything that we know is out
there, that is all around us, that is over there in front of us…<br />
<br />
How do we even know that there is anything out there, that other people
are out there? A long walk, travels, meeting people, doing business
with people, education, etc. confirm that there are other people out
there, other lifestyles, other ways of thinking, other ways of doing
things, other attractions, other things that people consider as very
precious and worth dying for. We read about these things, have actually
met and seen them with our own eyes, have lived with people of
different orientations and values, have had some great opportunities to
exchange ideas with them. But neither our reading and studying nor our
investigative and explorative eyes can exhaust the visible side of the
horizon because even the visible side has its own invisible aspects and
invisible faces. Let us take for example persons, situations and
objects. <br />
<br />
From time to time, a person whom I have known for many years, not only
surprises me, but also seems to be a surprise to herself/himself
whenever s/he says something or does something I could never have
thought or imagined her or him doing. And people of this nature are not
uncommon. <br />
<br />
How about situations? They are similar. Even the most familiar
situations often have aspects that are new and different, which we can
see if and when we look with more attention and care. And the moment we
become used to these, even newer different aspects of the same
situation emerge. The same goes for things such as books, clocks,
chairs, doors, and so on. A book often presents us with information
that we did not see the first time we read it. And if you read it
again, you will again see something you missed the second time you read
it. If you wish, you can read it again and again, and you will see
something new every time. The book will never fail to make you see
something new and/or think something new.<br />
<br />
Can a chair or a door do something similar? That is, can a chair or a
door make you see something new or think something new every time you
encounter them? Let us see. A chair, unlike a book, seems to have no
generative power. It seems mute and sterile. But can a chair speak
and make us think? The answer is yes, it can speak and make us think.
No one would disagree that the chair of Pontius Pilate, the chair of a
Court Judge, the chair of Saint Peter, and so forth do have a powerful
message. Although these chairs I have cited are special, every chair
can say something to us and really make us think. For example, chairs
for children and for adults make us think different thoughts, which by
the way, make us give children appropriate chairs and to adults what is
suitable for them. If we did not think differently of these chairs,
chances are we would give adults the chairs meant for children and
vice-versa, or give the same kind of chairs to everybody, children and
adults alike, seriously compromising comfort. And some chairs would
even fall apart (that is, if children’s chairs are given to heavy people
like me to sit on). <br />
<br />
Doors too make us think. For example, the Door of No Return in Goree
Island in Dakar, Senegal, and the Door of Hope in Johannesburg, South
Africa, makes every visitor think. But again, although these specific
references are special, every door, including those that may seem
unimposing and insignificant, can really make us think. Every door has a
message. <br />
The bottom line is that even the most visible side of the horizon can
have aspects that may not be totally obvious and immediately accessible.
Therefore, the visible, that which seems completely clear can still
make us think because it often has layers, folds, dimensions, messages
that lie beneath its surface. There are always other meanings, other
messages behind the obvious. And the moment we finish harvesting one
message, the moment we finish reading one meaning, the horizon presents
us another one, and yet another, and so on and so forth. Inexhaustible
indeed, this horizon can constantly give new meaning, hope, color,
shape, style, texture, depth, taste and strength to our lives for
endless joy and delight, even under very difficult circumstances. Why?
Because the horizon has power to liberate us from the present, the
immediate, the obvious. As it draws back, so to speak, that is, when we
attempt to respond to its invitation into the open, when we dare to go
after it, go with it into the deep, when we allow ourselves to move with
it and flow with it, then it can open new doors, generate new ideas,
launch new beginnings, reveal inroads, illuminate new bridges, disclose
exits, uncover new faces, make terrains of other possibilities visible,
make cooperation and collaboration possible, make teamwork possible,
bring along other solutions, other fertile soils. With the horizon,
there are no closed doors, no human being is a finished project, no done
deal, no finished once-and-for-all discussions, no insurmountable
barriers. The horizon’s open field stretches into infinity. <br />
<br />
All of this is but an invitation to read between the lines, i.e., “to
resist simplistic interpretations that dogmatically ascribe fixed
significations to [things]” (G. Weiss, Refiguring the Ordinary, Indiana
University, Bloomington, 2008, p.58).<br />
<br />
It is about the need to go on researching other possible meanings and
interpretations of a text, to go on searching for other possible answers
to certain problems, to appreciate the expanding limits, and to devote
more time and energy to the lifelong project of exploration of self and
of the world (and of God) (see P. Okogie’s “Horizon: the birthing
world” in the Journal of Horizons of Horizons, Vol. 1, no. 1, Duquesne
University, Pittsburgh, 2012, p.10).<br />
<br />
Via Fountain Magazine (By :Rev. Dr. Pachomius Okogie )</div>
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<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Rev. Dr. Okogie is Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Bioethics, University of Saint Anselm, Rome, Italy.</div>
underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-67027368439156046582013-10-14T11:51:00.001-07:002013-10-14T11:51:36.043-07:00Potential Danger in Water?<div style="text-align: justify;">
Everything-from the size of <b>raindrops</b> to the height of trees, the speed
of wind and the food chain produced in the ocean-is controlled within a
magnificent balance. However, due to the unlimited demands of humans,
the <b>earth's ecosystem</b> is subjected to immense changes and is gradually
being destroyed. Some of the main reasons for this destruction are the
fertilizers used in agriculture which contain excessive chemicals,
insecticides, and detergents used in the home. These substances are
carried into streams, lakes, and the oceans by rainfall, wastewater, and
through irrigation, causing pollution. The deterioration in the
ecological chain caused by this pollution affects the ecosystem, and
thus the human health. Phytoplankton, the productive organisms which are
at the base of the food chain in aquatic ecosystems, are microscopic
organisms that produce organic nutrients (sugar, protein etc.) through
the process of photosynthesis. During the production stage of these
nutrients, phytoplankton absorbs the contaminative and toxic elements.
As the larger creatures (invertebrates and vertebrates such as fish)
feed on phytoplankton, they, in turn, absorb the toxins accumulated in
the phytoplankton. </div>
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<br />
The phosphate and nitrogen compounds found in the waste material that
are released into the environment go through some biological processes
and are transformed into nourishing salts for the phytoplankton. When
there is an increase in temperature, these salts may cause some of the
phytoplankton to grow and reproduce excessively. The<b> toxic materials</b>
released by some, and the use of excessive oxygen, are harmful to other
organisms. <br />
<br />
Another example of <b>pollution</b> is related with algae. When the number of
microbial plants called algae reaches one million per cubic decimeter (1
million/dm3) of water, the consumption of oxygen required in order to
mineralize, and break-down the organic materials found in the water
increases, and therefore a compound of toxins which pollute the water,
such as hydrogen sulfide (H2S), are released. This pollution can cause
the death of fish and other organisms which live in the water. As a
result of the reduction in water quality, an increase in the type of
algae called cyanobacteria occurs and the biotoxins that they produce
threatens human health. <br />
<br />
More than forty types of algae produce various toxins. Some of these
toxins damage the human liver, some attack the nervous system
(particularly the brain), some can cause allergic skin reactions, and
some can even induce cancer. The release of domestic, industrial, and
agricultural waste and the high percentage of nutrients (such as
nitrogen and phosphor compounds) into the aquatic ecosystem can cause an
excessive increase of algae in the waters. This algal bloom in fresh
water is referred to as eutrophication. In oceans, it is referred to as
red tide because the water appears to be a reddish color. Both present a
significant environmental problem.<br />
<br />
In low doses humans are exposed to these <b>toxins </b>by the consumption of
drinking water. In Brazil in 1988, almost 2000 people developed
gastroenteritis over a forty day period due to the consumption of
drinking water contaminated by these toxins, and eighty-eight of them
died. In South Australia, as early as 1878, many sheep, horses, dogs and
other animals died as a result of drinking water from Lake Alexandrina,
which was covered by scum caused by an aglal bloom called Nodularia
spumigena.<br />
<br />
Mussels, a delicacy eaten and enjoyed by many, accumulate large amounts
of toxins because they feed on phytoplankton. One study found that in
fresh water mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis) that fed on
cyanobacteria, almost 10.7 g toxins per gram of bodyweight was
accumulated. This is also the case in marine mussels. It has been
determined that these toxins in gradually increased concentrations are
passed onto organisms higher on the food chain by consumption.
Accordingly, we should always consider the potential risk factors before
consuming shellfish.<br />
<br />
<b>Biotoxins</b> are released into the water after being broken down by algae.
Thus, when an algal bloom reaches high levels, there is an increase in
the density of toxins in the water. As these toxins dissolve in the
water, purifying the contaminated water requires not only expensive, but
also advanced technology methods. Unfortunately, it is impossible to
remove this waste in many of the existing refining plants. The toxin
concentration in drinking and utility water should be reduced in regions
where drinking water is obtained from lakes by mixing it with
uncontaminated water, particularly during the spring when the algal
bloom occurs. Thus, reducing the amount of biotoxins in the water to a
level that will cause minimal harm to aquatic organisms should help to
reduce the risks to humans.<br />
<br />
Many types of waste released into the environment cause damage, which
adversely affect humans. Polluting the environment may be easy, but
purifying the environment of this pollution is a very difficult task.
Indeed, humans were not created to act irresponsibly and destroy the
universe in which they are mere guests. On the contrary, the human is a
delicate guest with sublime duties. Protecting the natural resources
provided for our needs and utilizing these resources in the most
productive manner, without disturbing the balance of nature, is a duty
of every human on earth.<br />
<br />
<br />
<b>References</b><br />
Pouria S. de Andrade A. 1988. "Fatal microcystin intoxication in haemodialysis unit in Caruaru, Brazil." Lancet 352:21-26.<br />
<br />
Carmichael W.W., Azevedo S.M.F.O. 2001. "Human fatalities from
cyanobacteria: Chemical and biological evidence for cyanotoxins."
Environ. Health Perspect 109: 663-668.<br />
<br />
Codd G.A., Bell S.G., Kaya K., Ward C.J., Beattie K.A., Metcalf J.S.
1999. "Cyanobacterial toxins, exposure routes and human health." Eur. J.
Phycol. 34:405-415.</div>
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Via Fountain Magazine ( By : Bahadir Can Gumussulu )</div>
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underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-60237994839829138102013-10-14T11:41:00.001-07:002013-10-14T12:51:09.924-07:00Faith, Worship, and Social Responsibility: The Ideal Person in the Qur'an<div style="text-align: justify;">
As with other sacred texts, one of the most important subjects regarding
the <b>Qur'an</b> concerns its interpretation or <u>tafsir</u>. As a matter of fact,
its language and communicative style require interpretation even for
legalistic verses. The fact that the <b>Qur'an</b> is the absolute authority
for the <b>Islamic faith</b> increases the importance of its interpretation.
Beginning from the early centuries, Muslims developed interpretation
methods such as recording the circumstances or historical context of the
revelation-known as asbab al-nuzul. Whereas for early scholars, the
asbab al-nuzul comprised the most important exegesis of the
text-critical explanation or interpretation, later scholars attempted to
interpret each verse of the <b>Qur'an</b> by collecting what the Prophet, his
companions, and the former scholars had said about each verse. This
technique is known as tafsir bi al-riwaya. And finally, Qur'anic
scholars began to use their own opinions and the philosophical ideas of
their times in interpretation (tafsir bi al-diraya).</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjeB0EgZMoLT43ggIvN2cawKmfV599-s8ohNVF92FcZqimoP9lY6_pgL0jDtS9Cv9a7TfZXjx9NvRyLQCVRpbTlZytJ48eY5doRO1PguOHN3mpY_QZAHnK8l7cgElRK1X4FYk0Warq1ONpd/s1600/sujud.jpg" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="Taqwa" border="0" height="245" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjeB0EgZMoLT43ggIvN2cawKmfV599-s8ohNVF92FcZqimoP9lY6_pgL0jDtS9Cv9a7TfZXjx9NvRyLQCVRpbTlZytJ48eY5doRO1PguOHN3mpY_QZAHnK8l7cgElRK1X4FYk0Warq1ONpd/s400/sujud.jpg" title="Taqwa" width="400" /></a> </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
These three methods of classical exegesis have been very helpful in
understanding Qur'anic text. However, because they typically explain the
Qur'an verse-by-verse, it can be difficult to use them as a means to
understand the overall or core teachings of the Qur'an especially for
today's readers. In today's world, people who begin to study the Qur'an
can easily become confused when they see the same verse interpreted in
completely opposing ways, say by radicals on one side and peace
activists on the other side. To alleviate this confusion, we need to
understand the major themes and overall purposes of the Qur'an. <br />
<br />
To grasp one of the major Qur'anic themes, I will attempt to analyze the
beginning of the chapter, Al-Baqara (The Cow). I propose that the major
purpose of the Qur'an is to draw the picture of the ideal person by
proclaiming (a) what he/she needs to believe (b) how he/she should
perform worship and (c) how he/she needs to act within a society. This
ideal person is a "muttaqi"-a true believer (muttaqin is the plural
form). By describing the ideal person, the first five verses of the
Al-Baqara chapter best summarize the whole content of the Qur'an. This
passage tells us what kind of society the Qur'an intends to establish by
listing the important characteristics of individuals within an ideal
society. These are the first five verses:<br />
<br />
"Alif, lam, mim. This is the Book. There is no doubt in it. It is a
guide to the muttaqin. Who believe in the Unseen, are steadfast in
prayer, and spend of that We have bestowed upon them. And who believe in
that which has been revealed to you and that which was revealed before
you and are certain of the hereafter. These are on guidance from their
Lord and these are the successful."<br />
The chapter begins with the mysterious Arabic letters called al-huruf
al-muqatta'a (isolated letters). Scholars have suggested many theories
to explain such isolated letters which occur 29 times in the Qur'an. For
our purposes here, it is sufficient to mention that chapters that being
with al-huruf al-muqatta'a usually are followed by the verses about the
Qur'an itself. <br />
<br />
The specific Arabic words used in the second verse are a categorical
negation of any doubt-their usage signifies that the Qur'an contains no
doubt at all, not even the slightest one. This doubtless book, as the
same verse states, is guidance (huda) for the muttaqin or servants of
God. To anticipate the discussion on the next verses, we need to
understand more about the word muttaqin as it is used in the Qur'an.<br />
<br />
Muttaqi comes from the same Arabic root as the word taqwa. Thus, the
meaning of taqwa is implied here. We need to consider this very
important concept to fully understand these opening verses of Al-Baqara.
When we consider all the Qur'anic verses together in which the muttaqin
are mentioned, the evidence points to the idea that taqwa means an
ideal piety according to the Qur'an and refers, as an umbrella term, to
zeniths humans can excel in both religious and human terms. More
specifically, the following aspects of taqwa can be deduced from the
Qur'anic accounts: faith, piety, obedience, abstaining from bad deeds,
and sincerity. These can be considered the interdependent sides of
taqwa. Namely, when a person has the sense of taqwa associated with
faith and piety in his heart, this leads him/her to perform good deeds
and prevents him/her from carrying out bad deeds.<br />
<br />
The fourth verse of Al-Baqara poses the relationship between yaqin
(certain belief) and taqwa. This relationship evokes many similar
Qur'anic verses that end with a special emphasis on God's certain
attributes such as All-Hearing (al-'Alim), All-Knowing (al-Khabir), and
All-Seeing (al-Basir). These attributes remind us that everything is
under God's control. Thus, the Qur'an attaches obedience of servants to
the strong belief of an "Omniscient God." Concerning this subject, we
should mention another term, which took on a specific importance in the
Sufi tradition: al-ihsan. Although ihsan literally means to be kind and
to do good, a very famous tradition gives it a specific meaning.
According to the tradition known as the hadith Jibril, the angel Gabriel
(in the form of a human) asked the Prophet when he was with his
companions, to explain the meaning of ihsan. The Prophet answered the
question by saying, "It is to worship God as if you see Him; and
although you do not see Him, He sees you." So, ihsan refers to
God-consciousness to the extent as if the person is seeing God. In
brief, the Qur'an as a whole wants its followers to have such a high
level of consciousness of God. Strong faith is indispensable for
achieving this quality.<br />
<br />
Another meaning of taqwa is protection-taqwa protects God's servants
from falling into sin. How can a human being sin if he or she remains
constantly mindful that God is ever present? What is more, the muttaqi
is the person, according to the hadith, who abstains not only from sins
but also from dubious actions: "A servant cannot be among the muttaqin
unless he refrains from certain permissible things for fear of falling
into impermissible things." There is another tradition that reinforces
the meaning of abstinence for taqwa. According to the story narrated by
Uqba b. Amir, the Prophet was given a silken garment as a present. He
wore it and started to pray. When he finished his prayer, he took it off
immediately as if with a strong aversion to it and said, "This does not
suit muttaqin." <br />
<br />
Another meaning of <b>taqwa</b> given by the <b>Qur'an</b> is "<u>good intention</u>." This
meaning is clear in the following verse that was revealed about the
sacrificial animals: "It is neither their meat nor their blood that
reaches Allah, but it is taqwa from you that reaches Him." Here, taqwa
is understood and interpreted as sincerity and good intention. Another
verse in the same chapter underlines the relation between the taqwa and
the heart, saying "And whoever respects the symbols of Allah, such
(respect) should come truly from the taqwa of the heart." The hadith
collections also contain many traditions supporting the same sense. For
instance, after giving some advice to his companions, the Prophet says
three times, "The taqwa is just here," pointing to his chest. <br />
<br />
As for the importance of taqwa in Islam, we can state that individual
salvation in the hereafter and social order in this world are possible
only by the presence of taqwa in individuals who together constitute the
society. The Qur'an often connects salvation in the hereafter (as
exemplified by gaining the eternal reward or escaping from eternal
punishment) to taqwa. Among many of the verses involved, the following
ones are enough to show its significance with reference to the eternal
happiness: "And hasten to forgiveness from your Lord; and for a paradise
as wide as are the heavens and the earth, it is prepared for the
muttaqin" (3:133). "...And the hereafter is with your Lord only for the
muttaqin" (43:35). Not only the Qur'an, but also hadith collections
contain traditions giving good tidings to the muttaqin about the next
life. For instance, according to the tradition, the Prophet declared
that taqwa and good character (husn al-khuluq) are the most frequent
reasons for eligibility to enter Paradise. <br />
<br />
Taqwa, according to the Qur'an and the related traditions, includes all
good religious and moral qualities. If one asks "Who is the muttaqi
according to the Qur'an?" the correct answer, regarding its overall
exposition, would be the following: "The muttaqi is the ideal believer
who has all inward and outward qualities celebrated by religion and
lives a perfect godly life." Moreover, the first verses of Al-Baqara
summarize all the characteristics of the muttaqin under the three
titles: unshakable faith, fulfillment of personal responsibility before
God, and accomplishment of social responsibility for the sake of the
community.<br />
<br />
The third verse discusses the attributes of the <b>muttaqin</b>. Three
different attributes can be easily noticed in the verse: they believe in
the unseen (ghayb), they establish the prayer, and they spend out of
what they have been provided. In brief, the verse denotes the most
perfect forms of the three categories-belief, worship, and social
responsibilities. For example, belief in ghayb includes all the Islamic
faith principles including the belief in God, his messengers, angels,
revelations, the hereafter, and the divine decree. Meaning "certain
faith," the notion "iqan" employed in the following verse, on the other
hand, marks the highest level of belief. The preference of the word
iqama of the prayer which means establishing the prayer "in conformity
with its conditions" instead of the verb "salla" that has a simpler
sense, points out the most perfect way in praying. In addition, the
prayer, the most important and the most frequent form of worship in
Islam, can be considered here as the representative of all the Islamic
worships because those who are steadfast (iqama) in the daily prayers
would be the ones who perfectly perform the other Islamic duties. The
last part of the verse is even more interesting (They spend out of what
We have given them as rizq). Many other Qur'anic verses use the
expression "alms giving"-zakat. Instead, the word used here is more
comprehensive- rizq or blessings from God. Rizq is not limited to zakat
or sadaqa (obligatory and voluntary charity), but includes everything
given to humans in this world such as wealth, knowledge, time, and
power. Thus, the verse seems to call God's servants to share everything
they possess with other people in the society in order to be counted
among the muttaqin. The verse reminds Muslims of their social
responsibilities which extends beyond their personal relationship with
God. In summary, verse three provide us the picture of an ideal member
of the Muslim society: he/she holds the highest rank in God's sight by
having the strongest faith, perfectly performing worship, and carrying
out social responsibilities.</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br />
This verse is so comprehensive that much of Islamic scholarship revolves
around these three subjects-faith, worship, and social
responsibilities. These subjects constitute the major Islamic
disciplines: Kalam (Muslim theology) that is interested in faith
principles (i'tiqadat), Fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence) dealing with the
subjects concerning worship ('ibadat), and Islamic Ethics (Akhlaqiyyat).
In addition, these three are the main sections in the introductory
course books ('ilm al-hal) that were produced in the later periods.<br />
<br />
The wisdom of dealing with the three subjects under discussion
separately seems crucial because to confuse them with each other has
caused serious problems in the history of Islam. First of all, since
one's faith cannot be known with certainty other than by God, no one has
the right to denounce the faithfulness of a people or any individual
unless they, themselves declare their disbelief. Not distinguishing
faith from actions, some marginal groups, unlike the majority, tend to
charge people with infidelity examining their actions. Secondly, it is
important to distinguish between personal responsibilities in front of
God (worship) and social responsibilities within a society. The former
is between God and a person and affects each individual's afterlife,
whereas the latter makes a person responsible before the society. In
this sense, only the state has the rightful authority to punish
violators of the rules related to social duties. Likewise, declaration
of war for a purpose, as Muslim scholars have emphasized, is the
exclusive authority of the state. Therefore, individuals or groups
cannot start war nor kill people based on their own decisions or their
own understandings.<br />
<br />
The fourth verse adds extra details to the faith principles touched on
in the previous verse. "(a) To believe in what is sent down to Muhammad,
peace be upon him, and to the previous prophets" and (b) "to believe in
the hereafter" are included in the principle "iman bi al-ghayb." In the
fifth verse, "guidance" (huda) is reemphasized and the muttaqin are
called as "muflihun" (successful). This success has been understood as
both in this world and the afterlife.<br />
<br />
When we consider this exposition of the first five verses of Al-Baqara,
we can conclude that all the subjects of the Qur'an can be construed in
the following three: faith, worship and social responsibility.
Therefore, the main purpose of the <b>Qur'an</b> is to inform Muslims about
these subjects. It is imperative not to confuse these three with each
other. It is also important to remember that the muttaqi is the person
who has all of them at the highest level.<br />
<br />
<b>References</b><br />
'Abd al-Baqi, Muhammad Fuad, al-Mu'jam al-mufahras li alfaz al-Qur'an al-Karim, Cairo: Dar al-Hadith, 1996. <br />
Bukhari, Muhammad b. 'Isma'il, Sahih al-Bukhari, Beirut: Dar Ibn Kathir, 1987.<br />
Ibn Majah, Muhammad b. Yazid, Sunan Ibn Majah, Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, nd.<br />
Muslim b. al-Hajjaj, Sahih Muslim, Beirut: Dar Ihya al-Turath al-'Arabi, nd.<br />
Nawawi, Abu Zakariyya Yahya b. Sharaf, Riyad? al-salih?in min kalam sayyid al-mursalin, Dimashq: 2003.<br />
Tirmidhi, Muhammad b. 'Isa, Sunan al-Tirmidhi, Beirut: Dar Ihya al-Turath, nd. </div>
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Via Fountain Magazine ( By : Halim Calis) </div>
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underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-9155967206221308092013-10-12T11:38:00.003-07:002013-10-12T11:40:03.514-07:00Perfection in the Physique of Birds<div style="text-align: justify;">
With bodies heavy for flying and light for diving into the water, birds
push the limits of their physique. Let's take a close look at the
artistry displayed in birds, which <b>amaze thinking</b> people with their
wonderful flying techniques.<br />
<br />
Able to dive into the water at a speed approaching 90 km, the
kingfisher can grab its prey at this speed in a depth of 60 cm,
instantly pivot back and then, using its wings as oars, surface above
the water. In order not to lose its prey, the bird's precisely timed
diving and surfacing takes place in three seconds.</div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgPcloF1jfCMss1LGFVLBR61Dnf_4F7TaT2-XrGA4h97YRaPrTppF5Zq7BlKhwHjteJ8_-a19v4HflbU0vsoNHVZIQflpKVR268DEB5tfeW4IocYDOk7iVDJkgdzWjm8ERIx9XbUXsuedSY/s1600/HD-Birds-wallpaper-3.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="Bird" border="0" height="300" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgPcloF1jfCMss1LGFVLBR61Dnf_4F7TaT2-XrGA4h97YRaPrTppF5Zq7BlKhwHjteJ8_-a19v4HflbU0vsoNHVZIQflpKVR268DEB5tfeW4IocYDOk7iVDJkgdzWjm8ERIx9XbUXsuedSY/s400/HD-Birds-wallpaper-3.jpg" title="Bird" width="400" /></a></div>
<h3>
<b>A torpedo as light as a fly</b></h3>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
The most basic factor that enables an animate creature to dive into the
water is its body being heavier than the water. With a weight of 40 g
and a length of 18 cm, the kingfisher (Alcedo atthis) should remain on
top of the water and not be able to catch fish because it cannot dive.
However, because God put the sustenance of this bird in the depths of
the sea, He gave it the special diving ability. Able to dive into the
water at a speed approaching 90 km, the kingfisher can grab its prey at
this speed in a depth of 60 cm, instantly pivot back and then, using its
wings as oars, surface above the water. In order not to lose its prey,
the bird's precisely timed diving and surfacing takes place in three
seconds. In a short period of time the kingfisher has traveled a
distance 414 times its height. This shows that it can move as fast as a
fighter aircraft. If we consider what the kingfisher does on a human
scale, a person would be able to dive 26 meters in three seconds and
then resurface with a prey the size of a sheepdog. Here another
interesting point should be made. The fish the kingfisher wants to catch
is actually in a different position than it would visually appear from
the sky due to the difference of the degrees of deflection of light in
water and air. Bereft of any knowledge of optics, how does this bird
solve this problem of physics?</div>
<h3>
<b>How heavy is a bird feather?</b></h3>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
There are physical limits to bird's flying capabilities. In order for a
bird to be able to fly, its weight should not be more than 15 kg. In
order for birds heavier than this to fly, their wings have to be
proportionately larger so it is difficult for this big a bird with heavy
wings to fly. Male silent swans (Cygnus olor) weigh more than 14 kg; in
fact, there are even some that weigh 20 kg. However, God compensated
for this situation with a special structure. Like other birds, the
silent swans have some bones filled with air and the inner part of these
bones has been made stronger with small props. For this reason, the
feathers and bones of these birds are one-tenth as heavy as their
bodies. There are more than 12,000 muscle ligaments in the wings of
swans to activate the feathers used in flying. Long (50 cm) wing
feathers greatly increase the carriage surface of the wings. Each
feather can carry 200 grams of weight during flight. For this reason, a
swan that loses just one wing feather can no longer take flight. It
takes 60 days for the feathers to be completely renewed.<br />
<br />
Because the owl's ears were created asymmetrically (the right ear is
higher), sounds reach the close ear 1/300,000 of a second earlier. This
small amount of time difference is enough for the owl to determine the
exact place of the source of the sound.</div>
<h3>
<b>Are owls flying radar stations?</b></h3>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Under normal conditions it is not possible to hear the sound waves of a
mouse eating a hazelnut in a hayloft. Possessing a sensitive receiver,
owls are an exception. The facial structure of owls resembles the high
tech early warning equipment on AWACS planes. Focusing on even the
smallest sound wave just like a satellite antenna, this structure cannot
be explained by the intelligence of an owl.<br />
<br />
Because the owl's ears were created asymmetrically (the right ear is
higher), sounds reach the close ear 1/300,000 of a second earlier. This
small time difference is enough for the owl to determine the exact
location of the source of the sound. Through the 95,000 nerve cells in
the simultaneous hearing center, the brain imagines a 3-D image of the
prey. Due to the anatomy of it 14 neck vertebrae (humans and other
mammals have seven vertebrae), the owl was given the capability of
turning its head 270 degrees and determining the exact position of its
prey. While flying towards the place where the sound came from, the owl
can constantly recalculate the position of the prey relative to its own
position, even if the prey changes its place. As a result of this
precise calculation, only three seconds passes between the moment the
owl first heard the sound of the prey and the moment it makes its deadly
attack.</div>
<h3>
<b>Is there a mathematical formula for remaining alive?</b></h3>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
The formula is this: 7-15-70. It is difficult to immediately understand
what these three numbers mean. However, these numbers make it almost
impossible for a starling to be caught by its enemies.<br />
<br />
We can explain the meaning of these numbers as follows: Whatever 7 close
neighbors do, imitate them; constantly fly at least 15 cm from them; do
not ever fly more than 70 km per hour. There is one more rule: Keep
your distance from all enemies. When these principles are followed,
enormous protection follows.<br />
<br />
Flocks of starlings are comprised of several thousands of birds that
move like one organism. In less than a second, the flock's direction,
size and breadth can change. In this situation their enemies do not have
much of a chance against such a tight mass. For predatory birds need to
determine their targets in order to catch their prey. The fast and
sudden movements of the flock prevent attack from predatory birds. In
spite of this, predators who attempt attack go back empty-handed. For
acting like one body, this enormous flock encompasses the enemy in a
counter current with the waves they create and narrow it down until the
bird can no longer fly. Becoming dazed, the predatory bird has no choice
but to fly away from the flock. This instructive action of the
starlings brings to mind the Qur'anic verse: "There is not an animal
(that lives) on the earth, not a being that flies on its wings, but
(forms part of) communities like you" (6:38).<br />
<br />
The world's best camera can see objects as big as a mouse from a height
of 300 meters. This is an amazing thing, but even so, no camera can
compare in any respect to an eagle's eyes.</div>
<h3>
<b>Can eagles see from the side?</b></h3>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
The world's best camera can see objects as big as a mouse from a height
of 300 meters. This is an amazing thing, but even so, no camera can
compare in any respect to an eagle's eyes. Eagles can clearly see their
targets from a distance of more than 1,000 meters. Eagles can even see a
fish in fine detail from this distance. This special quality bestowed
upon eagles is something technology would have difficulty imitating. For
the lens of the eagle's eye is soft contrary to human eyes' and it sees
clearly more quickly and it more greatly magnifies its object. In
addition, each of the eyes of the eagle has two separate vision centers.
This allows the birds to see clearly both in front of them and at their
sides. To attain this perfect vision, more than a million light
receiving cells are on duty in each square millimeter of the retina.
Comparing this to a human eye, a person has 200,000 cells in the same
unit of space in the retina. Due to this structure of the retina and
lens, an eagle's eyes are as large as a human being's eyes. If a human
eye were to have the same capability, it would have to be as large as an
apple. Because a human does not need to hunt like an eagle, he was not
burdened with such big eyes.</div>
<h3>
<b>How much can a brain be shaken? </b></h3>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
G-force expresses changes in a body's weight caused by acceleration. For
example, when a jet is climbing towards the sky, the gravity a pilot is
subject to increases immensely and his blood puts a lot of pressure on
the veins in his legs. A space vehicle has 3 G when it takes off; a war
plane has an average of 10 G; and a car's peak force is 120 G when it
crashes head on at full speed. With every peck, a woodpecker's beak
reaches 1,200 G in a way that is hard to believe. In other words, it is
like the bird's head hits a cement wall at a speed of 25 km per hour,
and the woodpecker does this 20 times a second. <br />
<br />
Experiencing pressures greater than 14 G is deadly for a human being. In
comparison, woodpeckers have been given the ability to endure several
hundred times what astronauts experience in their landings. This is only
possible with a very special histological/anatomic structure and a
skull created with perfect proportions. With the beak hitting a tree in a
hard manner, a woodpecker's brain almost completely fills its skull in
order to prevent a trauma from developing. Created with a spongy
structure, its bone structure acts as a shock absorber. The head and
nape of the neck muscles contract towards the place it has hit and the
waves from the blow become harmless. Even the lower part of the tongue
is wound around the skull once in order to secure the brain and protect
it from shaking. This situation does not create a problem or difficulty
for woodpeckers which hit their heads against trees for a handful of
larva, for they have been prepared for these conditions in their
creation.</div>
<h3>
<b>Small birds creating the power of a hurricane</b></h3>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Having a spread of 35 cm between two wings when they are opened,
swallows weigh less than a normal size lighter. At first glance the
apparent body structure of swallows suggests that they should only
display an average flight capability with their deficient ability to
maneuver. However, when we go out into nature and see swallows soaring
in the countryside, we see that the situation is not like that at all.
With the amazing way in which they were created, swallows succeed in
doing a job that appears to be almost impossible physically. These birds
can pass with jet speed through a space only 2 cm wider than their
bodies. They succeed in this by flapping their wings rhythmically
without stopping. Researchers have determined that they do this by means
of a wing structure that moves with a special mechanism. The upper part
of the wings of swallows can turn the air into an eddy. With the
pressure created by this eddy, a great power of lifting and balancing
occurs. The birds virtually fly with the power of hurricanes. Until now,
this style of flying was only known to exist with insects. By seemingly
gluing their wings to their bodies with this wonderful mechanism
bestowed by the Creator, swallows easily pass through difficult places.
Consequently, swallows can make 90-degree turns at astonishing speeds.
Supersonic planes also benefit by generating these same kind of
mini-hurricanes.</div>
<h3>
<b>Can there be flying submarines?</b></h3>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Every year in May, tens of thousands of sharks, whales and dolphins come
to the South African coastlines because of the schools of sardines
(Sardinella). However, the strongest sardine hunter is not under water;
it is a bird eyeing its prey from 30 meters high. The northern gannet
(Morus capensis) a much better hunter than other sea birds, has a
perfect body structure. While even sharks can only catch one out of two
prey, the northern gannet's perfect hunting techniques enable it to make
a record success. The first reason for this is its reaching its target
quickly and directly; the second reason is its being able to move about
comfortably under water. These sea birds can go down 10 meters at first
and then 20 meters by flapping their wings. They can dive at a speed of
120 km per hour. Their capability of holding oxygen-rich air in their
air bags allows them to hunt up to one minute under water. Because they
usually finish their prey under water, it is not common for them to
bring it to the surface. <br />
<br />
As research supported by technological possibilities increases, many
more amazing biological mechanisms will be discovered. Doesn't it strain
reason to explain the existence of animate creatures that continue life
with such fine calculations by means of chance? </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Via Fountain Magazine (By : Mehmet Mertek) </div>
underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-89379089711585103982013-10-12T11:30:00.001-07:002013-10-12T11:32:42.893-07:00The Enigma of Time<div style="text-align: justify;">
Under no circumstances can it be said that any nation possesses a
greater authority than others with respect to physical power or <b>
spiritual values</b>. However, when it comes to <b>managing time</b> and utilizing
every second as if they were precious stones, some nations are
considerably more advanced than others. <br />
<br />
<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg-5eaBO1-3ZFukanPfzqA6KEveY-Yy-Ro8c-wDYvjTQCF0smIwsvMZeQfHfVEP9Ow9V99HyQBOrkApXlbPWMnDT0oI9wcfUpgPPKeXK8RQ0d71INHOm9iBBuBuyxrWFB7CsGXaLmr9_w8D/s1600/The_Time_Traveler_by_xetobyte.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img alt="The Enigma of Time" border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg-5eaBO1-3ZFukanPfzqA6KEveY-Yy-Ro8c-wDYvjTQCF0smIwsvMZeQfHfVEP9Ow9V99HyQBOrkApXlbPWMnDT0oI9wcfUpgPPKeXK8RQ0d71INHOm9iBBuBuyxrWFB7CsGXaLmr9_w8D/s320/The_Time_Traveler_by_xetobyte.jpg" title="The Enigma of Time" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">The Enigma of Time</td></tr>
</tbody></table>
<b>Time</b> is not a void traversed from above. It is a precious jewel to be
acquired and put to use. It is the most valuable commodity we have, and
an important capital bestowed upon humanity in this marketplace we call
the world. Throughout history, those who have been able to fathom the
mystery of time, have uncovered the secret of how to exist with it.
Those who considered time a vacuum were devoured within its gnashing
teeth.<br />
<br />
If any nation desires to attain honor, splendor, and glory, with the
hopes of being a balancing factor in international relations, then they
must first learn to command time. Not even a millisecond of it should be
wasted, and the methods used to fully utilize time should be taught to
succeeding generations.<br />
<br />
There is one significant rule for those on this path: they have to claim
full possession of their past as a foundation on which they can develop
plans and projects for the future; while doing so, they should still
focus on current issues, and be conscious of the present dynamics. What
use is it today that we were happy and fortunate yesterday? What will
remain tomorrow, even if the present circumstances shower us with
comfort and felicity? If the future is a glasshouse built upon dreams,
what will it offer to today’s unfortunate? The past, indeed, ought to be
seen as a crown upon our heads and a source of pride - but we should be
prepared for the future with such diligence and spirit that those
prosperous years do not merely remain as epic tales and legends in the
moth-eaten pages of books.<br />
<br />
Creation—each particle of which is a world of hidden truth and wisdom,
each instant of which contains a lesson to be learned—is an exhibition
for those vigilant souls who gaze carefully upon it; it is a book with
each page on display, providing inspiration for hearts; and it is a
musical where every note that is heard instills the knowledge of God in
the listener’s conscience and heart.<br />
<br />
We witness the wonders of creation in a multitude of ways. We gaze upon
the luminous sun, the azure sky, and the endless seas bubbling with our
aspirations for eternity. We look out from between peaks and plains,
with the consciousness of the vicegerents of the earth. We come face to
face with distant stars by observing the depths of space through
telescopes, and become acquainted with tiny insects by descending to
their microscopic world. We attempt to perceive and understand the
events of nature within the passing of seasons, recognizing the springs,
summers, autumns, and winters that come one after another, year after
year. We ceaselessly contemplate the resplendent world of the eyes and
ears, listening for the wild chatter in the forest depths alongside the
sweet susurrus of the wind rustling in the leaves. We listen to the
sorrowful poets of day and the eloquent orators of night reclined upon
their thrones in the tree branches. We strive to see the brilliant
countenances in places of worship and in other works of art. We
experience, one after another, heat and cold, bitter and sweet,
beautiful and ugly, and discover the unifying spirit behind opposites.
We greet the future with new syntheses, new evaluations, and new
discoveries, both in our conscience and the external world, as we prize
each moment of life with an appreciative contemplation. Indeed, we find
the essence of existence through all of these; we accelerate the flow of
existence with these. And then, when the time comes, we tear away from
it entirely. Thus is the luminous path to union with time.<br />
<br />
Those who complain of not having enough time to work and think, and who
perpetually curse and bemoan time, can falter through heedlessness and
deviancy; whereas those great souls who etch their spirits’ inspirations
on every fragment of time have found it to be even more expansive than
they initially thought. By using time wisely, they have explored all
facets of creation, down to the minutest detail. With this care and
vigilance, and through perceiving the reality beyond creation, great
thinkers like Ghazali attained a second existence; those like Rumi were
entranced by the uplifting breaths of time, and embraced every corner of
the world with its clamor; scientists like Newton, interpreting even
the smallest event, such as an apple falling to the ground, discovered
the laws like gravity, and proved that time could suffice for
everything. These personalities of great stature, at one with time,
utilized the inheritance of the past in the best possible way, and
investigated, in every detail, the time in which they lived. From the
moment at which they were recognized, they were respectfully greeted and
welcomed the world over and, like the seeds sprouting on the hardest
rock, they took root in the consciences of even the most primitive
societies.<br />
<br />
The fortunate generations of the future are going to make the best
possible use of <b>time</b>, are not going to fail at working while thinking,
at reading while working, and while reading, they will not neglect
serving others for the sake of exalted ideals. They will know how to
remain forever lively, forever colorful.</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Via Fountain Magazine (By : M. Fetullah Gulen) </div>
underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-30263773601706545262013-10-11T01:56:00.001-07:002013-10-11T01:56:25.994-07:00The Role of Education for Dialogue<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiQJyJe5k-NOmXnGBrUwC1ZKGASwEN4OFB0PKC7l8uFvfJ4i96HM2CqEQ24x7s4d7AanFLayVVJ5ttvG3lvwBgXzh88IPPO9LASApzztJmHku3DsqYE7ivTO9oKXY9WXBsvaWaLV_5qhVuw/s1600/dialogue.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="dialogue and education" border="0" height="243" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiQJyJe5k-NOmXnGBrUwC1ZKGASwEN4OFB0PKC7l8uFvfJ4i96HM2CqEQ24x7s4d7AanFLayVVJ5ttvG3lvwBgXzh88IPPO9LASApzztJmHku3DsqYE7ivTO9oKXY9WXBsvaWaLV_5qhVuw/s400/dialogue.png" title="dialogue and education" width="400" /></a></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<em>“No one yet realized the wealth of sympathy, the kindness and
generosity hidden in the soul of a child. The effort of every true
education should be to unlock that treasure” </em> <br />
<b>Emma Goldman </b><br />
<br />
<br />
For centuries there has been much isolation (of various sorts) and years
of conflict that have placed a wall between peoples, cultures,
countries, and religions; this is because some people have been taught
to hate each other. Poverty, religious fanaticism, and war have taught
people all over the world to hate one another. <br />
<br />
Despite the increased opportunities for dialogue today, the community of
nations is also faced with serious economic, social, and cultural
difficulties; the inequality between nations is growing, and many
conflicts and serious tensions threaten peace and security. Just by
looking at recent events, we can see that the world has witnessed a
number of brutal wars and conflicts in the twentieth century alone.
Bosnia is one of the examples of wars where ethnic cleansing and
numerous ethnic and ideological conflicts have left a deep traumatic
scar on the collective memories of the nations in the region. The
Palestinian-Israeli conflict is another conflict that is just as
painful.<br />
<br />
The crises in Kashmir, Afghanistan, Chechnya, Karabag, and many other
parts of the world can be added to this painful list. The purpose of
this article is to find some possible answers to the following
questions: Why do people not solve their problems through dialogue? What
prevents them from doing this? Or in other words, who or what is to
blame?<br />
<br />
My immediate answer to all these questions is just one word: <strong><a href="http://blossom-of-heart.blogspot.com/2013/10/the-role-of-education-for-dialogue.html">education</a></strong>.
But the meaning of that word is not as simple as it seems. It can be
defined in different ways, such as the following: Education is an
organizational substructure that prepares individuals in order that they
will eventually become useful for:<br />
<br />
• The ongoing operation of their current social structure; <br />
<br />
• The preservation and continuation of such a social structure in following generations. Or; <br />
<br />
<em>Education is a substructure that prepares new generations so they
can eventually improve on current organizational structures (into which
they have been thrown) by: </em><br />
<br />
• Introducing mechanisms to smoothly implement improvements;<br />
<br />
• Sustaining those mechanisms with improvements;<br />
<br />
• Trying to preserve the stability of the social structure.<br />
<br />
Once the question becomes “what is the purpose of education?” it becomes more complex: <br />
<br />
<br />
<em> “The only purpose of education is to teach a student how to live
his life-by developing his mind and equipping him to deal with reality.
The training he needs is theoretical, i.e., conceptual. He has to be
taught to think, to understand, to integrate, to prove. He has to be
taught the essentials of the knowledge discovered in the past, and he
has to be equipped to acquire further knowledge by his own effort.” </em><br />
Ayn Rand<br />
<br />
<em> “The central task of education is to implant a will and facility
for learning; it should produce not learned, but learning people. The
truly human society is a learning society, where grandparents, parents,
and children are students together.” </em><br />
Eric Hoffer<br />
<br />
<em> “The central job of schools is to maximize the capacity of each student.”</em> <br />
Carol Ann Tomlinson <br />
<br />
<em> “The one real object of education is to leave a man in the condition of continually asking questions.” </em><br />
Bishop Creighton<br />
<br />
<em> “The aim of education should be to teach us rather how to think,
than what to think-rather to improve our minds, so as to enable us to
think for ourselves, than to load the memory with the thoughts of other
men.” </em> <br />
Bill Beattie<br />
<br />
As understood from the above quotations, it is not easy to find a single
definition of what education is. Therefore, education has a twofold
role to play in the questions asked above concerning “Education for
dialogue” or “Education for hate.” In fact, the duality of the role of
education emanates from the people, the educators, who use it for
whatever their purpose is. This purpose can vary, being political,
national, religious, antireligious, etc.... Thus, we arrive at the
issue of preparing people as “good educators.” <br />
<br />
All in all, education is the key to solving the greatest dilemmas of
humanity. Investment in human resources represents the best hope for
achieving growth in several areas, such as economic, social, and
cultural, without forsaking the goals of the alleviation of poverty,
social cohesion, and environmental sustainability. Achieving global
sustainability will depend upon the contributions of young generations
with the knowledge, training, and social commitment needed to create
real change. <br />
<br />
In the new millennium almost every region of the world will face
tremendous challenges. The insistent pressures of globalization imply a
new world order in which the only constant will be change. It seems that
education will be one of the essential foundations of both a culture of
peace and dialogue among civilizations. <strong>Education</strong> advocates the respect
of universal values common to all civilizations (solidarity, tolerance,
recognition of human rights, fundamental freedom for all, etc.).
<strong>Education</strong> is also ideally suited to the transmission of national and
universal cultural values and should foster the assimilation of
scientific and technological knowledge without detriment being made to
the capacities and values of the people.</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Via Fountain Magazine (By : Ugur Tarman)</div>
underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-77040531249393962152013-10-10T15:17:00.000-07:002013-10-10T15:23:49.880-07:00What Generations Expect from Education<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhs__fUDNu-Auyru3ScW_03KCPraIsf7cz0JXTUp_mOq6AjWkRqmAjVT7oOtlqsVDysPHtTv6TPrELx2hq2kIkaKbSeoLSSiQr5dKdBfPq0js54CEIIWqlhP8eiek9vKR2mDdhXubwvzI3E/s1600/education+on+blackboard.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="Education" border="0" height="213" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhs__fUDNu-Auyru3ScW_03KCPraIsf7cz0JXTUp_mOq6AjWkRqmAjVT7oOtlqsVDysPHtTv6TPrELx2hq2kIkaKbSeoLSSiQr5dKdBfPq0js54CEIIWqlhP8eiek9vKR2mDdhXubwvzI3E/s320/education+on+blackboard.jpg" title="Education" width="320" /></a></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
What do we mean when we mention <strong>education</strong> and <strong>training</strong>
in relation to our current and <strong>future generations</strong>? How should we teach
our values to new generations and who is to undertake this sacred duty?
We have to find the answers to these questions if we are to deal with
matters related to the education of our future generations.</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<u>A system of education without a clearly defined target and purpose will
only serve to confuse future generations</u>. We have to be careful that our
youth is taught the proper material in an effective manner to ensure
that they are actually learning rather than simply becoming conduits of
data. </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
The social structure of a nation is closely related to the importance it
places on the education of its populace. The education of the current
generation is especially crucial as they will become the educators of
following generations and will share with their students the knowledge
they have acquired as part of their own education and experiences. It is
vital for the society and morality of a society that its values are
transmitted to its younger generation in the process of their learning
experience. Value transmission is best possible in a successful
marriage, which thus makes family an important educational institution, a
vital one for the continued existence of a nation. Those nations which
fail to establish the institution of marriage on sound and essential
values without regard to the spiritual and moral condition of their
society are doomed to extinction.</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
The development of individuals is strongly influenced by other
individuals, dominant customs and traditions, and more importantly by
their parents. Similarly governments have a strong influence and
authority over the different parts of its populace. </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
A nation that effectively utilizes their resources is closely aligned
with the thoughts, concepts, and culture of the individuals who make up
the society and with the prudence, foresight, and sincere devotion of
those in power. The administrators that are responsible for the level of
care given to individuals and their efforts toward becoming a social
entity will be an indication of how closely aligned they are with the
prophetic principle that "All of you are shepherds, and all of you are
responsible for those under your care" and that "being glad with making
others' happy instead of self concerns." </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Those who are responsible for educating future generations - no matter
under what title they do it - should never forget the importance of
this. As members of society we try to do whatever it takes to ensure the
best possible future for our children by doing everything in our power
and overcoming any and all difficulties so that our children are not
deprived of anything as we try to prepare a world like Paradise for
them. Will it not be a waste of all our efforts if we fail to elevate
them to the level of morality and virtue, the capital of true value, if
we cannot elevate them to a state of satisfaction, having acquired
consciousness and culture? The nations who obtain this capital will have
gained a mysterious key to the treasures of the world. On the contrary,
the masses that have not elevated to the level of such a cultivation
and understanding will lose their first struggle for social life in the
future and be knocked out at the first round. </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
If the new generations' minds are equipped with the sciences of their
time and their hearts are not lit up with breezes from beyond and if
they are provided with an ample education, with all their needs
fulfilled and all opportunities available for them to succeed then they
can look forward to a bright future. These future generations will be
able to stand up to every kind of obstacle in the struggle of life, they
will be able to overcome - material or spiritual - every kind of
difficulty and will never give in to despair. All the hardships that we
will have encountered along the way in providing our children with a
better education will have been worth it. </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
As for the unfortunate ones who are deprived of this consciousness will
waste away the inheritance they received from their fathers, spiritually
as well, they will lead an unstable and pessimistic life, and then
perish between the ferocious teeth of misery. </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
The authorities today, who are at the crossroads of elevating their
children to the level of humanity or leaving them to be beasts in human
form, have to think the responsibility on their shoulders heavier than
mountains and find more profound and consistent cures against the decays
brought by years-long neglects. Otherwise, the unfortunate generations
who lost the most precious ores of their being in the unknown seas for
thousands of times through different erosions will completely lose their
ability to germinate and they will become completely barren, never be
able to find existence with their own essence, and never reach the glory
of the past again.</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Via Fountain Magazine (By : <a href="http://fgulen.com/en/" target="_blank">M. Fetullah Gulen</a>)</div>
underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-17654557963451449302013-10-09T11:03:00.000-07:002013-10-09T11:03:03.138-07:00Second Life or Afterlife?<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhzO2YO-UxVaw2F7voyIwr5EEUKi8MowcIC0N3NV3gijeiUF6VoMtfaY-6_hq3EVYG6-lPBDJYNb7ixrf9OhYZjzpeuAk5Bp9MxrhzpZj8bzFFFmu7XJvbLrZQktPvyP0Vp8uT013udeTRz/s1600/Hero-Image-LifeSciences-General.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="life" border="0" height="207" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhzO2YO-UxVaw2F7voyIwr5EEUKi8MowcIC0N3NV3gijeiUF6VoMtfaY-6_hq3EVYG6-lPBDJYNb7ixrf9OhYZjzpeuAk5Bp9MxrhzpZj8bzFFFmu7XJvbLrZQktPvyP0Vp8uT013udeTRz/s400/Hero-Image-LifeSciences-General.jpg" title="life" width="400" /></a></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
What would you think if you overheard two people talking about Second
Life? Although this may sound like the afterlife to most, that is,
where, after facing the Judgment of God humans will be either admitted
to Heaven by His mercy or driven into Hell by His justice, today, for
millions of players, “Second Life” also refers to one of the most famous
online virtual worlds where players can create an online life for
themselves.<br />
<br />
Every day, millions of people log on to online environments, seeking a
second life in virtual worlds. It is noticeable that the average user is
26 years old, and spends 22 hours per week in his/her alternative lives
[1]. After such dedicated players spend this much time in these worlds,
not much is left for their offline activities. They literally live “in”
these virtual worlds. What leads them to prefer a virtual life over a
real one? Is something missing from the daily life? Why are people not
happy or satisfied with what they have? Are they asking for more or
looking for something they don’t have?<br />
<br />
In Second Life, users can create a new character for themselves, a
lifestyle, an environment or anything else they might imagine. Second
Life, with about 17 million users, has its own economy and currency
(Linden). Residents are able to buy and sell amongst themselves directly
using Linden, which is also exchangeable for US dollars. Second Life's
GDP (2007) is estimated between $500 million and $600 million [2], which
is larger than the GDP of 19 countries in the world. In October, 2008
users spent approximately $30 million. Although Second Life does not
have a government, many countries have embassies in Second Life. The
online world even has an in-world newspaper.<br />
<br />
Many forms of sports activities have also appeared in Second Life.
Residents can watch or participate in football, soccer, boxing,
wrestling, and auto racing. Virtual art centers and museums allow
artists to create and exhibit their works in a way which might not be
possible in real life because of physical constraints or high costs.
Streaming vocal and instrumental music or inworld instruments allow
performances of live music. Live theater is also available in Second
Life. The British act Redzone toured for their new album on Second Life
(2007).<br />
<br />
There are several studies [3] discussing how these online worlds could
be used for educational purposes. There are regions in the virtual world
of Second Life for educational purposes, and a variety of topics are
covered. Virtual worlds are favored because they are thought to provide
more engaging experiences than traditional online learning. Virtual
worlds can provide an interactive imitation of real life classroom
environments. 80 percent of British universities have teaching and
learning activities in Second Life. More than 300 universities around
the world are taking advantage of the platform to provide educational
services at lower costs.<br />
<br />
Good and evil exist in Second Life, so religion is also finding its way
into this world. Many religious organizations have opened churches,
cathedrals and meeting places in Second Life. People are more willing to
explore and discuss spiritual things in a virtual world [4]. Second
Life also has a place to perform the Hajj ritual, providing a virtual
experience before making the actual pilgrimage in person. However, some
residents find the idea of virtual worship odd. They prefer spending
their time flying, shopping, or engaging in other activities.<br />
<br />
Are all these activities making users happier or just helping them to
forget their real life? The more users spend time in these worlds, the
more they became addicted to their new lifestyle, becoming alienated
from the events and responsibilities of real life.<br />
<br />
Fethullah Gulen, a Turkish scholar, addresses this question in one of
his latest articles [5] as follows: “In spite of the dizzying
developments brought by science, the new opportunities offered by
technology, and so many means promising us welfare and happiness, the
people of our time do not seem very happy. On the contrary, they are
overcome by unease and depression more than ever. Although it should not
be expected to be any other way, mere worldly opportunities, which are
not supported by personal relationships to faith or knowledge of God,
are not deepened or given meaning, and obviously do not mean much.”<br />
<br />
Despite the large number of educational and social features available in
virtual worlds, the main motivation that leads players to games like
Second Life seems to be a lack of satisfaction with their real lives.
People are either not happy with their work, lifestyle or social
environment, or they are seeking a second chance in life, a fresh start.
These worlds approximate real life ever more closely with each new
technological development. It remains to be seen how virtual worlds will
affect real human relationships. One day people may not realize the
difference between real and virtual worlds. Is Second Life simply taking
over real life?<br />
<br />
Gulen makes a similar connection between technological developments and
the afterlife: “Even though it would not be correct to speculate today
on the days to come, people who predict the future claim that the world
will become so attractive for the people of physicality and carnal
pleasures that it will make them forget Paradise. With a feeling and
passion that gives priority to immediate pleasures and delights, they
will say like Omar Khayyam, ‘The past and future are all but tales;
enjoy yourself now, do not spoil your life.’ Thus, they will see life as
only eating, drinking, and resting, constantly making their choices in
favor of worldly ease and comfort.” The belief that on a particular day
all humans will be held accountable before God for their actions in
this life helps to support and protect the social dynamics of society.
Success in the afterlife depends on remembering that one day we will be
held responsible for every single deed of our earthly life.<br />
<br />
Social dynamics and problems related to online gaming have been
discussed widely in academic arenas. The large amount of time, money and
resources spent on these games, as well as the associated social and
behavioral problems, and loss of productivity are only some of the
issues that come to mind. Scholarly articles on ethical issues of life
in virtual worlds [6] have increased lately, and many topics are
broached, including matters of privacy, monitoring and eavesdropping,
the fear of exploitation, identity theft, the ethical impact of
aesthetic decisions, values and ethics that are manifested in the social
processes and their relevance to activities, professional ethics,
standards of integrity, given identity issues and practices, malevolence
and altruism, legal and ethical doctrines of confidential and
privileged information, ethics for students and instructors, ethical
development stages and issues, vandalism, harassment and crime.<br />
<br />
Are we living our lives to the fullest? Everyone has the opportunity to
choose how they live in this world. If this time is not well spent, that
is, acting as if there is no responsibility or judgment for every
action, what would be the difference between people living in this world
as if it is a game, and those playing their lives away in these online
worlds? The Holy Qur’an says: “This life of the world is but a pastime
and a game, but the home of the Hereafter, that is Life if they but
knew” [7]. Some people prefer their online lives to real life, and
unfortunately many others are not aware that their actions evince their
preference for the real life over the afterlife.<br />
<br />
The movie Matrix has a similar story. The Matrix is a virtual world for
people whose bodies are connected to the Machines, which use the
bioelectricity and thermal energy of humans as their energy supply.
Humans live out their lives in this virtual reality that resembles the
21st century without knowing that they are in a simulation. In the
movie, a group of free humans attempts to rescue (unplug) others from
the Matrix. The main challenge here is to make others believe that there
is another life which is more real or important than the one they are
living. In fact, as human beings we are all confronted with the same
challenge. Either we gain an understanding of the meaning of our
existence in the world and live accordingly, or we are enslaved by
worldly ease and comfort, immediate pleasures and delights.<br />
<br />
I would like to end with a point the Gulen made on happiness: “It seems
that until human beings come to realize their essence, it will not be
possible for them to put their affairs in order or to attain the
happiness they long for. And this is particularly so if they are trying
to suppress their spiritual appetite through luxury, comfort, and
seeking to satisfy their physical pleasures because they are unable to
realize their real problems.”<br />
<br />
Acknowledgment: This article has been produced at MERGEOUS [8], an
online article and project development service for authors and
publishers dedicated to the advancement of technologies in the merging
realm of science and religion.<br />
<br />
<b>References</b><br />
[1] Yee, N. “The demographics, motivations, and derived experiences of
users of massively-multiuser online graphical environments.” Presence:
Teleoperators and Virtual Environments 15:309–329.<br />
[2] Wikipedia, Linden Dolar, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linden_dollar<br />
[3] Delwiche, A. (2006). “Massively multiplayer online games (MMOs) in
the new media classroom.” Educational Technology & Society, 9 (3),
160-172.<br />
[4] Anselmo, D., 08/01/2007, “A ‘Second’ Way to Save Souls” (churchsolutionsmag.com).<br />
[5] Gulen, M. Fethullah, “Days of Depression and Our Atlas of Hope,” The Fountain Magazine, Issue 67, 2009.<br />
[6] Emerging Ethical Issues of Life in Virtual Worlds, Information Age Publishing, Charlotte, NC, June 15, 2009.<br />
[7] The Holy Quran (29:64).<br />
[8] Mergeous, http://www.mergeous.com</div>
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<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Via Fountain Magazine (By : Halil I. Demir) </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<em> </em></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<em>Halil I. Demir is postdoctoral scholar in the area of Informatics, and lives in Iowa.</em> </div>
underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-84651887052853827692013-10-09T10:35:00.002-07:002013-10-11T11:33:53.177-07:00The Islamic Propensity for Science<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguG62_QxCitSt9s9ZOaWaIXz3Ez_grTeFuiuCXxJISZbK_uSHpiBDctx63tjd8P88fFuHQ8PemVowP3Jx89sSaMLOhoZFAi4_H9Ty49nUxAhYOhnsx51tCLqGYbXmP76XP_ZuSQExBh6QH/s1600/Lunar_eclipse_al_Biruni.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="Science and islam" border="0" height="281" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguG62_QxCitSt9s9ZOaWaIXz3Ez_grTeFuiuCXxJISZbK_uSHpiBDctx63tjd8P88fFuHQ8PemVowP3Jx89sSaMLOhoZFAi4_H9Ty49nUxAhYOhnsx51tCLqGYbXmP76XP_ZuSQExBh6QH/s400/Lunar_eclipse_al_Biruni.jpg" title="Science and islam" width="400" /></a></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
The naive view of religion and science sees them in direct opposition to
one another, and given the chequered history of religion and science
this is perhaps understandable. Examples such as the incarceration of
Galileo, the Scopes Trial and more recently the issue of creationism are
at the forefront of the social consciousness, so undoubtedly there is
some history of confrontation between religion and science. Islam, on
the other hand, has historically seemed to have fewer difficulties with
science, and indeed often has been conducive to it. <br />
<br />
There are many possible explanations for this, not least of which is the
presentation of science and the use of reason in Islamic texts, but
also sociological factors, such as different economic situations during
the Middle Ages, and internal political structures. There is also the
fact that the Qur’an simply doesn’t contradict scientific findings .<br />
<br />
The Middle Ages (or the Dark Ages as they used to be known) of European
civilisation extended between the 5th and 16th centuries, encapsulating
the Islamic Golden Age spanning the 7th to 16th centuries. It was once
thought that Islamic science during this time was little more than a
translation of Greek conclusions, however there is now sufficient
evidence to suggest that this was a scientific revolution in its own
right, and it contributed greatly to the basis of modern scientific
thought. Part of the reason science played such a key role in the
Golden Age of Islam is surely because of the importance placed on it in
Islamic texts. There are hundreds of references in the Qur’an related to
human knowledge and contemplation, including the first command of God,
instructing humanity to “read.” The hadith also contains hundreds of
references the Prophet made to seek knowledge, including one instance of
the him saying, “Seek for science, even in China” ; the significance of
China being that it is the furthest known country to the Muslim Empire.
There is a moral obligation for Muslims to seek knowledge; in fact,
learning is often seen as a form of worship and a quest for spiritual
perfection through knowledge. This surely acted as an incentive that
enabled them to become the great scientific civilization they were
during the Golden Age. The Renaissance, which followed the Middle Ages,
could be described as the Western equivalent<br />
<br />
There is nothing in the Bible to discredit specific scientific
discoveries, though it also doesn’t encourage the scientific pursuit in
the same manner as the Qur’an. The Bible does convey an ordered world
in which science is not only possible but should tend towards the truth,
but any such scientific commendation can also be levelled at the
Qur’an. <br />
<br />
What’s unique about the Qur’an, however, is that it is not as
susceptible to the human fallibility excuse, in that it was written
immediately after the Archangel Gabriel imparted the Revelation to
Muhammad, it was arranged by Muhammad himself, and has remained
unchanged since, at least when speaking of the original Arabic and not a
translation. The areas of science explored in the Qur’an range greatly
from astronomy to physics to biology, and all seem to be in well
keeping with modern scientific findings. <br />
<br />
Perhaps not surprisingly, the Qur’an does not contain any hardline
indisputable science, however. The meanings of many of the Arabic words
are subtle and open to interpretation, and different interpretations of
the same passages have been used to support different scientific
enquiries at different times. <br />
<br />
The rapid expansion of the Muslim empire beginning in the 7th century
brought great wealth and security, and this naturally led to great
advancements in science and technology, similar to the Greek and Roman
empires before them. Once an empire establishes itself and can
comfortably support its population in terms of food and security, it can
turn sights on its lesser problems, and attempt to solve them using its
ingenuity, thus making great strides in science and technology. The
West had, as already noted, become stagnant in these fields following
the collapse of the Roman Empire. Europe was unified once more under the
Catholic Church, but there was much animosity between the destitute
working class and the self-interested ruling class. It was a time of
prosperity for few, and the Muslim empire attracted great minds and
became the hub of scientific achievement. Viewed in this context, the
Islamic Golden Age is not so much a religious achievement as it is a
cultural achievement of a burgeoning civilisation. <br />
<br />
The contrast with the Western Renaissance is clear. Galileo, a friend of
the pope and of the church, is the most famous example. Upon expressing
his approval of Copernican theories, he was incarcerated for heresy.
The pope famously rebutted Galileo’s arguments by stating that Galileo
could not assert a scientific theory that contradicted the scripture
unless it could be shown that God, in his infinite power, could not have
brought it about that all the evidence in support of the theory existed
and the theory itself not be true. This is of course an impossibly high
standard of truth for science to achieve, and furthermore put in
jeopardy all scientific knowledge. Galileo was, however, purposefully
antagonistic towards the church, and may have done more harm, especially
for the relationship between religion and science, than he is usually
given credit for. Rene Descartes was on the verge of publishing a
similar paper in support of Copernicus, but suppressed it upon seeing
the treatment that Galileo received. During this time, it was required
that all work be approved by representatives of the church before it was
published in order to avoid the publication of any heretical material.
This was catastrophic for any scientific theory that may have
contradicted the interpretation of the scripture as advocated by the
Church. Islamic science avoided this problem. While the Church, as a
figure of authority, advocated a particular interpretation of the
scriptures and had in the past exercised this authority with punitive
measures such as excommunication and incarceration, Islam had no
centralised authority with the same level of control. The closest
analogous administration is the caliphate, whose role has changed over
time, but never gained the overarching power of the Christian church.
This could well be due to the Muslim Empire being founded by many small
tribes with Bedouin roots, and city states, who had no history of being
subject to a greater authority. Also, due to their disparate nature,
both culturally and geographically, such an overarching authority was a
logistical impossibility. Furthermore, the legitimacy of any one caliph
was always controversial; the most divisive split of course being
between Sunni and Shi’a Muslims, the former believing Abu Bakr,
Muhammad’s father-in-law, was his rightful successor, while the latter
preferring his cousin and son-in-law Ali ibn Abi Talib. Such
disagreement continued and constantly threatened the supreme power of
the caliphate, despite Muhammad’s assertion that Muslims should fulfil
oath of allegiance to only one caliph. This disagreement in turn led to
a lack of a single ruling authority, and a lack of one single
interpretation being enforced across the empire. Often, the
interpretation of the Islamic texts varied from community to community.
Further supporting a lack of enforcement was the Qur’an. “There is no
compulsion in religion” can be interpreted both as a decree of
tolerance to other religions, and also a decree of tolerance within
Islam itself. This aspect of religious tolerance must surely have played
some part in the ability of Muslims to abide alternate interpretations
of their text, and also rationalise discrepancies between the text and
the constantly evolving hypotheses of science. Without an authority to
push an anti-scientific agenda, the Muslim Empire became a hub of
scientific enquiry which, along with an unusual tolerance for religion,
attracted scientific minds from across the entire region.<br />
<br />
There is another hypothesis that should be noted, which is that the view
of Christianity and science being in direct opposition to each other is
unwarranted. After all, modern scientific prosperity grew out of the
Christian West, and it can also be argued that without the fundamental
view that nature is uniform and has an observable order and
organisation, provided initially only by religion, science would never
have even had a grounding on which to start. Perhaps religion and
science are not as diametrically opposed as they seem, and their
previous confrontations have been due to misunderstandings that are not
fundamental to their positions. While it is undoubtedly true that
Christianity and science have in the past had a tolerant, if not a
symbiotic, relationship, it is nevertheless the case that for quite some
time the two held hostile policies in regard to each other, and these
policies have resulted in animosity that exists even to this day. This
animosity is not a necessity, however, as demonstrated by Islam.<br />
<br />
It seems it can then be concluded that the roots of the Islamic
propensity for science are a product of both Islamic texts and
sociological factors, such as a lack of a centralised authority pushing a
particular interpretation of the text. The search for knowledge which
the Qur’an advocates must surely have helped initiate this scientific
resurgence, but it was also the ability of the Muslim population to
interpret the findings of the scientific community (and it should be
noted that Muslim and scientific groups were by no means mutually
exclusive) in a way that didn’t conflict with their theological beliefs
which allowed science to flourish. The Golden Age of the Muslim Empire
should stand as an example to all cultures that science and religion can
coexist, and not just tenuously, but harmoniously.<br />
<br />
<b>Notes</b><br />
1. H.R. Turner. 1997. Science in Medieval Islam:<br />
An Illustrated Introduction, Austin:<br />
University of Texas Press, pp. 5-9.<br />
2. George Saliba. 2007. Arabic Islamic Science<br />
and the Making of the European Renaissance,<br />
Cambridge, Mass. MIT Press.<br />
3. A.H. Syed, Islam and Science, New Delhi,<br />
2003, p. 111.<br />
4. Ibid.<br />
5. Maurice Bucaille. 1978. The Bible, the<br />
Qur’an and Science: The Holy Scriptures<br />
Examined in the Light of Modern Knowledge.<br />
Indianapolis, p. 92.<br />
6. Syed. 2003. p. 116.<br />
7. Syed. 2003. p. 115.<br />
8. F. M. Donner. 1981. The Early Arab Conquests.<br />
Retrieved 16/5/2009 from http://www.<br />
fordham.edu/halsall/med/donner.html<br />
9. John Cottingham. 1991. The Philosophical<br />
Writings of Descartes. Cambridge: CUP, pp.<br />
xi–xiii.<br />
10. Sachiko Murata, William Chittick. 1994.<br />
The Vision of Islam. New York, p. xxiv.<br />
11. A. H. Siddiqui. Translation of Sahih Muslim.<br />
2007, 20:4543.<br />
12. Qur’an 2:256.<br />
13. Syed. 2003. p. 112–113.</div>
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</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Via Fountain Magazine (By : Stephen Pant)</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br />
<i>Stephen Pant is a freelance writer in Australia. He has a degree in philosophy and history from Monash University, Melbourne.</i> </div>
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underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-21485688213493290002013-10-09T10:14:00.001-07:002013-10-14T12:50:19.906-07:00Reccuring DNA in Genome Structure<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhUmarAqUiSZ-nz__yhD8hqoh4_EIwmx9NtnIGFbApnw6Q_joGTf3oeTT1umdeVQFZWDEo2a_XnipziQO6BaHU34-YDuEXIsUOox_EX7W0xQwPU5WlF5b2ZoWaGS3WhlyPFudAxZtEuCC55/s1600/etc_opener08__01__630x420.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="Genome" border="0" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhUmarAqUiSZ-nz__yhD8hqoh4_EIwmx9NtnIGFbApnw6Q_joGTf3oeTT1umdeVQFZWDEo2a_XnipziQO6BaHU34-YDuEXIsUOox_EX7W0xQwPU5WlF5b2ZoWaGS3WhlyPFudAxZtEuCC55/s400/etc_opener08__01__630x420.jpg" title="Genome" width="400" /></a></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
A <b>genome</b> is a data book or registry which records the past and future of
living organisms. It dynamically and simultaneously stores hereditary
and biological information in three different hierarchical levels
belonging to three different time periods. <br />
<br />
The first is the preservation of characteristic, long term data imprints
that describes the development of an organism in the stable <b>DNA
sequences</b>. <br />
<br />
Second is the storage of medium term epigenetically featured data that
is carried a couple of generations further down the cellular level. <b>
Epigenetic information</b> is not stored within nucleotide sequences but in
the chemical modifications of these sequences (like the methylation of
repeated strings of GC dinucleotide). <br />
<br />
Third is the storage of data generated as a result of dynamic
interactions between proteins, RNA and DNA in order to adapt to the
events and changes during cellular life cycle in the form of
nucleoprotein or <b>DNA-protein complexes</b>. <br />
<br />
The data generation and storage capacity of DNA in three different
hierarchical levels and time periods demonstrates that genome plays a
plethora of roles in cellular activities and heredity. Formatting of
genome for its generation and storage of data is carried out via DNA
sequences of various features. Genomic system is composed of repeating
DNA sequences. DNA sequences (satellite) function as a marker as they
repeat numerous times in various frequencies. Genome includes genomic
folders similar to that of computer systems. These genomic folders,
also known as the epigenetic index of genomes, are responsible for the
remodeling of chromatin and the coordinated control of genomic
functions. Repeating DNA sequences play a critical role in replication
of genome (making a copy of DNA), dispersal of copied DNA into daughter
cells and construction of support systems that enable organization of
chromatins. <br />
<br />
It is possible to better understand genomic functions in relation to
examples such as memory sticks and hard drives that are used in
electronic information systems. The difference between a genome as a
basic data-information storage medium from a hard disc is that it can be
replicated as required by its nature and these replicas can be
transferred to daughter cells. Following examples could be given to
illustrate that a genome gains function only when it interacts with
various data processing modules in the cell. <br />
a) A copy of genome is produced by cellular DNA replication system <br />
b) Correct localization of each genome copy towards daughter cells is
only possible when chromosome segregation system works (the centrosomes
and microtubules)<br />
c) The central transcription system is responsible for the copy of data
from DNA to RNA. Different gene expression patterns are developed via
regulation of transcription time and level with the help of
transcription factors and a web of cell signalization. <br />
<br />
Very intricately organized genomic system structures are designed
through the successive combination of protein encoding sequences,
signals distributed in various places and repeating DNA sequences.
Formatting of genome resembles formatting of computer programs. Various
repeated serial commands of computer software are used to allocate
addresses to files independent of the original data contained; different
computer systems use different signals and structures to manage
programs. In a similar fashion, diverse living species often utilize
repeating DNA sequences and chromosomal structures to organize the
encoded information and to format their genomes. <br />
<br />
Diversity and variation of repeating DNA sequences are building blocks
that are constructed into different genomic system structures. Genomes
of different organisms bear characteristic system morphology just like
computers with various operating systems and hardware. For instance,
animal cells are created as a good model to take and incorporate foreign
DNA into their genomes. Genetic data transfer among organisms of the
same kind is referred to as “vertical gene transfer” whereas transfers
between different species, genuses and classes are called “horizontal
gene transfer.” Mobile DNA sequences like transposons are very
effective horizontal gene transfer agents.<br />
<br />
Cellular differentiation and morphogenesis (formation of tissue and
organ from cell) is not programmed completely in the primary structure
of the DNA sequence. Components of modular programs are encoded in a
flexible way and a continuous renewed and recombined arrangement is
enabled when needed. <br />
The reason behind creation of different organisms from a single genome
is this utilization of such genomic structure. Metamorphosis, that is
the development of different organisms like invertebrates such as a
caterpillar and a butterfly, is a good example of this feature. <br />
<br />
Two organisms from the perspective of the same genomic protein and RNA
codes can be considered as two different species. Different genomic
structures and repetition of sequences among different organisms are
distinctive criteria for the identification of species since these
features can lead to mismatch of reproductive cells, different
expression patterns of genetic code sequences, and may cause ecological
diversity as well. That is why repeated DNA sequences are very important
in studying parental relationships. Today, microsatellite DNA as
repeated DNA sequences are used to configure biological relations among
individuals in forensic sciences. Plant species vary in respect to the
repeated sequences in centromeres in their chromosomes; these variations
are used for identification of species. Main determinants of genomic
system structure are diversity, frequency, and genomic localization of
repeated DNA sequences. To explain this with examples, we could say that
successively repeated sequences at centromeres, telomere repetitions
and transcription, packing of chromatin, repeated sequences that are
spread throughout genome in charge of cellular functions like nucleus
localization are the main elements of the genome system structure.
Genome is a single integrated system that is controlled closely and
remotely via communication webs that use repeated sequences.<br />
<br />
While explaining the Qur’anic concept of the Manifest Record (36:12)
Bediuzzaman Said Nursi, the great renovator of Islamic thought in Turkey
in the twentieth century, wrote that the Manifest Record expresses one
aspect of Divine knowledge that is related “more to the past and future
than to the present. It is a book of Divine Destiny that contains the
origins, roots, and seeds of things, rather than their flourishing forms
in their visible existence” (30th Word, Second Aim).<br />
<br />
Inspired from this view, a seed can be considered as a tiny adorned form
of Divinely creative command as programs and indexes and as a
determinant for those programs and indexes in the organization of an
entire tree. Since the Manifest Record book, as a title of Divine
knowledge and command, observes the past and the future rather than the
present, the genome of a grain or a seed acts like a library and an
archive in which the future and past of an organism is written. <br />
<br />
Sequences encoding different information in DNA<br />
Different information types corresponding with various DNA sequences
exist in the genome. These DNA sequences that were considered junk for a
long time because they were not coding proteins, have in fact been
found to be responsible for an amazing array of functions in genomic
structure. Some of these sequences include: <br />
<br />
1) Group determining sequences that enable coordinated or successive expression of genes,<br />
2) Sequences acting as a marker in charge of initiation and termination during transcription of DNA to RNA ,<br />
3) Signal sequences responsible for conversion of primary immature RNA, sequences into smaller functional RNA molecules, <br />
4) Transcription control sequences that determine the expression frequency of genes,<br />
5) Sequences that identify and mark the initiation regions for intensification and remodeling of chromatins, <br />
6) Sequences that make binding regions which affect the relocation of genome in nucleus or nucleolus, <br />
7) Sequences that target regions where covalent DNA modification (methylation) with functional groups like methyl takes place, <br />
8) Sequences that control and identify the regions responsible for initiation of DNA replication, <br />
9) Sequences that make the structures which enable completion of replication at terminal ends,<br />
10) Sequences at the segregation points that enable equal distribution
of copied DNA molecules into daughter cells and centromere sequences, <br />
11) Sequences responsible for guidance during repair of DNA bound errors and damages,<br />
12) Start point sequences used for repackaging of genomes, <br />
<br />
Recurring sequences exist in the genomes of many organisms and shows
great structural diversity. Recurring elements function as an initiator
or terminator for heterochromatin regions. Furthermore they form an
important scaffold and binding spots for folding of DNA structure. As if
they carry out the job of an architectural mold in specific shaping of
genome to be packed into a very limited area. The ratio of repeating
sequences in genome (60-90%) is much more than sequences that are
encoding proteins and RNA (10-40%). To explain it with an example,
chromosomes in human genome are made up of packages of protein-DNA such
as heterochromatin and euchromatin. Heterochromatin regions usually make
up the regions with no transcription whereas euchromatin regions
feature DNA transcription. <br />
<br />
The ratio of protein encoding sequences to the entire human DNA is
approximately 1.2%. Around 43% of euchromatin regions are composed of
recurring and mobile DNA elements. 18% of heterochromatin region is
also made of satellite (dense repeating sequences) and mobile DNA
elements. Therefore almost 50% of human genomic DNA is composed of these
repeating DNA sequences. In bacteria however, these only make up around
5-10% of the genome. These sequences were described as parasitic and
junk individual DNA structures up until today and still continues to be
described thus by many researchers and scientist. Nevertheless, even
today, mobile DNA elements and repeating sequences are accepted as
genomic parasites. Recent advances in the last ten years that have
demonstrated this is not true, have instead revealed the vital
importance of repeating sequences in genomic functions.<br />
<br />
Repeating DNA sequences affect chromatin (dense pack of DNA and protein)
structure in two ways. Irregular repeating DNA sequence copies contain
binding regions for proteins that organize DNA. Heterochromatin (darker
since it is densely packed chromatin) inhibits transcription and
recombination, delays replication, and generally blocks the reading of
information in DNA sequences that contain genetic coding.
Heterochromatin regions are distributed throughout the chromosome.
Because of this, presence of regions with coupled successive repeated
sequences triggers heterochromatin formation. <br />
<br />
In fruit flies, placement of protein encoding loci required for eye
pigmentation near the heterochromatin blocks in centromeres (phenomenon
of position effect) is provided via organization of chromosomes and
thus, formation of phenotypic characters are inhibited. The “phenomenon
of position effect” is convincing evidence that genome is a major system
which is integrated with composition of partially repeating DNA
sequences. When heterochromatin amount is increased in XYY male fruit
flies, reorganized pigmentation of eye expression decreases. In XO
males, when heterochromatin amount decreases, inhibition becomes severe.
Changes in levels of protein which binds to special heterochromatin
specific DNA regions generate opposite effects. Decrease in these
proteins reduces or suppresses “phenomenon of position effect.” Surplus
synthesis of these proteins also enriches this effect. <br />
<br />
Repeating DNA sequences play an important role in the transfer of genome
into daughter cells. For instance, they function in formation of the
centromeres as chromosomal binding regions for microtubules, during
gamete formation as linear terminals of chromosomes are replicated, and
during chromosomal matching. Distribution of repeating sequences plays a
major role in configuration of genomic functions. Each genome has
genomic system structure that is shaped dependent on the amount of
repeating DNA sequences to a major extent. <br />
<br />
Going back to Nursi’s explanation of the Manifest Record, we can draw a
parallelism between the book of the universe and the book of revelation,
the first of which shows us that certain sequences in the genome are
repeated for significance and necessity, just as many verses are
repeated frequently in the Qur’an with nuances to refer to different
meanings, benefits, and purposes, opening a wider space for many
interpretations.<br />
<br />
A genome is not only a book that contains protein and RNA codes, but
also has a complex system structure with many functions for cellular
vitality. The most needed sequences are those that are repeated more
frequently. They are not pieces of junk DNA as predicted, they are
jewels Divinely constructed. <br />
<br />
<b>References</b><br />
Shapiro J. A. 2001. “Genome Formatting for Computation and Function
:Genome Organization and Reorganization in Evolution: Formatting for
Computation and Function.” Presented at a symposium on "Contextualizing
the Genome," Ghent University, Belgium, November 25 - 28, 2001 (Ann.
N.Y. Acad. Sci., in press)<br />
Shapiro, J.A. 2005. “A 21st century view of evolution: genome system
architecture, repetitive DNA, and natural genetic engineering.” Gene
345, pp: 91–100.<br />
Shapiro J. A. and Sternberg R. V. 2005. “Why repetitive DNA is essential
to genome function.” Biol. Rev., 80, pp. 1–24. Cambridge Philosophical
Society.</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Via Fountain Magazine (By : Hamza Aydin) </div>
underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-42839191888646780002013-10-09T09:26:00.002-07:002013-10-09T09:26:48.290-07:00The Prophet Muhammad's Illiteracy<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiPen-S77UJ4B9JOigxUTpjkQGJgs0l8YWU6UjJsb3pI2OmDbbE1VRbrKcHhSk7NZ7-K1WDKNndJH83OnUfSByJkQcXsA0DFMEvkKJq1k4ai0LULC4RFZIxOGac3xFffKWYuRbbyfXR5V-_/s1600/Prophet_MUHAMMAD_by_SoulFlamer+-+Copy.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="163" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiPen-S77UJ4B9JOigxUTpjkQGJgs0l8YWU6UjJsb3pI2OmDbbE1VRbrKcHhSk7NZ7-K1WDKNndJH83OnUfSByJkQcXsA0DFMEvkKJq1k4ai0LULC4RFZIxOGac3xFffKWYuRbbyfXR5V-_/s400/Prophet_MUHAMMAD_by_SoulFlamer+-+Copy.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Question: <b>Was the Prophet illiterate throughout his life?</b> Or did he-the
one for whom veils were lifted with the verse "<b>Read!</b>", and thus who
could read the mysteries of the universe-ever read and write in the
sense that we understand?<br />
<br />
The Arabic word that is used to describe the Prophet's illiteracy is
"<u>ummi</u>." This word is derived from "umm," which means "mother, the middle
or navel of everything, where everything or something springs up."
Ummi, thus, connects the Prophet to his mother and refers to his purest
nature which remained as unsullied as on the day she gave birth to him.
This word also refers to the Prophet's connection to his birthplace,
Mecca, which is described in the Qur'an as "the mother of towns (Umm
al-Qura, 6:92), and to the holy shrine Ka'ba, the mother of houses (Umm
al-Buyut).<br />
<br />
The Prophet, peace be upon him, could not read the Torah or Bible or
other books. God did not teach him to read or write, and this was one of
the requirements for his messengership. In fact, the following verse
states this: You did not (O Messenger) read of any book before it (the
revelation of this Qur'an), nor did you write one with your right (or
left) hand. For then, those who have ever sought to disprove the truth
might have a reason to doubt (it) (29:48).<br />
<br />
As can be understood from the verse, writing and reading were not taught
to the Messenger of God. If he had known how to, those pursuing
falsehood would have said, "He takes previous books, reads them, and
explains to us what he read." However, everyone-friends and foes-knew
that the Prophet was illiterate. Consequently, here we see that his not
being able to read and write is related to his messengership, and this
fact was confirmed by his peers during his time, the Age of Happiness.<br />
<br />
In this respect, the Prophet was not made to write. However, it is
necessary to say here immediately that knowledge does not mean being
able to write. The Messenger of God was given the knowledge of both
former times and of the times to come. When God poured his blessings
over him, the horizons lying between the East and the West cracked open,
and he saw everything in front of him like the pages of a book, from an
atom to the globe and from the macro-realm to the micro-realm.<br />
<br />
God blew into his spirit the capacity "to express and read the truth"
when He said, "Read!" (96:1). God said "Read" and He made His Prophet
recite as he memorized the revelation all at once.<br />
<br />
His words that he spoke in relation to every concern of life outside of
the Qur'an are a separate treasury of knowledge, and this treasury is
called "non-recited revelation" (wahy al-ghayri matluw). Non-recited
revelation means revelation other than the Qur'an that was blown
directly into the Prophet Muhammad's spirit by God by means of Gabriel.
God's Prophet spoke throughout his life, and the distinguished
Companions at his side recorded his speech. At one time some Companions
thought that it was not right to record things spoken by him who as a
human being could get upset at times.<br />
<br />
Abu Hurayra describes this incident as follows: "None among the
Companions of the Prophet know more hadith (the Prophet's sayings and
actions) than me; however, Abdullah b. Amr ibn al-As is an exception,
for I did not write it, but he did."<br />
<br />
Actually, according to the statement of Abdullah b. Amr, he would write
down everything he heard from God's Messenger. Some said to him, "You
write every word that comes out of the Prophet's mouth, but he is a
human also. There are times when he is angry and times when he is
pleased" (Hadith narrators conceal whose words these were as a matter of
courtesy and because it is not necessary.)<br />
<br />
Due to this, Abdullah ibn Amr stopped writing and informed the Prophet
about it. The Prophet raised his hand to his blessed mouth and said,
"Write! I swear to God in Whose hand my life is that nothing but the
truth comes out from here."<br />
<br />
Even if he was a human, he was still a prophet; his anger and his
pleasure were for God, and he always spoke the truth in every state.
Yes, none of his words were from whim, and they did not stem from human
desires. More correctly, he did not speak from himself, but only what
was revealed to him (see 53:3).<br />
<br />
The Prophet's illiteracy should not be understood to mean that he did
not know anything. Even before revelation came he was a perfect and
exalted spirit. He acted according to the remnants of the religion of
Abraham, peace be upon him. He was known by those around him as a
virtuous person. If that had not been the case, at a time when people
were killing one another in Mecca, would they have turned to him as a
judge? <br />
<br />
God created him special. Then, He reflected His own knowledge to that
mirror, and we witnessed the truths belonging to God in His Messenger.</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Via Fountain Magazine (By : Hikmet Isik) </div>
underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-41121049854598042582013-10-09T08:29:00.001-07:002013-10-09T08:29:56.668-07:00Is Hizmet is a Threat for Turkish Goverment?<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEidUBPnMyLxfqP-JOGGlU-25834qF6Z2Spe4JHrrPzNpja4AisMa6Azl7YNpm7KZBAj3Ijfz9D-nYz54lVuDIsmtHfTvYwvesl_CJInV2XG_W5G9KxV83FQljz3dIbzRuTUS4gkLPbfYpxu/s1600/Turkey1.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img alt="Turkey" border="0" height="250" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEidUBPnMyLxfqP-JOGGlU-25834qF6Z2Spe4JHrrPzNpja4AisMa6Azl7YNpm7KZBAj3Ijfz9D-nYz54lVuDIsmtHfTvYwvesl_CJInV2XG_W5G9KxV83FQljz3dIbzRuTUS4gkLPbfYpxu/s400/Turkey1.jpg" title="Turkey" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
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<div style="text-align: justify;">
The Turkish press has been dominantly occupied with the coup and
violence in Egypt and Syria, and one more issue that has erupted, as if
out of no where, is a so-called rift between the government and the
Gulen Movement (GM), an influential faith-inspired educational movement.
The story goes that some influential circles within the ruling party,
or supporting it, believe the GM was behind the Gezi Park protests which
caused serious problems for the government. The protests had started to
stop a government project to erect a historical barracks with a
shopping center on the site of a small but famous park in Istanbul. But
later on, the protests evolved into a full-scale anti-government action.
This rather hard-to-believe accusation about the GM has later expanded
to repeat the old cliche that GM members are secretly infiltrating the
state bureaucracy and the government is doing its best to keep them
away, if not kick them out of their positions totally.<br />
<br />
I think this is a futile dispute, apparently based on misinformation and
false fear, and will serve no positive purpose for Turkey. The Gulen
Movement, aka Hizmet, is very well known for its capacity to maintain a
certain level of distance, and proximity, to all political groups. That
distance is a sine qua non for this movement which is extremely cautious
not to appear on any side of the naturally divisive political spectrum.
Hizmet rather positions itself in a dynamic pendulum, and this
positioning not only makes them equally accessible for every one,
regardless of their political choice, but also frees them from possible
burdens and engagements that may arise from hooking oneself to a single
party. This essential condition is difficult to digest for political
parties which prefer to see their supporters openly declare their sides,
march for them in rallies, and sing ballads of unconditional love and
support. Hizmet has never done that in the last four decades since its
inception in the '60s.<br />
<br />
The only exception – still without an unconditional lifetime commitment –
was perhaps the constitutional referendum in 2010, which coincided
September 12, exactly the same day 30 years later after the coup d'etat
in 1980 that had penned the humiliating junta constitution, which is
still effective. Fethullah Gulen said before the referendum that every
Turkish citizen should vote "yes" for this reform package introduced by
the government, resulting in a landslide pass. Mehmet Ali Sahin, a
leading figure in AK Party and the former parliament speaker, said
recently that AK Party could start wielding real power as an elected
government only after this referendum, before which Turkey was under the
tutelage of the army and appointed civilian bureaucracy.<sup>[1]</sup>
Professor Burhan Kuzu of AK Party repeats the same sentiments when he
says that if it was not for the referendum and the constitutional
revisions, AK Party was definitely going to face another closure case.<sup>[2]</sup>
Turkey was able to accomplish the September 12th and Turkish citizens
fulfilled their duty that day. Yet, it would be daydreaming to wish such
a single day to descend from the sky for all other countries suffering
from a similar tutelage and oppression. Such a day is very much unlikely
without strong civil society networks that are able to empower people
for nationwide goals.<br />
<br />
The Gulen Movement is one such group - not only because of its media
power but also because of its wide public outreach throughout the
country. It is perhaps the widest fellowship of voluntary associations -
at least in the Tocquevillen sense, where groups gather around the
ideas and inspirations of Fethullah Gulen. It is a movement of a
combination of formal and informal associations yet without a
headquarters, without a common name, logo, or sign, which, as understood
from the recent dispute, is for some circles a threat to the government
and even to the prime minister. These circles perceive - mistakenly, at
best, or intentionally, at worst - a ghoul-like nature of Hizmet,
which, for them, is present everywhere, dominates all bureaucracy -
including the judiciary and the police - and constitutes something like a
parallel rule next to the government.<br />
<br />
Gulen himself said several times that he has always encouraged those
coming to listen to his sermons and talks to rear their children not to
become imams or preachers only, but to enroll them in the best schools
so that they can serve their country as teachers, doctors, engineers,
soldiers, judges, prosecutors, and as police. And he has been doing that
since 1960s. So, yes, there should be quite a number of bureaucrats who
sympathize with his ideas, try to emulate his code of ethics and
citizenship, and certainly his advice on civic service. Being inspired
from his ideas does not, or should not, disqualify a person from public
service, and blacklisting individuals according to their civil or
faith-related associations is a violation of human rights.
Unfortunately, this seems to be what is happening in Turkey, as
understood from a recent statement released by the Journalists and
Writers Foundation, of which Gulen is the honorary president: "… due to a
large number of news reports in recent times, it is public knowledge
that those members of the judiciary who were alleged to be close or
sympathetic to the Hizmet Movement have now been dismissed from their
posts."<sup>[3]</sup><br />
<br />
About politics and power sharing, Hizmet philosophy is what Gulen
himself would call "Hasani." Hasan was one of the two beloved
grandchildren of the Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him. Hasan
"declined the highest political and spiritual position in Islam as
caliph in order to prevent bloodshed when the Muslim community was
divided into two groups, and if either leader had insisted upon
leadership, it would have caused further conflict. Although he had the
majority of the community on his side, Hasan (r.a) did not want to
endanger people's lives and risk the community's stability by accepting
the popular support. Choosing the greater communal benefit over all
kinds of individual benefits is a very important rule in Gulen's
philosophy. In Gulen's works, Hasani ruh refers to being altruistic,
trustworthy, peaceful, and devoted to the service of humanity."<sup>[4]</sup>
It is nonsensical to be paranoid over baseless arguments, as if Hizmet
is the greatest challenge to the current government. Whoever comes to
the office should make use of Hizmet's potential to the benefit of all
nation. If there is any criticism coming from Hizmet, then the
government should know it is not to the advantage of any person or group
claim for power sharing.<br />
<br />
Turkey is lucky to have Hizmet Movement with its outstanding educational
services, relief organizations, and intercultural dialogue efforts
within Turkey and around the world. It is also a blessing that this
movement has raised generations of well-educated Turkish young men and
women who are now serving in their own capacity in numerous official and
civil posts. Individuals who are dedicated to rule of law and motivated
to serve their nation are a blessing to a government like AK Party, who
by now should have already acknowledged their support for many reforms
accomplished in the last decade. Lasting reforms is possible in the long
term in a bottom-up direction in which the people rise by merit to rule
themselves, and a government's responsibility is facilitate that
natural upward process rather than imposing things on the society
downward. If a nation cannot achieve to make the current flow in that
direction, then "spring" becomes a very short-lived season, and the
gloomy fall comes back again.<br />
<br />
<br />
<b>[1]</b><a href="http://www.haber7.com/partiler/haber/1062322-sahin-ak-parti-o-referandumla-iktidar-oldu" target="_blank">http://www.haber7.com/partiler/haber/1062322-sahin-ak-parti-o-referandumla-iktidar-oldu</a><br />
<b>[2]</b><a href="http://www.zaman.com.tr/politika_burhan-kuzu-anayasa-degisikligi-olmasaydi-ak-partiye-kapatma-davasi-acilacakti_2122612.html" target="_blank">http://www.zaman.com.tr/politika_burhan-kuzu-anayasa-degisikligi-olmasaydi-ak-partiye-kapatma-davasi-acilacakti_2122612.html</a><br />
<b>[3]</b> You can read the full statement here: <a href="http://gyv.org.tr/Haberler/Detay/2455" target="_blank">http://gyv.org.tr/Haberler/Detay/2455</a><br />
<b>[4]</b> Salih Yucel. 2011. "Spiritual Role Models in Gulen's
Educational Philosophy." Tawarikh, International Journal for Historical
Studies, 3(1).</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Via Fountain Magazine (By : Hakan Yesilova) </div>
underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6988769749575052192.post-80907524828841862092013-10-09T08:20:00.000-07:002013-10-09T08:20:34.971-07:00We Have A Dream<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjSyfT4VGFhG52wSwwDPLtE9bTvsbeFdogycJIs7PoJkmBSqOBbAvBvvBMJ8PtmmeBTRQ2Rv3cCI_65hF7QfXvGwMy2UMZEuoVzgQoVXAZWHuer18Lk71p0iTsEQw2_kV_9ghnG0zm8xL-c/s1600/08-03-2012-WeHaveaDream_0110.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img alt="We Have a Dream" border="0" height="275" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjSyfT4VGFhG52wSwwDPLtE9bTvsbeFdogycJIs7PoJkmBSqOBbAvBvvBMJ8PtmmeBTRQ2Rv3cCI_65hF7QfXvGwMy2UMZEuoVzgQoVXAZWHuer18Lk71p0iTsEQw2_kV_9ghnG0zm8xL-c/s400/08-03-2012-WeHaveaDream_0110.png" title="We Have a Dream" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
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<div style="text-align: justify;">
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">August 28 was the 50th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s
famous “I Have a Dream” speech. Attended by hundreds of thousands, it
was a most memorable day not only in American history, but for all
nations. Arguably, what was perhaps regrettable about that inspirational
speech and the great gathering was that it overshadowed decades of
dedicated struggle and suffering. Civil rights were not acquired by a
speech nor by one march only. With all respect to the great memory of
that day and Dr. King, we, the new generations of the twenty-first
century, have to remember that the great heroes of the civil rights
movement did much more across many years, all of which John Lewis
summarizes in a single phrase: <a href="http://www.onbeing.org/program/john-lewis-on-the-art-and-discipline-of-nonviolence/5126" style="color: black; font-weight: bold;" target="_blank" title="the art and discipline of nonviolence">the art and discipline of nonviolence</a> (visit the link to listen to Krista Tippett’s fascinating interview with him).</span></span></div>
<br />
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Looking back on what Congressman John Lewis and his legendary friends
like Dr. King managed to obtain, these two qualities prove to be very
pivotal for civil and citizenship rights. Lewis said they trained
themselves for non-violence; they gathered regularly and rehearsed the
worst scenarios and how they would stand strong without retaliation in
the face of violence: </div>
<br />
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<i>“We did go through the motion, the drama, of saying that if someone
kick you, spit on you, pull you off the lunch counter stool, continue to
make eye contact. Continue to give the impression, yes, you may beat
me, but I'm human. Be friendly, try to smile, and just stay nonviolent.
And during the nonviolent campaign in a city like Nashville and so many
other parts of the American South, you never had one incident of someone
striking back or hitting back… We would act out. There would be black
and white young people, students, interracial group, playing the roles
of African-Americans, or be an interracial group playing the roles of
white.”</i></div>
<br />
<div style="text-align: justify;">
How many of us today, after 50 years of that speech, remember what it
signifies? People who are marching these days for their freedoms, are
they able to unite around a single cause? The real change comes when a
nation is united to march together for the same purpose in the same
square. If Rabiah square is rivaled by Tahrir, true freedom is then
still far in the distance. We can confidently say Dr. King’s dream has
been realized extensively enough to pave the way for an African-American
to be the President – and get re-elected – yet racial inequality is not
over in the world or the US. </div>
<br />
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Congressman Lewis says the way of peace has to be taught. In this world,
which is a great test for humankind, we are being tested whether we
will learn to live in peace, or whether we will fail and give in to
violence. I think his advice is worth listening to, for the compassion
embedded therein is the key for all freedoms:</div>
<br />
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<i>“It's just not something that is natural. You have to be taught the
way of peace, the way of love, the way of nonviolence. And in the
religious sense, in the moral sense, you can say in the bosom of every
human being, there is a spark of the divine. So you don't have a right
as a human to abuse that spark of the divine in your fellow human being.
We, from time to time, would discuss if you see someone attacking you,
beating you, spitting on you, you have to think of that person, you
know, years ago that person was an innocent child, innocent little baby.
And so what happened? Something go wrong? Did the environment? Did
someone teach that person to hate, to abuse others? So you try to appeal
to the goodness of every human being and you don't give up. You never
give up on anyone.”</i></div>
<br />
<div style="text-align: justify;">
We, as humans, have qualities that are potentially superior to those of
angels. Lewis’ call is to be faithful to this innate essence which will
enable us to see that potential in every human being and will urge us to
think a second time before we hurt anyone. Then we might be able to
wake up to the reality of <a href="http://blog.fountainmagazine.com/index/detail/www.fountainmagazine.com/Issue/detail/A-Dream-Worth-The-Entire-World" style="color: black; font-weight: bold;" target="_blank" title="A Dream Worth The Entire World">" a dream worth the entire world"</a> in the words of Fethullah Gulen:</div>
<br />
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<i>“When we were ourselves, our homes, streets, and walkways exchanged
warm glances with their inhabitants; their demeanor was so meaningful
that those who could observe them from the angle of their spirit could
feel as if these places were intoning things that were unique to our
realm. Almost everyone in this realm was intoxicated with a kind of
music originating in their heart and refined in their beliefs, dreams,
and subconscious. Every moment thrilled them with a different breeze of
meanings and they were overjoyed. There were occasional occurrences of
frustration and sorrow, but they did not last for long. Such moments
were immediately followed by the victory of this realm’s unique
character, texture, and ever-enchanting nature that would overcome all
the tumult in people’s conscience and convert the darkest autumns into
the brightest springs. Our days and nights were always cordial, our
months and years were all resplendent.”</i></div>
<br />
Via The Fountain (By Hakan Yesilova) <br />
<br />underwaterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03888924488802090468noreply@blogger.com0