tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-326167780677397310.post8815586963783405107..comments2024-03-27T21:35:04.988-07:00Comments on EGO OUT: AXIL"S PROFOUND AND EXTENDED COMMENTS RE "SYNTHESIS"Georgina Popescuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04628821029016016988noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-326167780677397310.post-27863060242898778222013-04-10T17:51:46.911-07:002013-04-10T17:51:46.911-07:00Dear L Dussan
Please contact Peter Glouk, the admi...Dear L Dussan<br />Please contact Peter Glouk, the administrator of this blog, to get your requested contact info.<br />Thank youJohn Hadjichristoshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13745216633198255742noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-326167780677397310.post-60077455338992246942013-04-10T17:14:09.947-07:002013-04-10T17:14:09.947-07:00John
Enjoyed both Axils writing and your reply.
...John<br /><br />Enjoyed both Axils writing and your reply.<br /><br />Intuition is very much a subject in the Jungian camp.<br /><br />Put very simply, Carl Jung was at one time Freud's 'heir apparent' but they had a big falling out and the heart of the disagreement centers on issues that include 'intuition'.<br /><br />Freud was an extraordinarily logical thinker and had little time for Jung's interest in paranormal phenomenon. To this day Jungians and Freudian (core followers) have disdain for each other's POV in this area. Not dissimilar to scientists arguing over CF/LENR :) <br /><br />I would go with the Freudians if it were not for the many experiences I have had at solving problems where there was no discernible logic behind how my solution was reached. <br /><br />And cap that off with repeated instances of where a friend pops into my minds focus (even if in another country) and when I contact them discover they were either trying to contact me or had been thinking directly of me.<br /><br />Logic doesn't have a formula to deal with the 'paranormal' and intuition tends to belong there.<br /><br />DSMdsjm1https://www.blogger.com/profile/07779323885237127015noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-326167780677397310.post-39634667355493744442013-04-10T12:05:34.370-07:002013-04-10T12:05:34.370-07:00Mr. Hadjichristos is there any email I can ask you...Mr. Hadjichristos is there any email I can ask you some questions about the paper you presented at last ICCF.<br /><br />As a PhD student hoping to do a dissertation on LENR I was hoping you would assist me on some questions. Maybe Peter can be our intermediary if you'd like.<br /><br />Thanks<br />L DussanAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-326167780677397310.post-67816744958326679392013-04-05T07:31:08.864-07:002013-04-05T07:31:08.864-07:00This report was published last October but hit the...This report was published last October but hit the mainstream media today:<br />www.technologyreview.com/view/513326/scientists-use-mri-to-glimpse-the-dreaming-mind/<br /><br />Are there any similar studies monitoring with fMRI brain's activity while problem solving?<br /><br />Yes, some are working while sleeping whilst other do the opposite. The real issue is what they dream in any case. I like most the ones dreaming the impossible while working or sleeping.<br /><br />JohnJohn Hadjichristoshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13745216633198255742noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-326167780677397310.post-31284757675498879412013-04-05T04:04:21.209-07:002013-04-05T04:04:21.209-07:00Working while sleeping...
Amazing...
Working while sleeping...<br />Amazing...<br />drboblog.comhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15666484882867601812noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-326167780677397310.post-1712823273735286192013-04-04T13:48:20.882-07:002013-04-04T13:48:20.882-07:00I copy (with Peter's permission) here a short ...I copy (with Peter's permission) here a short presentation of a very interesting book named "Seven Life Lessons of Chaos" related with the above post and my non formal definition.<br /><br />While humans have had to deal with chaos since ancient times, only recently has science recognized it as a fundamental force in the universe.<br /><br />Chaos theory, originally used to understand the movements that create thunderstorms, raging rivers, and hurricanes, is now being applied to everything from medicine to warfare to social dynamics and theories about how organizations form and change. Chaos is evolving from a scientific theory into a cultural metaphor. As a metaphor it allows us to query some of our most cherished assumptions and encourages us to ask fresh questions about reality.<br /><br />Our modern society has been obsessed with conquering and scientifically controlling the world around us. However, chaotic, nonlinear systems - such as nature, society, and our individual lives - lie beyond all our attempts to predict, manipulate, and control them. Chaos suggests that instead of resisting life's uncertainties, we should embrace the possibilities they offer.<br /><br />In this groundbreaking new book, John Briggs and F. David Peat unfold seven lessons for embracing chaos in daily life:<br /><br />Be Creative: how to engage with chaos to find imaginative new solutions and live more dynamically.<br /><br />Use Butterfly Power: how to let chaos grow local efforts into global results<br /><br />Go with the Flow: how to use chaos to work collectively with others<br /><br />Explore What's Between: how to discover life's rich subtleties and avoid the traps of stereotypes<br /><br />See the Art of the World: how to appreciate the beauty of life's chaos<br /><br />Live Within Time: how to utilize time's hidden depths<br /><br />Rejoin the Whole: how to realize our fractal connectedness to each other and the world.<br /><br />If you have ever felt your life was out of control and headed towards chaos, science has an important message: Life is chaos, and that's a very exciting thing.<br /><br />I am sure that life is a very exciting thing also.<br />Thank you for the hospitality and for the chance to express the above<br />John Hadjichristos<br /><br /> John Hadjichristoshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13745216633198255742noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-326167780677397310.post-83016640872511279702013-04-04T13:41:55.341-07:002013-04-04T13:41:55.341-07:00Freud's understanding/modeling on how brain wo...Freud's understanding/modeling on how brain works in its different modes was a significant moment in modern science, as it has been presented in the above Axil's piece "thinking out of the box" and in an area that physical scientists are not really are used to get in touch with.<br /><br />But I have a problem as a mathematician: Where intuition, one of the most powerful not explored tools in problem solving, is really "living"? What are the mechanisms triggering intuition at those rare moments when it blows your mind up with the obvious to be proved? <br /><br />Still I have not traced any robust definition on that question (inside or outside Freud's literature) nor any of my professorial friends working in neurosciences has given me a good answer. So I have to speculate based on my intuition only on the following non formal definition for the shake of a discussion:<br /><br />Intuition might be the evolutionary result of human brain living in societies to realize the so called "Lorentz's strange attractor" where a system collapsing from his old equilibrium will find a new balance, impossible to be predicted using any Newtonian approaches.<br /><br />It seems that such catastrophe of equilibria-to the rise of new ones is what really is happening both in societies, in economy, in physical systems AND in human brain. For the later, when it takes any decision, problem solving included. And after that, one has to do the real hard work to prove or to reject that the result of such process makes sense based on methodologies and observations.<br /><br />LENR+ systems seem to follow such time dependent process, aka they are following non-linear models. In such we might watch, for example, effects happening before their cause (as some theoreticians are debating recently) in a way "that makes sense" or other "strange" things that make conservatives from academia protest or lose their sleep when experimental evidence is provided. <br /><br />Fortuantly we know now that such we can make "chaos" work for us.... (continued in the next post)<br /><br />John Hadjichristoshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13745216633198255742noreply@blogger.com