-
6 votes
-
How to learn a language: Input
8 votes -
Do you have a moral duty to leave Facebook?
31 votes -
What is Federal land?
15 votes -
Return of African artifacts sets a tricky precedent for Europe’s museums
5 votes -
What these two French words can teach us about social change
3 votes -
American exorcism
4 votes -
A new history for humanity – The Human Era
7 votes -
A 4,000-year old tale of trade and contraband
3 votes -
This staircase from the Eiffel Tower is for sale
10 votes -
We thought the Incas couldn’t write. These knots change everything
8 votes -
Jonestown’s victims have a lesson to teach us, so I listened
10 votes -
Cultural activist from Guyana's Wapishana tribe tries to revive a near-extinct language
6 votes -
A toy monkey that escaped Nazi Germany and reunited a family
6 votes -
Who’s behind that beard? Historians are using facial recognition software to identify people in Civil War photographs
8 votes -
Rediscovering Ancient Greek music
7 votes -
Becoming Anne Frank - Why did we turn an isolated teenage girl into the world’s most famous Holocaust victim?
7 votes -
New research confirms substantial majority of Scottish people are not religious and not spiritual
19 votes -
Why are we still teaching reading the wrong way?
9 votes -
Bonfire of the humanities: The role of history in a society afflicted by short-termism
13 votes -
One hundred years on, the scars from World War I linger on Australia's streets and in our psyche.
6 votes -
Humanists going all the way: AHA to defend church-state separation at the Supreme Court
11 votes -
Pope vs. pope: How Francis and Benedict’s simmering conflict could split the Catholic Church
14 votes -
What's an arts degree really worth? $200,000, just for starters.
What's an arts degree really worth? $200,000, just for starters. And here's the study in question: The value of the humanities: A critical foundation of our society
8 votes -
At 63, I threw away my prized portrait of Robert E. Lee
9 votes -
Believing without evidence is always morally wrong
10 votes -
The Gauls really did embalm the severed heads of enemies, research shows
5 votes -
Found: The earliest European image of Aboriginal Australians
4 votes -
The Roman pomerium
4 votes -
American Nazis in the 1930s—The German American Bund
10 votes -
The name ‘Mormon’: Why all the fuss, and why now?
8 votes -
Pakistan’s ultra-Islamist party blocked roads in major cities for a third day on Friday in protest against the acquittal of a Christian woman on death row for blasphemy allegations
8 votes -
The island that never stops apologising
7 votes -
Does anyone here share a passion for spiritual development, the occult, metaphysics, or fringe science/academia?
One of my biggest hobbies and passions over the last 10 or 15 years has been essentially all of the above. I'm not the smartest or the most well-read lady out there by any means but I enjoy...
One of my biggest hobbies and passions over the last 10 or 15 years has been essentially all of the above. I'm not the smartest or the most well-read lady out there by any means but I enjoy exploring the more shadowy realms of discourse. There's lots and lots of dross but occasionally a nugget of something magnificent, and over the years it's eroded away my original scientific materialist atheism completely and my thinking now is more animist, panpsychist, deist. I've spent years off and on experimenting with (actual, not stage) magic, and though I was never super committed to the full ceremonial experience like others I've seen, it's become a part of how I think.
So I was wondering if there's any here that don't fit into the typical scientific materialist box in one form or another. And if so, what're you reading or experimenting with right now?
Currently I'm reading through Conversations with God and it's persuaded me to start practicing loving-kindness meditation. I've only been at that a few days but I'm interested to see what impact it has on my daily life. It's definitely true that up until these past few days I've never actively focused on trying to love myself and others, which kind of surprises me when I think about it. But that sort of thing isn't really something I see emphasized in our culture or in my own little circle.
How about you?
21 votes -
'There are no rules': The unforeseen consequences of sex robots
21 votes -
The myth of whiteness in classical sculpture
8 votes -
Calling prophet Muhammad a pedophile does not fall within freedom of speech: European court
39 votes -
The elusive foolproof theory of the origin of language
2 votes -
Anti-semitisim comes to a city of tolerance
13 votes -
Pittsburgh synagogue shooting leaves at least four dead, official says
34 votes -
What is the best age to learn a language?
13 votes -
Why are Americans still uncomfortable with atheism?
18 votes -
Time Traveller by Merriam-Webster—Find out when a word was first used in print
9 votes -
From the liberty cap to the pussy hat: A history of radical objects
6 votes -
Civilization and its latest discontents
7 votes -
The oldest true stories in the world
6 votes -
Eureka Stockade rebellion
3 votes -
Brazil museum fire: Prized 'Luzia' fossil skull recovered
5 votes -
The pyramid scheme that collapsed a nation
6 votes -
About time: why western philosophy can only teach us so much
6 votes