5 people like this.

475 comment(s). Last comment by BalikZmSm 2020-06-03 20:57

Tom

2,984 posts

Posted by Tom > 2020-05-10 19:53 | Report Abuse

no la, god loves pyscho mom like you more2it, lol

FoolsGold

654 posts

Posted by FoolsGold > 2020-05-20 23:50 | Report Abuse

ple feel free to share any songs that can uplift our spirits , to be ONE as part of humanity,tq...

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 06:36 | Report Abuse

Check out the unprecedented and unparalleled REVEALATIONS by the 21st century science prophets:

Part 1:

At an atomic level, we’re all incredibly deeply connected. Hundreds of billions of atoms that were once inside each other human being on Earth. Throughout the generations, those same atoms continue to make up everything: the atoms of extinct prehistoric living things, and even the single-celled organisms that once dominated the planet.

Bones, muscles, skin, and the other organs only makes up 4% of the cells in your body. The other 96% are split, roughly evenly, between your blood cells and bacterial cells that live on and in our body.

An average-sized human has (percentage by weight in bracket):

4 × 1027 hydrogen atoms (9.5%),

2 × 1027 oxygen atoms (65%),

3 × 1026 carbon atoms (18.5%),

8 × 1025 nitrogen atoms (3.2%)

5 × 1312 miscellaneous atoms including calcium, phosphorous, sodium, potassium, sulfur, chlorine, and magnesium (4%)

Together, there are more atoms in your body than there are stars in the entire Universe.

With each year that goes by, in fact, more than 90% of the atoms are no longer there as they have been replaced.

In fact, right now, as we breathe, by the time a year goes by, approximately one atom from that breath will wind up in every other person on Earth’s lungs at any moment in time. In other words, we probably have approximately one atom from King Tut's last breath in our lungs right now.

So how connected are we? In particular, how many of the atoms in our bodies were in another human’s body at some point? Do we share atoms in common with everyone alive today? With everyone who’s ever lived? With Genghis Khan, Julius Caesar, Abraham Lincoln, etc.? Scientists have found the answer : not only do we each have hundreds of billions of atoms that were once in everyone else’s bodies, but we have approximately 1 atom in our body from every breath that every human has ever taken.



HOW ENLIGHTENING AND AWESOME! (Let learning about archaic mythological grade inspirational-cum-heart-warming fictions merely optional for kids of this millennium!)

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 06:48 | Report Abuse

Part 2:

Hominin populations were interbreeding at least 700,000 years ago. The revelation was made possible by sophisticated genetic analysis methods and advanced computing system.

The most famous instances of interbreeding, between modern Eurasians and Neanderthal and Denisovan predecessors, occurred 50,000 years ago. When they began interbreeding, the lineages of modern humans and those of Neanderthals and Denisovans were separated by 750,000 years.

The ability to sequence ancient genomes is helping scientists learn about what our ancestors ate, how they looked, and where they came from.Denisovans disappeared about 50,000 years ago, but not before passing on some of their genes to Homo sapiens, according to a 2018 study. Denisovan DNA can be found in the genes of modern humans across Asia and some Pacific islands. Up to 5% of modern Papua New Guinea residents' DNA shows remnants of interbreeding with Denisovans. People in Tibet today also possess some Denisovan traits; that could even explain how Sherpas are able to weather high altitudes.

Before these recent findings, anthropologists thought our ancestors left the African continent in one mass exodus about 60,000 years ago. (These past 'truth/revealations had become modern-day laughable fictions)

BalikZmSm

192 posts

Posted by BalikZmSm > 2020-05-21 06:58 | Report Abuse

@EngineeringProfit, tq for contributing your thoughts and wish for humanity.May i know if u r a follower of Scientology ? thks

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 07:00 | Report Abuse

Part 3:

All the glucose in our diet, whether it is free or part of complex sugars, is exclusively D-glucose. All the amino acids, whether free or part of proteins are exclusively L-amino acids. This is what we find in nature, so this is what we eat. The digestive enzymes are designed to work on these isomers. Their active sites are complementary to the shapes of these molecules, not their mirror images. Plants cannot make cell walls out of mixtures of D and L glucose because the cellulose would not form fibers that line up next to each other for hydrogen bonding. And no organism have receptors for Levo-glucose.

It is established that amino acids are generated in the prebiotic earth from simple molecules such as methane, water, ammonia, and hydrogen by so called chemical evolution. Ordinary chemical synthesis of amino acids always generates a racemic mixture (a mixture of the same amounts of L- and D-amino acids), because enantiomers have identical chemical properties.

Surprisingly, only L-amino acids are building blocks of proteins. Since the discovery of enantiomers by Pasteur in the 19th century, the origin of L-amino acids in the biosphere is a longtime mystery. All proteins, which are functional molecules of living creatures are made by combining 20 kinds of amino acids. Except one amino acid, each amino acid has two forms (isomer) named D (dexer meaning right) and L (meaning left).

Recently it was found that meteorites contained L-rich isovaline by 10%. This non-physiological amino acid is supposed to cause the L-amino acid-rich earth. Namely it is speculated that an extra-terrestrial substance generated L-amino acids. This concept resembles the idea that the cell came from the extra-terrestrial space.

BalikZmSm

192 posts

Posted by BalikZmSm > 2020-05-21 07:04 | Report Abuse

@EngineeringProfit r u one of the "enlighten" ones from Scientology? thks

BalikZmSm

192 posts

Posted by BalikZmSm > 2020-05-21 07:07 | Report Abuse

@EngineeringProfit if u only got 3 words to say for Humanity, what would u say ??? thank you.

BalikZmSm

192 posts

Posted by BalikZmSm > 2020-05-21 07:08 | Report Abuse

@EngineeringProfit if u only got 3 words to say for Humanity, what would u say ??? thank you. (that is to say, can u condense your deep knowledge and profound insights into just 3 simple words ? thks)

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 07:12 | Report Abuse

Part 4: Another 'FIRST' revealation - made possible only by modern science 'prophets' and AI technology

Humans and their galaxy have about 97 percent of the same kind of atoms, and the elements of life appear to be more prevalent toward the galaxy's center.
The crucial elements for life on Earth, often called the building blocks of life, can be abbreviated as CHNOPS: carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur. For the first time, astronomers have cataloged the abundance of these elements in a huge sample of stars.

The abundance of all of the major elements found in the human body had been mapped across hundreds of thousands of stars in our Milky Way.(source/donor).

60 tons of the star stuff entered our atmosphere every day.,

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 07:19 | Report Abuse

Part 5:

Without viruses on Earth, life would probably be a layer of slime. Viruses may either be genes that escaped from cells; or descendants of some of Earth’s earliest life forms. Viruses are the only life-forms that use RNA as their primary genetic material. The nucleic acid RNA evolved on Earth before DNA.

Up until some 2 billion years ago, Earth’s atmosphere was pretty much devoid of molecular oxygen. Although cyanobacteria drove photosynthesis in the world’s oceans, a good portion of the cyanobacteria’s photosynthetic activity, may be attributed to viral cyanophages (viruses that infect bacterial cells). That’s because many cyanophages infect cyanobacteria and encode photosynthetic proteins within the bacteria. It’s thought that the expression of these photosynthesis genes during infection not only promotes photosynthesis in the host, but also cyanophage replication

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 07:21 | Report Abuse

Ok......just with these part 1-5, how should we relook into HUMANITY differently now?

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 07:22 | Report Abuse

Humanity Issues: Part 1 - RACISM

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 07:53 | Report Abuse

Humanity Issues: Part 1 - RACISM (Philosophy and quality education for post-Covid gen)

a) With up-to-date insight and post-modern scientific revelations, racism is clearly a subset to anthropocentricism

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 07:59 | Report Abuse

b) Researchers establish link between racism and stupidity and childhood exposure to poor quality parents, educators, reading materials. Findings taken from numerous research projects strongly indicate that prejudice, racism and intolerance are more likely to be present in individuals with greater cognitive rigidity, less cognitive flexibility and lower integrative complexity.

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 08:03 | Report Abuse

Humanity issues: Brain's vulnerabilty to agency (Strength/Survival advantage of the past, shadow/falsehood of the present)

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 08:10 | Report Abuse

Humanity/ Education : Brain (The most powerful atomic machine in the universe- handle with care; fragile- this way up) Manual which every modern kid (must start before age of 5 to have optimal effect) MUST be 'served' (What a 'service'!)


a) The parietal lobe, located in the upper back part of the cortex, is the area that processes sensory information, helps us create a sense of self, and helps to establish spatial relationships between that self and the rest of the world. Deactivation of the parietal lobe during certain ritual activities has been observed

BalikZmSm

192 posts

Posted by BalikZmSm > 2020-05-21 08:11 | Report Abuse

@engineering, ur knolwledge is too high for me to grasp. Pls could u summarise in 3-5 key points ? Thks

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 08:12 | Report Abuse

b) When we begin to do some kind of practice like ritual, over time that area of brain appears to shut down. As it starts to quiet down, since it normally helps to create sense of self, that sense of self starts blur, and the boundaries between self and other – another person, another group, Thor, the universe, whatever it is you feel connected to – the boundary between those begins to dissipate and you feel one with it.

BalikZmSm

192 posts

Posted by BalikZmSm > 2020-05-21 08:13 | Report Abuse

I still dont get ur 5 key pts

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 08:13 | Report Abuse

c) The other part of the brain heavily involved in this sort of experience is the frontal lobe, which normally help us to focus our attention and concentrate on things, says Newberg. “When that area shuts down, it could theoretically be experienced as a kind of loss of willful activity – that we’re no longer making something happen but it’s happening to us.

BalikZmSm

192 posts

Posted by BalikZmSm > 2020-05-21 08:14 | Report Abuse

No need not explain in length

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 08:20 | Report Abuse

d) Our mental toolkit contains built-in biases, such as our 'built-in' Hypersensitive Agency Detection Device, which is responsible for a number of false positives of falsehood in life.

Our adoption of the intentional stance is so much a part of who we are that we have a hard time turning it off – especially after someone dies. A loved one’s death, he writes, “confronts us with a major task of cognitive updating: revising all our habits of thought to fit a world with one less intentional system in it”. And so we talk about our deceased loved ones as if they’re still around, telling stories about them, reminding ourselves that they would approve of our decisions.

Closely related to the idea of agency is a cards-up phenomenon. Agency detection carries with it certain risks: do you know about that bad thing I did? How can I be sure you know, and how can I be sure about what you think about me because of it? These are complex questions and human beings aren’t good at managing all the options. What’s needed for learning how to navigate these muddy waters is for everyone to be taught the rules of the game by placing all of our cards face up on the table. The teacher, then, is something of a full-access agent: they see everything and can instruct us accordingly.

Eventually, the seeds of this idea became more formalised in various theologies.

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 08:32 | Report Abuse

What is parasitic upon moral intuitions and vulnerable brains?

e) Philosophy & Sociology: Survival advantage of the past, burden of the present)

The problem created by increased sociality is its maintenanc. Before our ancestors settled into villages, they could simply “move from the Sias to the Suni’ group when tensions arise”. After settlement, however, they faced a very serious problem: “how to prevent everybody from killing each other”. Enter grooming.

The bonding process is built around endorphin systems in the brain, which are normally triggered by the social grooming mechanism of touch, or grooming. When it comes to large groups, touch has two disadvantages: you can only groom one person at a time; and the level of intimacy touch requires restricts it to close relationships.

The problem, then, was to find a way to trigger social bonding without touching. Laughter and music were good solutions, which Dunbar says create the same endorphin-producing effects as grooming by imposing stress on muscles. Language works, too. Because these effects can be achieved sans touch, social bonding can happen on a much larger scale.

Religion evolved as a way of allowing many people at once to take part in endorphin-triggering activation. Many of the rituals associated with religion, like song, dance, and assuming various postures for prayer, “are extremely good activators of the endorphin system precisely because they impose stress or pain on the body”.

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 08:35 | Report Abuse

Only when kids learn to understand how and why everything evolved, we’re now able to leave many childish, primitive and obsolete ideas.

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 08:37 | Report Abuse

In summary....(5 points)

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 09:06 | Report Abuse

1. Ignorance is the no.1 challenge of humanity since earlier times

Thinkers and meditators of the past had sacrified their lives to challenge falsehood, discover new knowledge and compile brain manuals to improve on humanity....(long story again......yawn....)

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 09:06 | Report Abuse

2. Quality education/knowledge is the only real long-term hope for humanity

Mindset is everything. 'Diversity is strength'(basis for hominid evolution) vs 'Diversity is conflict and competition' (Only one can be right).....(long story again......yawn....)

Bat-associated viruses emerged from the loss of bat habitat from deforestation and agricultural expansion. Pathogens do not respect species boundaries, Biodiversity loss and climate change exacerbate each other. The loss of species and habitats contributes to climate disruption, which in turn can accelerate biodiversity loss — both of which can contribute to the rise of pandemics. There’s little time to lose. Climate change could lead to an abrupt collapse of many species. Up to a million species of plants and animals are at risk of extinction, along with 40 percent of insects,....(long story again......yawn....yawn....)

Sslee

6,940 posts

Posted by Sslee > 2020-05-21 09:29 | Report Abuse

Dear BalikZmSM,
Please allow me to summaries the 5 key points
1. No one an island, we are all interconnected.
2. As you think, so shall you become.
3. You become what you are because of your education and upbringing.
4. Gods are what you think, so shall gods become.
5. We are not alone in this universe.

Posted by EngineeringProfit > 2020-05-21 09:37 | Report Abuse

Thank you, Sslee. You are brilliant

FoolsGold

654 posts

Posted by FoolsGold > 2020-05-21 09:43 | Report Abuse

@sslee & EngineeringProfit,
thank u for sharing,i have benefited...

FoolsGold

654 posts

Posted by FoolsGold > 2020-05-21 09:49 | Report Abuse

Since we r not alone, who could have said these words :

And now abideth faith,hope, charity(love), these three but the greatest of these is charity (love)

i Corinthians 13:13 KJV

FoolsGold

654 posts

Posted by FoolsGold > 2020-05-21 09:51 | Report Abuse

simple words that even a small kid can understand...

FoolsGold

654 posts

Posted by FoolsGold > 2020-05-21 09:52 | Report Abuse

tq for simple truths...as not all r educated nor got chance to be educated...

FoolsGold

654 posts

Posted by FoolsGold > 2020-05-21 09:54 | Report Abuse

BUT, ALL can enjoy the benefits of simple faith,hope,love...tq

when one choose to Believe...

FoolsGold

654 posts

Posted by FoolsGold > 2020-05-21 09:57 | Report Abuse

as all know, there r 2 versions of the Holy Books,

the kid version n the adult version, i choose the kid version

The adult version shd get u there where u wsnt to go,perhaps in another 2560 yrs ? hahaha...

FoolsGold

654 posts

Posted by FoolsGold > 2020-05-21 09:57 | Report Abuse

as all know, there r 2 versions of the Holy Books,

the kid version n the adult version, i choose the kid version

The adult version shd get u there where u wsnt to go,perhaps in another 2560 yrs ? hahaha...

FoolsGold

654 posts

Posted by FoolsGold > 2020-05-21 10:03 | Report Abuse

btw, followers of the GREAT TEACHER should also get their in 6 yrs or earlier, if they choose to follow exactly step by step what the GREAT TEACHER did, would u agree ?

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