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To purchase the books "The Power of Perception" and "The Poetic Realities, The Poetic Fantasies" please visit Laren Grey Umphlett's Amazon author page:

Friday, February 7, 2014

Word of The Day: Philocaly

The "Apes Gone Askew" word of the day:

philocaly

n. The love of beauty.

The sunset satisfied her deep sense of philocaly.

The word "philo" is of Latin and Greek origin, meaning "the love of".

Just as "philo-sophy" is the love of knowledge, "philo-caly" is the love of beauty.



Find more fun words in this book:
www.larengreyumphlett.com 

Monday, February 3, 2014

The Poetic Realities, The Poetic Fantasies


COMING SOON!
The new book by Laren Grey Umphlett...

"The Poetic Realities, The Poetic Fantasies"

"The Poetic Realities, The Poetic Fantasies" Table of Contexts

--Introduction: The (Must Read) Introduction
--Part 1: Words, The Poetic Realities
--Part 2: Thoughts, The Poetic Fantasies
--Part 3: What Is and What Shall Never Be
--Part 4: The Pepper, The Porridge, and The Papier Mâché 
--Part 5: Something Strange Is Afoot In The Dusty Corners of Quantum Reality/Non-Reality (or What The Hell Is Going On Here?!)
--Part 6: What Now? What Happens Next?
--Part 7: ...and Then The Beauty Befell Our Senses
--Part 8: Mental Exercises



"The Poetic Realities, The Poetic Fantasies" is an artistic literary expression that deals with how our experiences relate to the true, the false, the real, the unreal, and everything in between -the "poetic realities" and the "poetic fantasies". It blends poetry, prose, and profundity with short stories and entertaining lectures that delve into subjects such as Nature, science, philosophy, psychology, spirituality, the deep, the ironic, the comedic, and the mind-bending.





Saturday, February 1, 2014

10 Myths, Misconceptions, and Mischaracterizations of Evolution


10 Myths, Misconceptions, and Mischaracterizations of Evolution

This is an article on "From Quarks to Quasars"
www.fromquarkstoquasars.com

Also visit: www.larengreyumphlett.com

10 Myths, Misconceptions, and Mischaracterizations of Evolution


Image by University College London Digital Collections
Image by University College London Digital Collections
Evolution is a difficult topic to discuss with others.  What can make it even worse is when these debates veer from discussing the science behind evolution into discussing red herrings, a term used to refer to distracting side topics.  Below are are list of the 10 most common distractions that can cause discussions on evolution to get confused and derailed.
1. Abiogenesis 
‘Abiogenesis’ is how life began.  It’s the process that turned normal organic molecules into the self-replicating molecules we call life. The process seems to have only happened once and was wholly different from all other stages of evolution.  Abiogenesis is largely shrouded in mystery.  Why?  Because we can’t exactly dig up fossils of these first living organisms (single cells tend to not preserve very well).
What do we know about the start of life?  Close to 4 billion years ago the first life must have taken hold; we know this because life was robust enough by around 3.5 billion years ago that the first bacteria were abundant enough to make fossils. Prior to these bacteria, it’s hypothesized that the first life was largely made of RNA.  There are several reasons for this hypothesis.  First, because our polymerases (the tiny biological “machines” that put together our DNA and RNA) operate on RNA.  Infact, for your DNA to be copied, it first has to use a RNA primer to get the process started.  You could think of RNA primers as biological “fossils” within our cells, fossils which may be revealing that early life functioned off of RNA.  Secondly, RNA is oddly versatile.  Not only does it encode information to create proteins, it also can fold to function as an enzyme, called ribozymes.  Meaning, a single strand of RNA could potentially encode for itself and help assemble itself.  Here  is a highly informative, interactive website on this topic.
Image by David Shechner.
Example of a ribozyme. Image by David Shechner.
So, why is this topic a red herring?  Because abiogenesis is concerned with how life started; evolution is concerned with what life did once it was already here i.e., what happened to that first cell, not how it got here. Click here for an overview of the evidence in support of evolution.
2. Origin of the Universe
What banged the Big Bang?  What caused the singularity to become unstable enough to expand — creating time, space, and matter?  It’s an excellent and important question, but one that is very difficult to answer. Moreover, it’s not evolution.
What we know is that the universe had a beginning.  We also know that matter is far stranger than many realize.  It even appears  that it can spring from nothingness (and does so rather frequently).
Image by Emok.
Image by Emok.
You see, no vacuum is ever really a vacuum.  Even within “nothingness” there is a sea of virtual particles that buzz in and out of existence.  How do we know?  We can place two uncharged metal plates very close together within a vacuum and something bizarre happens.  They get pushed together.  This is known as the Casimir Effect and our best understanding of the situation says that, when the two plates are very near each other they have less virtual particles popping in and out of existence between them than on the outside.  Therefore, they get pushed together.
Why this is a red herring: The red shift of stars and the cosmic microwave background radiation substantiate the claim that the universe began just over 13.7 billion years ago. However, the details of what banged, how, and why have little to do with the development of that first cell.
3. “Evolution is just a theory.”
Theories are highly substantiate explanations of phenomena, not guesses or hunches.  They also don’t turn into laws.  Ever.  Why?  Because laws are descriptions of relationships, but not explanations.  Meaning, if the theory of evolution were to turn into a law, it would cease to be an explanation — you see how the very notion is fundamentally flawed?
Ultimately this is a red herring because, if you are arguing about what a theory means, you are arguing about semantics–not evolution. Moreover, calling something a theory does not mean it’s not an accurate science.
4. ”Evolution is random.”
First, this is based upon a false hypothesis. Mutations can be considered essentially random, but the process of natural selection that drives most of evolution is the exact opposite of random.  It is highly systematic, and it results in higher rates of survival and reproduction in those who are now better fit for their environment. Moreover,  just become something is random does not mean that it is not an exact science.
5. “Evolution can’t produce new species, only variation within a species.”
Many anti-evolutionists fully accept microevolution but stop short of macroevolution.  They believe slight changes can add up modifying a wolf into a dog, but never a wolf into a completely new species.  What’s important to emphasize with people with this misconception is that microevolution is *not* fundamentally different from macroevolution. It is the same process over a longer time scale (more below on the age of the Earth).
To help people understand their misconceptions about macroevolution, I often ask a few questions.  First, how are you defining a species?  There are numerous definitions, each with strengths and weaknesses depending on the context.
Second, if it were possible to change from one species into another, how long do you suppose that would take?  Many have never stopped to consider how long it would take for slight variations to build up to a sufficient level so that we could call a population a new species. Even though evolution is taking place all around us the process operates so slowly that it is not observable except over thousands or hundreds of thousands of years — much too long to witness in a human lifetime (or even human historians to record). However, there are cases of significant evolution in quickly reproducing life forms like bacteria and fruit flies.  I recommend these lists of observed evolution: here,here, and here.
Thirdly, what kind of evidence would a person look for to see one species turning into another?  Many have never allowed themselves to consider what life (and the world) would look like if evolution were true.  The answer, of course, is that the fossil record would show progressions of change, species would share inherited similarities to each other, they would have vestigial leftovers from past times, and that we would be able to see small changes adding up over shorter periods of time, like within a human’s lifetime.  This is exactly what we find in nature – slow variation adding up over long stretches of time creating new species.
6. “Major gaps in the fossil record show the explanatory inadequacy of evolution.” 
Fossilization is an extremely rare event.  It’s been estimated byRichard Leakey and Roger Lewin that 30 billion species have existed over the history of the Earth.  Of that figure, about 250,000 species have been recovered as fossils.  Only 1/120,000 species have died in the right spot, been buried in just the right way, preserved through the process of fossilization, and were lucky enough to be found by a human.  What we find in the fossil record is a shockingly high number of species showing large scale changes over vast stretches of time (cyanobacteria to multicellular life to more complex life, etc.) as well as small scale changes (Australopithecus to Homo erectus to Homo sapiens, etc.).
7. Age of the Earth
This topic might be considered a red herring in that it is definitely not directly evolution, but of this list it is the most essential to establish since it is a precondition for evolution.  Charles Darwin knew that for natural selection to produce the diversity we see on Earth today, vast stretches of time were needed.  While during his day no one was quite sure how old the Earth was, today we can say with an extremely high degree of confidence that the Earth is indeed quite old, roughly 4.6 billion years old.
How do we know this?  There are so, so, so many ways we know the age of the Earth.  Here are just a few:
Image by Mike Peel.
Paradoxides trilobite. Image by Mike Peel
  • We can use the very constant decay rates of radioactive isotopes to find out when something was buried or when the rock was formed.
  • Because fossil layers are so unbelievably predictable in their order, we can use index fossils to cross check rock layer dates. Think about that.  Fossils are so sequentially organized that if you find a certain index species in a particular layer, you know how old the layer is (since they have previously been dated by other means).  For instance, if you find the trilobite Paradoxides we know that the rock layer it came from is from about 500-509 million years ago during the Cambrian.
  • We can drill down into coral atolls, like Eniwetok atoll, through nearly a mile (4,610 ft) of solid coral that is at least 176,000 years old (the true number is difficult to estimate since coral growth can be slowed in a number of ways, like by being exposed during periods when the Earth’s ocean level is considerably lower than it is today). (Ladd, H. S. 1960. “Bikini and Nearby Atolls, Marshall Islands, Drilling Operations on Eniwetok Atoll” U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 260-Y)
  • We can use growth patterns within tree rings calldendrochronology to go back 11,500 years.
  • Caves like in Antiparos, Greece have huge formations 45 million years old.
  • Antarctic ice cores go back 1.5 million years.
  • The slow flow of meandering rivers like the Colorado river have carved out deep trenches, like the Grand Canyon, over the last 5 to 6 million years.
  • Speaking of the Grand Canyon, there are shasta ground sloth poop deposits  in caves along the Grand Canyon that are 30,000 years thick.  Eww!
  • Marine sediment cores date back as far as 170 million years ago.
  • There are 11,000 year old glass sponges from the China Sea.
  • Dirt – it’s as old as dirt.  Consider it: it takes a long time for rocks to be finely ground into the sediment around your house right now.  Each locale has its own composition of sediments that have taken often millions of years to be formed.
  • The massive quantities of coal that may be powering your computer right now and the gas that likely fills your transportation were formed over millions of years, largely during the Carboniferous period some 300 million years ago.
    350 million year old chunk of coal showing fern fronds.  Image by Vzb83.
    350 million year old chunk of coal showing fern fronds. Image by Vzb83.
8. Evolution Promotes Immorality and Prejudice
How depraved despots and others have misused and abused ideas like “survival of the fittest” has absolutely no bearing on whether or not evolution is the best explanation for the unity and diversity of life on planet Earth.  None.  Besides, one can just as easily find positive moral messages within evolutionary history, like the wild success ofsymbiosis.
9. It Undermines Human Worth and Dignity
Science is not dictated by how nice or worthy it makes us feel. Science does not bow to human hubris. It does not become untrue because it does not suit us. If you start debating the worth of humans–whether or not we are better/more evolved/created more efficiently–you are not talking about evolution or science, you are talking about philosophy.
What’s more, acceptance of evolution has been a great source of dignity for me through knowing that we are star dust–that we are a part of a of 3.5 billion year old, unbroken chain of success; that life is an exceedingly rare and fragile; that all life is connected; and that we are a part of a species that is capable of exceedingly great love, self-sacrifice, forgiveness, creativity, and morality.  
As Darwin famously put it in his final paragraph within Origin: “There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.”
10. It Counters My Religious Beliefs
First, like with the previous point, a fact does not become untrue because it does not suit us. Second, a great many scientists are quite religious and find no conflict between their faith and the facts about evolution.
Summary:
If you’re going to debate evolution, or if you want to do research in order to better understand it, stick to the topic at hand.  Avoid, to the best of your ability, the traps listed above.  Remember also that facts are not implements to hit people over the head with.  They are beautiful revelations of reality that are to be enjoyed, revered, celebrated, and shared.  Good luck.
This article was brought to you by our partner pagewww.EvolutionEvidence.org on Facebook atwww.Fb.com/EvolutionEvidence.org.
Rough Brown Stucco

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Word of The Day: Selcouth


selcouth


adj. archaic - unusual, strange

From Middle English, from Old English seldcūth, from seldan seldom + cūth known.


Selcouth is a word that deserves revival. Simply saying that some action or object is "strange" or "unusual" lacks some richness. 

For example:
The strange behavior of the man hinted at a mysterious persona.
The selcouth behavior of the man hinted at a mysterious persona.


Monday, January 27, 2014

2014 The Year of the Yang Wood Horse

This is a well written article on the positivity of 2014 from Karen Abler Carrasco on the Western School of Feng Shui website.


2014 – The Year of the Yang Wood Horse



By Karen Abler Carrasco, WSFS Consultant, Mentor and Teacher 

There might not be a bigger shift of energies in the entire 60 year wheel of Chinese astrology than this one coming up–the shift from two Water years of deep introspection to the fast-paced spurt of extroverted forward propulsion that the Wood Horse brings.  Hold on to your hats, folks, and realize that you won’t be able to, nor will you want to, slow your horses in the New Year ahead! 

This will be a promethean year, the Beginning of all beginnings, arriving around January 31st to February 4th, 2014.  Full of uplift, optimism and compelling inspiration, we will be guided into purposeful action of the most elegantly simple and powerfully fruitful kind.  After two years of feeling every revelation of corruption in the dark as if it was scouring our subconscious insides and wringing us dry of watery emotion, we are READY for this change!  Light, hope and clarity of vision gallop in. Emerge from your cocoons, everybody, here we goooooo! 

Because this will be such a big change of energetic experience for us, it will help to review here how the cycle of the sacred Five Elements, or Phases, have set us up for this shift.  In that cycle, Wood feeds Fire, Fire’s ash creates Earth, Earth’s compression reveals gems of Metal, and Metal collects and holds Water, which nourishes the Wood to start the cycle all over again. The natural laws of these five elements are actually working in multiple ways throughout Nature, our bodies, our psychologies and the energetic movements of all things here on this planet.  In these movements, there are cycles within cycles, one of which is the cycle of birth, growth, disintegration and death, or the void that comes after old life and before new life.   

We have just been traveling through that void, in two Water years, which immersed us in a descending place of degeneration, dissolution and chaos, a time when our internal world of formless spirit and emotions held total sway over every attempt at external control or order.  For most of us, it was an unsettling time of letting go of many things, either voluntarily or forcefully, a time of deep soul searching, with gradual or sudden destabilization in many areas of family and livelihood.  There was a profound search for a return to a spiritual basis for daily living.  This all had the effect of highlighting an individual’s isolation and powerlessness within a seemingly random and careless society.  Not that outright rebellion and outcry didn’t happen, globally as well as internally.  The 2012 Yang Water Dragon year saw to that, with its critical promptings of social responsibility and heroism, and this Yin Water Snake year that followed delved even deeper into the most hidden caves of stagnant dysfunctionality and corruption on all levels.   

The good and great news is that we have completed 5 years of the degenerative part of the cycles–that of the harvested, decomposing Earth, compressing and eliminative Metal, and dissolving, settling out, cleansing Water.  We now emerge into the generative cycles–powerful, bursting buds of Wood’s new growth fueling the joyful outreach and passions of Fire and the beginnings of Earth’s fruitful harvests.   

So, that’s the Wood part of what’s coming.  Now to turn our gaze to the animal symbol of Horse. This sprouting upward rush of Wood energy will find its perfect release into the impulsive and passionate nature of the Yang Horse, whose native element is Fire.  The Horse energy inspires powerful INTUITION and an indomitable surge towards freedom in every aspect of life. This is a year to follow your inner voice like never before, for it will have a universal cosmic ch’i within it.  Higher guidance is with us every step of the way.  Reach for the sky, call up your vision, fuel your plans with vision boards and creativity, find a fresh path and pace yourself well.  This yang Horse year has the potential to channel the powerful new upthrust of Wood’s Ch’i through the Horse’s Heart energy of Fire and into every project we start, every desire we reach for.  It will keep our eager plans from being dominated by too much “head” and not enough “heart.”   

It may be quite challenging to trust that we have this absolutely new, purified and hopeful energy to build on now.  Our hearts have had to endure a gauntlet of deconstruction through two Metal and two Water years, but the fiery Horse is about to change all of that.  Within the extroverted “Green Horse” year, we will not only branch out with new growth, but we will be able to stoke the Fire element of love in every area of life.  Follow your intuition fearlessly, as it is both the horse’s main attribute which preserves its freedom and powerful health and it is Wood’s primary talent for stretching into the unknown future.  Reach out with irrepressible faith to a new level of social communion and mutual support.  Trust every impulse to embrace a revitalized and renewed sensitivity for the pleasures this earthly dimension has to offer.   

Step up and out of any old clutter, stored memories, should-have-dones or regrets.  The time to deal with that is over for now.  Untangle your thoughts quickly and get clear on what it is that you truly desire in this lifetime.  Your trusty steed is here, full of vibrant health and tremendous stamina.  It should be quite a fast ride, so grab a fistful of mane, hang on to the reins, cast your old cares to the wind and let out a whoop of delight–Yeeehaaw! Upward and onward we thrive!  May we all be blest abundantly as we hold each other closer in the circle of health and new life the Wood Horse year brings. 

- See more at: http://westernschooloffengshui.com


www.larengreyumphlett.com





Saturday, January 25, 2014

Word of The Day: Apricate

The "Apes Gone Askew" word of the day....

Apricate

v. To bask in the sun.

Apricate is a beautiful defunct archaic word. It wasn't around for very long in written history, from about 1690 until the mid-1800s. It is very rarely used today. It's origin is from the Latin word apricari "to bask in the sun" from apricus "to expose", originating earlier from apericus and aperire "to open" (such as in the term aperture).

Lizards apricate in the sun.
Fruits apricate until ripened.

This word has been far too rare for its potential and deserves a resurgence.

Enjoy some aprication today.

Saturday, January 18, 2014

The Wisdom of Henry Miller



Henry Miller was an American writer and unique personality who lived from 1891 to 1980. He is best known for intense classics such as "Tropic of Cancer" and a relationship with Anaïs Nin.
Here are some quotes:

“The aim of life is to live, and to live means to be aware, joyously, drunkenly, serenely, divinely aware.” 

“Develop an interest in life as you see it; the people, things, literature, music - the world is so rich, simply throbbing with rich treasures, beautiful souls and interesting people. Forget yourself.” 

“Serenity is when you get above all this, when it doesn't matter what they think, say or want, but when you do as you are, and see God and Devil as one.” 

“I have no money, no resources, no hopes. I am the happiest man alive.” 

“If there is to be any peace it will come through being, not having.” 

“We have two American flags always: one for the rich and one for the poor. When the rich fly it means that things are under control; when the poor fly it means danger, revolution, anarchy.”

“What holds the world together, as I have learned from bitter experience, is sexual intercourse.” 

“All growth is a leap in the dark, a spontaneous unpremeditated act without the benefit of experience.” 

“We should read to give our souls a chance to luxuriate.” 

“No one asks you to throw Mozart out of the window. Keep Mozart. Cherish him. Keep Moses too, and Buddha and Lao Tzu and Christ. Keep them in your heart. But make room for the others, the coming ones, the ones who are already scratching on the window-panes.” 

“Chaos is the score upon which reality is written.” 

“Every moment is a golden one for him who has the vision to recognize it as such.” 

“It is with the soul that we grasp the essence of another human being, not with the mind, nor even with the heart.” 

“Until we accept the fact that life itself is founded in mystery, we shall learn nothing.” 

“We do not talk - we bludgeon one another with facts and theories gleaned from cursory readings of newspapers, magazines and digests. ” 




Purchase "The Power of Perception" here.




Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Bertrand Russell on Teaching




Here is a list of quotes on teaching by Bertrand Russell from the Brain Pickings website.

Bertrand Russell's Ten Commandements on Teaching

  1. Do not feel absolutely certain of anything.
  2. Do not think it worth while to proceed by concealing evidence, for the evidence is sure to come to light.
  3. Never try to discourage thinking for you are sure to succeed.
  4. When you meet with opposition, even if it should be from your husband or your children, endeavor to overcome it by argument and not by authority, for a victory dependent upon authority is unreal and illusory.
  5. Have no respect for the authority of others, for there are always contrary authorities to be found.
  6. Do not use power to suppress opinions you think pernicious, for if you do the opinions will suppress you.
  7. Do not fear to be eccentric in opinion, for every opinion now accepted was once eccentric.
  8. Find more pleasure in intelligent dissent than in passive agreement, for, if you value intelligence as you should, the former implies a deeper agreement than the latter.
  9. Be scrupulously truthful, even if the truth is inconvenient, for it is more inconvenient when you try to conceal it.
  10. Do not feel envious of the happiness of those who live in a fool’s paradise, for only a fool will think that it is happiness.

Monday, January 13, 2014

The Power of Perception

"The Power of Perception" is a deep and fun book that explores the human experience.

Purchase your copy of "The Power of Perception"...

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Wednesday, January 8, 2014

5 Solutions to The Human Dilemma

The human dilemma injects a human flaw into otherwise sensible systems and circumstances. We taint everything from belief to politics to our food industry. Corruption and greed prey on ignorance and indifference. The battle can be won from person to person. You can't improve the world if you can't improve yourself. If everyone on Earth understood and practiced the following principles it would drastically alleviate human and world suffering. The world is ready to evolve. Why not live better?

1. The study of General Semantics and the expression and translation of thought and meaning.
We live in a very psychologically reactive society. This leads to violence and oppression. We think we are right and want to impose our will on others, instead of loosening our own walls to allow understanding and blending.

"The map is not the territory." -Alfred Korzybski

2. The regular practice of meditation. Settling the mind into its natural state.
This will alleviate the general anxiety and agitation the mind experiences daily. Meditation should be the single most important part of your day. A frazzled mind leads to a frazzled world. Humans have a deep habit of hanging on dearly to suffering. This causes more suffering.

"The flowering of love is meditation." -Jiddu Krishnamurti

3. Scientific literacy and elevated education. It's a big interesting world, be a part of it.
By remaining ignorant we can be taken advantage of by nefarious powers that are fueled by greed and power. Become wild and free by expanding the boundaries of your cage through knowledge and wisdom. Science explores the beauty of the nature we are a part of.

"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." -Albert Einstein

4. Dropping Aristotelian logic and western duality in favor of non-duality, such as found in Buddhism.
Letting go of certainty is liberating. There is no black and white, but plenty of gray. When you realize that you don't know, and that no one else really knows you will become free and immune to authority.

"In the sky, there is no distinction of east and west; people create distinctions out of their own minds and then believe them to be true." -The Buddha

5. Teach others. Teaching is the greatest way to learn and the greatest way to turn on a lightbulb in another mind.
We can always improve our weaknesses through teaching. We can also make new discoveries. Minds awaken and transform.

"We cannot teach people anything; we can only help them discover it within themselves."
-Galileo Galilei
It is time for the next step in human evolution.