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EARTH HOUR
03.24.08 (5:28 pm)   [edit]
Thank you all for supporting Earth Hour which will take place on Saturday, March 29th at 8pm.



If you and your friends haven’t signed up to participate please do so at http://www.earthhour.org/." title="http://www.earthhour.org/." target="_blank"http://www.earthhour.org/.. www.earthhour.org



We have 10 days to go and we really feel the work you all are doing to spread the word. Keep talking to your friends, neighbors, co-workers, schools, local businesses and get them to participate. Have them sign up and help raise awareness towards the need to take action on climate change.



Email our myspace page to tell us what you are doing during Earth Hour. We’d like to see the many different creative ways you’ll be spending the hour.



Write and call your local newspapers, radio stations and news stations to tell them what you are doing.



Also, please note that Earth Hour is taking place on Saturday, March 29th at 8pm YOUR TIME. So wherever you are on that Saturday night turn off the lights and help us save the planet.



Thanks for your time and your support
4 Comments
 
snow snow go away, come again another day
03.24.08 (5:23 pm)   [edit]

FREAKEN BUUURRRRRR!
it's cold and snowing... my mind is blown.. it was 68 f yesterday and now it's like 30 something now...

jacob is running around in his (mantiees lol) boxers while i'm in my flannel pj's, flannel fuzzy housecoat, house shoes (yeah i'm the one that goes barefoot every where), the heat on 70, and all snuggled up to a hot steaming cup of tea.... i'm freaken freezing

i think i'm going throu the opposite of menopause... instead of the hot flashes i have very cold flashes.. i get so cold that even hunkered down under 3 comforters i'm still shivering... besides having manic mood swings, ashma, and being fat there is nothing clinicly wrong with me. i dont understand... perhaps i'm part adbonible snowman (yeah i know it's spelled wrong)

anyways.... i'm freaken cold and it's snowing..lol

2 Comments
 
Moo-moo in her basket...
03.23.08 (10:53 pm)   [edit]
3 Comments
 
flowers...
03.23.08 (7:51 pm)   [edit]

I am a
Snapdragon

What Flower
Are You?

3 Comments
 
WITCH'S SABBATS...
03.23.08 (7:12 pm)   [edit]
 

The Sabbats

  • Samhain - Samhain (OCT-31)
  • Yule - Winter Solstice (�DEC-21) - Alban Arthan, Saturnalia, Yule, Christmas
  • Imbolc Imbolc (JAN-31 to FEB-02) - Bride's day, Candlemas Day, Groundhog Day
  • Ostara - Vernal Equinox (�MAR-21) - Alban Eilir, Eostar, Eostre, Lady Day, Ostara
  • Beltaine - Beltane (APR-30)
  • Midsummer - Summer Solstice (�JUN-21) - Alban Hefin, Gathering Day, Midsummer, Vestalia
  • LughnasadhLammas (AUG-1)
  • MabonFall Equinox (�SEP-21) - Alban Elfed, Mabon, Autumn Equinox, Harvest Home

The Names of the Festivals

Most of the names originated with real, ancient festivals, but the names Litha and Mabon were invented by Aidan Kelly in the 1970s and have continued to gain popularity with North American Wiccans. The word "sabbat" has the same roots as Sabbath (Christian) and Sabbath (witchcraft). It stems from the Old English sabat, Old Frenchsabbat, Latin sabbatum, Greek sabbaton, and Hebrew shabbat, which means "to cease or rest".

Festival Dates

The dates of the festivals vary due to the numerous traditions, forms, and styles of Witchcraft, Wicca, and the modern Neopaganism. However, while each festival has somewhat different traditions associated with it and the dates can vary according to path, the meanings generally remain consistent.

The Effect of the Hemispheres

The Wheel of the Year originates in the Northern Hemisphere, so to compensate in the Southern Hemisphere most Neopagans advance the dates by six months or so to bring them into alignment with their local, natural seasons.

Quarter Days

Cross-quarter days traditionally fall at the end of the months, but some Neopagans consider them as having occured at the midpoint of the two surrounding quarter days. These modern-day calculations typically result in celebrations being held a few days after the traditionally observed dates.

Sun Sabbats and Moon Sabbats

Observance of Moon Sabbats:

  • Imbolc: new, crescent, 1st quarter
  • Beltaine (Beltane): 1st quarter, gibbous, full moon
  • Lammas (Lughnasadh): full, disseminating, 3rd quarter
  • Samhain: 3rd quarter, balsamic, new

Sun Sabbats refer to the quarter days, based on the astronomical position of the sun. Moon Sabbats are usually observed during Full Moons, normally the Full Moon closest to the traditional festival date, but sometimes during the 2nd Full Moon after the preceding quarter day. This places the Moon Sabbat anywhere from 29-59 days after the preceding solstice or equinox.

Origins of the Festivals of the Wheel of the Year

The festivals of the Wheel of the Year take their names from old, Pre-Christian Celtic and Germanic festivals. However, the forms and meanings have changed in most cases. This is primarily due to the influence of late eighteenth century romanticism and elements introduced through the advent of Wicca.

Prior to modern Wicca, the Wheel of the Year was unknown, and at first, only cross-quarter days were observed. In 1958 members of Bricket Wood Coven added the solstices and equinoxes to their calendar to increase the number and frequency of celebrations. Gerald Gardner, the coven's high priest at the time, was on holiday on the Isle of Man when the coven increased the number of celebrations, but he did not mind, as in his opinion this change served to further their alignment with the Order of Bards, Ovates, and Druids, a style of Neo-druidism created and promoted by Ross Nichols, Gardner's friend.

There are no records that prior to the birth of Wicca all eight of the festivals were ever observed by anyone, anywhere.

0 Comments
 
dangers of peeps and caffine on kids...
03.23.08 (3:33 pm)   [edit]

this is katie...

 

this is katie on caffine...

now this is katie on "peeps"...

got the message?? keep kids away from "peeps"... oh and caffine too...

ζ(does she not look like a dork?? all she does is take pictures of herself..)ζ

 

4 Comments
 
excited...
03.22.08 (11:06 pm)   [edit]
♥ i'm so freaken excited right now.. i just had to share... i made my very first cheese cake from scratch 2 hours ago.. i ha to wait for it to harden and stuff .. i'm eating it now and it is so devine... ummmmmmm... nice gooey cherry topping.... ♥
11 Comments
 
some people are not nice...
03.22.08 (5:52 pm)   [edit]

what the crap is up with the price of eggs?? seriously... jacob and i went to food city to get some eggs so that he could color them since we are not envited to any of the "family" easter stuff this year (which really hurt his feelings, he didnt even get a chocolate bunny or even a card or a happy easter. this didnt really surprise me too much considering the way x-mas went)... for a cartoon of eggs it is now $2.99... what the crap?!?
we managed to find something called " clearbrook easter eggs" for $1.99. it is a dozen large eggs with a coloring kit included. i thought the eggs were already boiled till about a few minutes ago when i broke one. now i've got them boiling... so how come all the other eggs are so high? this is getting ridiculous.. food prices are going up faster then gas prices...

yes jacob is still having easter.. it's just the 2 of us as it was at x-mas... most people will be having ham or rabbit or what ever and we will be have steak..lol.. it's actualy cheaper then ham and the kid loves it. i didnt go out and waste money on the premade baskets that dont have crap in them.. instead i bought him a segma6 gun (yes a toy im not that much of an idot), 2 bunny shaped boxes of "ferrerp rocher" candies, a carton of egg shaped reese cups, a tiny chocolate bunny, a bag of apples (he loves his apples), some cotton candy bunny tails, some jelly beans, and a 3 pack of bubble yum gum. all of this i put into an easter basket from a few years ago i had put up. i think he will be happy with it. yes i got katie sum stuff and done gave it to her. Jacob picked me some flowers and said happy easter to me earlier... so i'm happy

it's just so sad how heartless and stuck on themselves some people can be....


 

 

HAPPY EASTER TO ALL...

7 Comments
 
very long but interesting...
03.22.08 (2:24 pm)   [edit]

The science of religion

Where angels no longer fear to tread

Mar 19th 2008
From The Economist print edition

Science and religion have often been at loggerheads. Now the former has decided to resolve the problem by trying to explain the existence of the latter

Illustration by Stephen Jeffrey

BY THE standards of European scientific collaboration, €2m ($3.1m) is not a huge sum. But it might be the start of something that will challenge human perceptions of reality at least as much as the billions being spent by the European particle-physics laboratory (CERN) at Geneva. The first task of CERN's new machine, the Large Hadron Collider, which is due to open later this year, will be to search for the Higgs boson—an object that has been dubbed, with a certain amount of hyperbole, the God particle. The €2m, by contrast, will be spent on the search for God Himself—or, rather, for the biological reasons why so many people believe in God, gods and religion in general.

“Explaining Religion”, as the project is known, is the largest-ever scientific study of the subject. It began last September, will run for three years, and involves scholars from 14 universities and a range of disciplines from psychology to economics. And it is merely the latest manifestation of a growing tendency for science to poke its nose into the God business.

Religion cries out for a biological explanation. It is a ubiquitous phenomenon—arguably one of the species markers of Homo sapiens—but a puzzling one. It has none of the obvious benefits of that other marker of humanity, language. Nevertheless, it consumes huge amounts of resources. Moreover, unlike language, it is the subject of violent disagreements. Science has, however, made significant progress in understanding the biology of language, from where it is processed in the brain to exactly how it communicates meaning. Time, therefore, to put religion under the microscope as well.

I have no need of that hypothesis

Explaining Religion is an ambitious attempt to do this. The experiments it will sponsor are designed to look at the mental mechanisms needed to represent an omniscient deity, whether (and how) belief in such a “surveillance-camer a” God might improve reproductive success to an individual's Darwinian advantage, and whether religion enhances a person's reputation—for instance, do people think that those who believe in God are more trustworthy than those who do not? The researchers will also seek to establish whether different religions foster different levels of co-operation, for what reasons, and whether such co-operation brings collective benefits, both to the religious community and to those outside it.

It is an ambitious shopping list. Fortunately, other researchers have blazed a trail. Patrick McNamara, for example, is the head of the Evolutionary Neurobehaviour Laboratory at Boston University's School of Medicine. He works with people who suffer from Parkinson's disease. This illness is caused by low levels of a messenger molecule called dopamine in certain parts of the brain. In a preliminary study, Dr McNamara discovered that those with Parkinson's had lower levels of religiosity than healthy individuals, and that the difference seemed to correlate with the disease's severity. He therefore suspects a link with dopamine levels and is now conducting a follow-up involving some patients who are taking dopamine-boosting medicine and some of whom are not.

Such neurochemical work, though preliminary, may tie in with scanning studies conducted to try to find out which parts of the brain are involved in religious experience. Nina Azari, a neuroscientist at the University of Hawaii at Hilo who also has a doctorate in theology, has looked at the brains of religious people. She used positron emission tomography (PET) to measure brain activity in six fundamentalist Christians and six non-religious (though not atheist) controls. The Christians all said that reciting the first verse of the 23rd psalm helped them enter a religious state of mind, so both groups were scanned in six different sets of circumstances: while reading the first verse of the 23rd psalm, while reciting it out loud, while reading a happy story (a well-known German children's rhyme), while reciting that story out loud, while reading a neutral text (how to use a calling card) and while at rest.

Dr Azari was expecting to see activity in the limbic systems of the Christians when they recited the psalm. Previous research had suggested that this part of the brain (which regulates emotion) is an important centre of religious activity. In fact what happened was increased activity in three areas of the frontal and parietal cortex, some of which are better known for their involvement in rational thought. The control group did not show activity in these parts of their brains when listening to the psalm. And, intriguingly, the only thing that triggered limbic activity in either group was reading the happy story.

Dr Azari's PET study, together with one by Andrew Newberg of the University of Pennsylvania, which used single-photon emission computed tomography done on Buddhist monks, and another by Mario Beauregard of the University of Montreal, which put Carmelite nuns in a magnetic-resonance-imagin g machine, all suggest that religious activity is spread across many parts of the brain. That conflicts not only with the limbic-system theory but also with earlier reports of a so-called God Spot that derived partly from work conducted on epileptics. These reports suggested that religiosity originates specifically in the brain's temporal lobe, and that religious visions are the result of epileptic seizures that affect this part of the brain.

Though there is clearly still a long way to go, this sort of imaging should eventually tie down the circuitry of religious experience and that, combined with work on messenger molecules of the sort that Dr McNamara is doing, will illuminate how the brain generates and processes religious experiences. Dr Azari, however, is sceptical that such work will say much about religion's evolution and function. For this, other methods are needed.

Dr McNamara, for example, plans to analyse a database called the Ethnographic Atlas to see if he can find any correlations between the amount of cultural co-operation found in a society and the intensity of its religious rituals. And Richard Sosis, an anthropologist at the University of Connecticut, has already done some research which suggests that the long-term co-operative benefits of religion outweigh the short-term costs it imposes in the form of praying many times a day, avoiding certain foods, fasting and so on.

Leviticus's children

On the face of things, it is puzzling that such costly behaviour should persist. Some scholars, however, draw an analogy with sexual selection. The splendour of a peacock's tail and the throaty roar of a stag really do show which males are fittest, and thus help females choose. Similarly, signs of religious commitment that are hard to fake provide a costly and reliable signal to others in a group that anyone engaging in them is committed to that group. Free-riders, in other words, would not be able to gain the advantages of group membership.

To test whether religion might have emerged as a way of improving group co-operation while reducing the need to keep an eye out for free-riders, Dr Sosis drew on a catalogue of 19th-century American communes published in 1988 by Yaacov Oved of Tel Aviv University. Dr Sosis picked 200 of these for his analysis; 88 were religious and 112 were secular. Dr Oved's data include the span of each commune's existence and Dr Sosis found that communes whose ideology was secular were up to four times as likely as religious ones to dissolve in any given year.

A follow-up study that Dr Sosis conducted in collaboration with Eric Bressler of McMaster University in Canada focused on 83 of these communes (30 religious, 53 secular) to see if the amount of time they survived correlated with the strictures and expectations they imposed on the behaviour of their members. The two researchers examined things like food consumption, attitudes to material possessions, rules about communication, rituals and taboos, and rules about marriage and sexual relationships.

As they expected, they found that the more constraints a religious commune placed on its members, the longer it lasted (one is still going, at the grand old age of 149). But the same did not hold true of secular communes, where the oldest was 40. Dr Sosis therefore concludes that ritual constraints are not by themselves enough to sustain co-operation in a community—what is needed in addition is a belief that those constraints are sanctified.

Dr Sosis has also studied modern secular and religious kibbutzim in Israel. Because a kibbutz, by its nature, depends on group co-operation, the principal difference between the two is the use of religious ritual. Within religious communities, men are expected to pray three times daily in groups of at least ten, while women are not. It should, therefore, be possible to observe whether group rituals do improve co-operation, based on the behaviour of men and women.

To do so, Dr Sosis teamed up with Bradley Ruffle, an economist at Ben-Gurion University, in Israel. They devised a game to be played by two members of a kibbutz. This was a variant of what is known to economists as the common-pool-resource dilemma, which involves two people trying to divide a pot of money without knowing how much the other is asking for. In the version of the game devised by Dr Sosis and Dr Ruffle, each participant was told that there was an envelope with 100 shekels in it (between 1/6th and 1/8th of normal monthly income). Both players could request money from the envelope, but if the sum of their requests exceeded its contents, neither got any cash. If, however, their request equalled, or was less than, the 100 shekels, not only did they keep the money, but the amount left was increased by 50% and split between them.

Dr Sosis and Dr Ruffle picked the common-pool-resource dilemma because the communal lives of kibbutz members mean they often face similar dilemmas over things such as communal food, power and cars. The researchers' hypothesis was that in religious kibbutzim men would be better collaborators (and thus would take less) than women, while in secular kibbutzim men and women would take about the same. And that was exactly what happened.

Big father is watching you

Dr Sosis is not the only researcher to employ economic games to investigate the nature and possible advantages of religion. Ara Norenzayan, an experimental psychologist at the University of British Columbia, in Vancouver, has conducted experiments using what is known as the dictator game. This, too, is a well-established test used to gauge altruistic behaviour. Participants receive a sum of money—Dr Norenzayan set it at $10—and are asked if they would like to share it with another player. The dictator game thus differs from another familiar economic game in which one person divides the money and the other decides whether to accept or reject that division.

As might be expected, in the simple version of the dictator game most people take most or all of the money. However, Dr Norenzayan and his graduate student Azim Shariff tried to tweak the game by introducing the idea of God. They did this by priming half of their volunteers to think about religion by getting them to unscramble sentences containing religious words such as God, spirit, divine, sacred and prophet. Those thus primed left an average of $4.22, while the unprimed left $1.84.

Exactly what Dr Norenzayan has discovered here is not clear. A follow-up experiment which primed people with secular words that might, nevertheless, have prompted them to behave in an altruistic manner (civic, jury, court, police and contract) had similar effects, so it may be that he has touched on a general question of morality, rather than a specific one of religion. However, an experiment carried out by Jesse Bering, of Queen's University in Belfast, showed quite specifically that the perceived presence of a supernatural being can affect a person's behaviour—although in this case the being was not God, but the ghost of a dead person.

Illustration by Stephen Jeffrey

Dr Bering, too, likes the hypothesis that religion promotes fitness by promoting collaboration within groups. One way that might work would be to rely not just on other individuals to detect cheats by noticing things like slacking on the prayers or eating during fasts, but for cheats to detect and police themselves as well. In that case a sense of being watched by a supernatural being might be useful. Dr Bering thus proposes that belief in such beings would prevent what he called “dangerous risk miscalculations” that would lead to social deviance and reduced fitness.

One of the experiments he did to test this idea was to subject a bunch of undergraduates to a quiz. His volunteers were told that the best performer among them would receive a $50 prize. They were also told that the computer program that presented the questions had a bug in it, which sometimes caused the answer to appear on the screen before the question. The volunteers were therefore instructed to hit the space bar immediately if the word “Answer” appeared on the screen. That would remove the answer and ensure the test results were fair.

The volunteers were then divided into three groups. Two began by reading a note dedicating the test to a recently deceased graduate student. One did not see the note. Of the two groups shown the note, one was told by the experimenter that the student's ghost had sometimes been seen in the room. The other group was not given this suggestion.

The so-called glitch occurred five times for each student. Dr Bering measured the amount of time it took to press the space bar on each occasion. He discarded the first result as likely to be unreliable and then averaged the other four. He found that those who had been told the ghost story were much quicker to press the space bar than those who had not. They did so in an average of 4.3 seconds. That compared with 6.3 seconds for those who had only read the note about the student's death and 7.2 for those who had not heard any of the story concerning the dead student. In short, awareness of a ghost—a supernatural agent—made people less likely to cheat.

Who is my neighbour?

It all sounds very Darwinian. But there is a catch. The American communes, the kibbutzim, the students of the University of British Columbia and even the supernatural self-censorship observed by Dr Bering all seem to involve behaviour that promotes the group over the individual. That is the opposite of Darwinism as conventionally understood. But it might be explained by an idea that most Darwinians dropped in the 1960s—group selection.

The idea that evolution can work by the differential survival of entire groups of organisms, rather than just of individuals, was rejected because it is mathematically implausible. But it has been revived recently, in particular by David Sloan Wilson of Binghamton University, in New York, as a way of explaining the evolution of human morality in the context of inter-tribal warfare. Such warfare can be so murderous that groups whose members fail to collaborate in an individually self-sacrificial way may be wiped out entirely. This negates the benefits of selfish behaviour within a group. Morality and religion are often closely connected, of course (as Dr Norenzayan's work confirms), so what holds for the one might be expected to hold for the other, too.

Dr Wilson himself has studied the relationship between social insecurity and religious fervour, and discovered that, regardless of the religion in question, it is the least secure societies that tend to be most fundamentalist. That would make sense if adherence to the rules is a condition for the security which comes from membership of a group. He is also interested in what some religions hold out as the ultimate reward for good behaviour—life after death. That can promote any amount of self-sacrifice in a believer, up to and including suicidal behaviour—as recent events in the Islamic world have emphasised. However, belief in an afterlife is not equally well developed in all religions, and he suspects the differences may be illuminating.

That does not mean there are no explanations for religion that are based on individual selection. For example, Jason Slone, a professor of religious studies at Webster University in St Louis, argues that people who are religious will be seen as more likely to be faithful and to help in parenting than those who are not. That makes them desirable as mates. He plans to conduct experiments designed to find out whether this is so. And, slightly tongue in cheek, Dr Wilson quips that “secularism is very maladaptive biologically. We're the ones who at best are having only two kids. Religious people are the ones who aren't smoking and drinking, and are living longer and having the health benefits.”

That quip, though, makes an intriguing point. Evolutionary biologists tend to be atheists, and most would be surprised if the scientific investigation of religion did not end up supporting their point of view. But if a propensity to religious behaviour really is an evolved trait, then they have talked themselves into a position where they cannot benefit from it, much as a sceptic cannot benefit from the placebo effect of homeopathy. Maybe, therefore, it is God who will have the last laugh after all—whether He actually exists or not.

0 Comments
 
just in time for easter
03.22.08 (2:14 pm)   [edit]

Sydney Archbishop warns against occult forces

By Barney Porter

Posted Sat Mar 22, 2008 12:20pm AEDT
Updated Sat Mar 22, 2008 12:56pm AEDT

Dr Jensen believes while traditional religion is still pertinent, young people believe it is less relevant.

Dr Jensen believes while traditional religion is still pertinent, young people believe it is less relevant. (Sydney Anglican Church: Madeleine Collins)

In his Easter message this weekend, the Anglican Archbishop of Sydney Dr Peter Jensen has warned of the occult.

The Archbishop is particularly concerned about people using the supernatural to contact deceased loved ones.

Dr Jensen told ABC radio's AM program there has been a surge of interest non-traditional religions.

"There's become a great deal more freedom than there used to be decades ago, with mind and spirit stuff; new age religions," he said.

"All the sort of stuff you see very prominently in book stores.

"But there's also been a large migrant intake into this country from people who haven't been impacted by Western cynical secularism, but culturally have a strong belief in the afterlife and in supernatural beings; in ghosts and spirits.

"And a surprising number of people therefore who are now living in Australia are quite concerned about, and fearful of I think, of this supernatural realm."

Dr Jensen believes while traditional religion is still pertinent, young people believe it is less relevant.

"We are actually incurably religious, and we will worship, we will dabble in the supernatural, we will think of these things," he said.

"And there's a spiritual vacuum caused when Christianity declines in any way.

"People search for meaning they search for purpose and of course, they're worried about the big one - that is death itself.

"It's interesting to see how modern people are coping with, or actually not coping with death."

He says if a grieving person tries to and then believes they do make contact with a loved one, and then achieves some type of closure or comfort from that, there is no way to be sure a supernatural visitor is actually the person.

"From the biblical and Christian point of view, this universe has within it spiritual forces, many of which are evil or occult and which will be quite keen to open us up," he said.

"If we're prepared to dabble in occult things then we will open ourselves up to these evil forces. You can never be sure that the person you're contacting is really - in fact you can be pretty sure, it's not the person you think it is.

"And so there's a great deal of fraud in this area of course, we hasten to say a great deal of fraud.

"But there is also something there that is true and spooky and a person who dabbles in that area is doing something very dangerous; dangerous to their own stability and health I think, and dangerous spiritually."

0 Comments
 
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