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Daily Archives: June 17, 2017
50 DMA for CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF) moves above 12-week low – NY Stock News
Posted: June 17, 2017 at 2:13 pm
50 DMA for CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF) moves above 12-week low NY Stock News The technicals for CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF) have taken shape, and with them a comprehensive picture has emerged. This is the current state of play as presented by the current technical setup. The technical data for a stock offers a rich ... |
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50 DMA for CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF) moves above 12-week low - NY Stock News
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New members of Vatican pro-life academy have defended abortion and contraception – Catholic Herald Online
Posted: at 2:12 pm
Avraham Steinberg, a new member of the Pontifical Academy for Life (Wikimedia)
Avraham Steinberg has approved of abortion in some cases, while Fr Maurizio Chiodi says contraception may be permissible
Two more newmembers of the Pontifical Academy for Life hold controversial positions on bioethics.
Rabbi Professor Avraham Steinberg, one of 45 ordinary members of the Pontifical Council for Life appointed this week, has argued for the permissibility of ending a pregnancy in some cases.
Steinberg told Australias Radio National in 2008 that an embryo has no human status before 40 days. After 40 days it has a certain status of a human being, not a full status.
As a result, Steinberg says, Abortion is not permissible by Jewish law, but if the situation of the mother is in a psychological upset to a degree that it may cause her serious trouble, then abortion may be permissible despite the fact that for the foetuss sake, we would not allow it.
So case by case, occasionally abortion might be permissible, something which is probably unheard-of in the Catholic point of view.
When asked about eugenics, Steinberg says he approves of genetic screening for disability, so that parents can avoid the birth of a Tay-Sachs child or of a cystic fibrosis child and so on. He explains that this might be looked at as a form of eugenics, but that is not a forbidden eugenics if you think about it carefully, because what we want is that people would be happy and able and not suffering, but once they are born, they have equal rights and one must support them.
Steinberg also supports stem-cell research involving the destruction of embryos, something forbidden by Church teaching, on the grounds that the embryo at a few days old is not a human being in any sense. So therefore the destruction of it is not murder in any sense. Asked when the embryo becomes a human being, Steinberg replies that it must be 40 days old.
Elsewhere in the interview, Steinberg contrasts the Jewish and Catholic ways of approaching ethics, saying: In the Catholic approach there are a lot of dogmas that are strict, and they cant be changed, and they cant be modified. Whereas in Judaism, in general, there are no absolute values except for values that have to do with the belief.
Another rabbi appointed to the academy, Fernando Szlajen, has said that the prohibition on abortion is absolute, and that the commandment Thou shalt not kill means we should protect human beings from the moment of conception.
Another new member, Fr Maurizio Chiodi, has questioned Church teaching onartificial contraception. According the newspaper LAvvenire, which reviewed a book to which Fr Chiodi contributed, he believes that the use of artificial birth control techniques can be moral. The newspaper quotes FrChiodias saying that the moral norm on responsible procreation can not coincide with the biological observance of natural methods. LAvvenire also say that for Fr Chiodi, It is not the method itself that determines the morality, but the conscience of the spouses, their sense of responsibility, their genuine willingness to open themselves to life.
Pope Paul VIs encyclical Humanae Vitae said that artificial contraception is never lawful, even for the gravest reasonsit is a serious error to think that a whole married life of otherwise normal relations can justify sexual intercourse which is deliberately contraceptive and so intrinsically wrong.
This reaffirmed the teaching of the Church, also expressed in Pius XIs Casti Connubii, that contraception is intrinsically vicious and that the Divine Majesty regards with greatest detestation this horrible crime and at times has punished it with death.
Fr Chiodi wrotein 2008 that Humanae Vitaemust be interpreted with conscience and discernment.
Steinberg and Fr Chiodi arenot the only new members of the academy whose appointment diverges from previous expectations. Oxford Professor Nigel Biggar, an Anglican clergyman who has also joined the academy, has said he only opposes abortion after about 18 weeks.
The academy no longer requires members to sign a statement promising their allegiance to the Churchs teaching. Pope Francis hasremovednearly 100 members of the academy, including John Finnis, Luke Gormally, Josef Seifert and Wolfgang Waldstein, while 17 have been added.
The membership term is five years, but it can be renewed.
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Theory of Evolution Needs Update, Scientists Say – Voice of America
Posted: at 2:11 pm
Scientists from several U.S. and Chinese universities say new findings about microbes and their interaction with other species show that Darwin's theory of evolution needs an update.
Their contention is based on discoveries that all plants and animals, including humans, evolved in interaction with a huge number of microscopic species bacteria, viruses and fungi not only in harmful but also in beneficial ways.
In a paper published by the scientific journal Trends in Ecology and Evolution, scientists from the University of Colorado, Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou, China, and several other universities say Darwin's tree of life fails to recognize that many forms of life are linked physically and evolved together in so-called symbiomes.
The authors propose creating a working group that would use advanced computational methods to create a multidimensional evolutionary tree describing our complex interaction with microbes.
For centuries, mythologies around the world used the so-called tree of life as a metaphor for diversity stemming from a single source.
In 1859, Charles Darwin used the same concept to explain his theory of evolution, depicting it as a two-dimensional tree with individual species evolving independently of other branches.
Scientists say an updated view on symbiomes could have a profound effect not only on biology but also on many areas of science, including technology and even on society.
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Theory of Evolution Needs Update, Scientists Say - Voice of America
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Humanity’s next Stage of Evolution Could Be the Cyborg – Futurism
Posted: at 2:11 pm
In Brief As medical advancements in robotics, implants, and other assisting technologies continue, will we, as humans, eventually evolve into a species of cyborgs? What would this mean for society as we know it? The Next Evolution
Cyborgs: humans who have been merged with machines; a hybrid of sorts. What was once the subject of far-out science fiction has now entered reality as a medical tool. From implants to robotics, there is a whole host of emerging technologies that aim to treat health conditions and aid those suffering from different disabilities by turning people into, technically, cyborgs.
It might seem to be going too far to use the term cyborg when discussing, for instance, new versions of prosthetic limbs. However, carbon fiber and titanium prostheses are now commonplace, and most artificial limbs are fully functional. For example, in the video below, you can see the dexterity and capabilities of one prosthetic arm. Since this video was created, prostheses have advanced even further, with researchers going so far as to create robotic hands that can be controlled with ones brain and they have a sense of touch.
Artificial limb technologies like the blades used by Paralympians are even so advanced that some have started to discuss whether or not they are more capable than organic limbs. But artificial limbs arent the only advancements in so-called cyborg tech. One Swedish company is implanting its employees with microchips to allow them to do things like access doors with the wave of a hand instead of with a key. Elon Musk thinks that his neural lace could actually make human beings smarter. Many are experimenting with the many possibilities of merging humankind with machines.
The authors of a recent paper in Science Robotics discussed the potential issues with the future of such technologies:
There needs to be a debate on the future evolution of technologies as the pace of robotics and AI is accelerating. It seems certain that future assistive technologies will not only compensate for human disability but also drive human capacities beyond our innate physiological levels. The associated transformative influence will bring on broad social, political, and economic issues.
Once we officially cross that line, once the technologies that we create to assist those with difficulties and disabilities begin to advance human capabilities beyond what is biologically possible, we will have a teeming variety of moral and practical issues to deal with. Many believe that this will be humanitys next step in evolution. Indeed, ifwe are ever going to colonize Mars and expand our reign in the Solar System, that might be a necessary evolution. Whatever moral and ethical quandariesmay exist, it might not be possible for us to take such large strides without becoming cyborgs.
So, more likely than not, the day will come and we will cross that line. Will cyborg humans have the same rights and be bound by the same laws as biologically ordinary citizens? Will cyborgs be vulnerable to hacking and manipulation? Will warfare forever change with the possible advancement of military exoskeletons? The list goes on and on. And so, while we might not all be walking around as half-machines just yet, it might be a good idea to plan ahead.
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Humanity's next Stage of Evolution Could Be the Cyborg - Futurism
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Becky Lynch says engaging storylines key to women’s evolution in WWE – Hindustan Times
Posted: at 2:11 pm
The face of womens wrestling has changed a lot over the last few years and Becky Lynch was at the epicenter of this evolution. The popularity of the womens division has skyrocketed thanks to the constant influx of talent and the former womens champion believes engaging storylines is the reason behind the womens evolution in the WWE (World Wrestling Entertainment).
(Read | Stephanie McMahon surprised by interest in WWE among women wrestlers)
The problem with womens wrestling few years ago was the lack of compelling storylines. There were a bunch of tag matches and honestly, the audience did not care much. However, that changed once the company started to book the wrestlers in a different way, Becky Lynch told HT.
The popularity started to increase once we started to give proper storylines to the female wrestlers and the success has been phenomenal. However, I believe we have barely scratched the surface of whats possible and the future looks extremely bright, she added.
(Read | Rinku Singh, Saurav Gurjar eye WWE glory)
The Irish wrestler started her journey from NWA Ireland and then went on to perform for promotions all around the world. However, it was the WWE where Lynch found true stardom. During her initial years, she was a part of the Four Horsewomen along with Bayley, Sasha Banks and Charlotte in NXT and they were responsible for a huge change in how the audience viewed womens wrestling in the company.
The Irish wrestler was a huge draw on the developmental scene and her main roster debut came in 2015. Becky became the inaugural WWE SmackDown Live Womens champion after winning a six-pack elimination challenge and on Monday, shell be a part of the first-ever womens Money in the Bank Ladder match.
(Read | WWE trying to tap into popularity in India with tryouts, merchandise)
It is going to be monumental occasion for all the wrestlers involved in the match. When the concept of a womens Money in the Bank ladder match was proposed, we were all a bit apprehensive but we have trained hard and we are ready to make history.
The WWE will also host a womens tournament in July which will feature 32 participants from all around the world. It will be an elimination-style competition along the lines of the Cruiser-weight Classic and Lynch believes it has the potential to change the entire landscape of the company.
(Read | Jinder Mahal beats Randy Orton to win WWE Championship at Backlash)
I think it is a great opportunity for the wrestlers to show their talent on such a big stage and it is brilliant that they will have a complete show all to themselves. Ill be there to see every match and this can potentially change the entire scene of womens wrestling in the WWE.
Becky Lynch also dropped a major hint that former Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) fighter Shayna Baszler could be a part of the tournament. The Queen of spades has appeared for a couple of independent promotions including Ring of Honor and Lynch said that she is excited to see how Baszler does in the tournament.
I am excited to see Shayna Baszler in the tournament. It is true that she does not have much experience in pro-wrestling, but her UFC background will give her a huge advantage.
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Becky Lynch says engaging storylines key to women's evolution in WWE - Hindustan Times
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Novi High robotics team gives helping hand to kids around world – Fox 2 Detroit
Posted: at 2:10 pm
NOVI, Mich. (WJBK) - School is winding down for most area students this week, but even though school year is ending the impact of some students in Novi goes on.
Novi High School's robotics team is giving a helping hand to kids all over the world.
"It really makes me feel amazing to be able to see that high schoolers can change the world. That high schoolers can have the ability to help someone out in a literal helping hand way," says Heidi Aguas.
They call the project Helping Hands, and it's part of the outreach efforts of Frog Force 503.
"Frog Force is the high school robotic team, and what we do is build these 120 pound robots to complete a specific challenge, and that challenge changes year from year," explains Eric Mazza.
Frog Force is known for their impressive record. They have qualified for the world championships 16 of the past 17 years. They've proven themselves in robotics - but they're also known for giving back.
"We really don't just build robots. There's so much more going on. Outside of the robots, we do a lot of volunteer work," says Mazza.
"Last year, we held over 93 different events that gave back to the community," says Fenton Lawler.
'We'd have community nights where we have demos, where we try to get more kids involved with robotics and create more teams," says Anne George.
"There's just a ton of different opportunities that students get to work with people, make connections, and help out and have a sense of joy," says Mazza.
Their Helping Hands project is a partnership with an organization called e-NABLE - a global network of volunteers using 3D printers to create free prosthetic hands for those in need around the world, focusing on children in underserved countries where a typical prosthetic hand would be too expensive.
"A normal prosthetic costs so much. The good thing about 3D-printed prosthetics is that you can easily replace them and it's for such a low cost," says George.
With a 3-D printer donated by Bosch and the enthusiastic support of the Novi School District, Frog Force started reaching out across the world.
"Obviously our students are very talented and gifted in the classroom in regards to their achievements academically, and with this group their achievements are at the world level, even but we take things a step further," says Novi High School principal, Nicole Carter. "One of the taglines of the district is service over self, and Frog Force definitely embodies that."
So far they have donated 75 hands - and they're just getting started.
"We are actually looking to expand it here in the community since the school district got some new printers were hoping to print at different schools, start activities with people at the schools so we want to go in and have kids assemble hands," says Lawler.
Their hope is to inspire children in the Novi community to help children around the world. It's a global movement bringing together creative and kind people, using technology to change lives.
"Last year we were able to give a hand to a girl in Tbilisi, Georgia. She is about six. Her name is Misha," says Aguas. "I got a thank you picture of her holding her Barbie for the first time while I was at a competition, and it sounds really cheesy but IO actually started tearing up because she looked so happy holding her doll for the first time with the pink prosthetic that we gave her."
"It's like, 'Oh, she's holding her Barbie for the first time with her prosthetic' - and it just hits you. It's a younger kid finally holding her Barbie. When I was little I used to pick them up with both hands, but to think that she's never held it with both hands, it really hits you," says Shivani Bongu.
Frog Force may be Novi High School's robotics team but they're not just building robots, they're building a better community.
"Anyone can take initiative, which anyone can find something that they love, run with it, give a helping hand to someone else -- you may be helping something bigger than yourself," says Aguas.
All of that wonderful video of kids using their prosthetic hands came from e-NABLE. They're hands made by volunteers from all over the world just like Novi's Frog Force volunteers.
If you would like to support the cause, CLICK HERE for the e-NABLE site and HERE for the Facebook page.
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Novi High robotics team gives helping hand to kids around world - Fox 2 Detroit
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RCBI camps offer students opportunity to explore LEGO robotics – Charleston Gazette-Mail (subscription)
Posted: at 2:10 pm
The Robert C. Byrd Institute (RCBI) will offer a camp this summer for 9- to 15-year-old students interested in robotics.
Activities kick off June 26-30 with a camp for both those with robotics experience and first-timers. During the five-day event, campers will learn to build, program and operate LEGO Mindstorms EV3 robots and participate in the World Robot Olympiad the final day.
The camp will run from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday, and from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday at RCBI Huntington. The cost is $125 for each camper and includes lunch and snacks.
Students are encouraged to register as small teams. Sign up at http://www.rcbi.org/go/robotics1.
RCBI Huntington also will host a free, two-day Boot Camp from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Aug. 7-8 focused on boosting participation in FIRST LEGO League (FLL) robotics and promoting STEM education in southern West Virginia counties. Groups interested in forming teams are encouraged to apply for the free camp by contacting Mike Friel at 304-781-1686 or mfriel@rcbi.org.
Five teams will receive a free Mindstorms EV3 robot and expansion set after completing training and agreeing to compete in future FLL events. Teams must include two adult coaches and between two and six students age 9 to 14.
Both camps will be taught by employees from NASAs IV&V Educator Resource Center and the West Virginia Robotics Alliance. Campers will learn to program robots for specific missions and work on core values and team-working skills that align with the FIRST LEGO League robotics vision. Additionally, campers will engage with guest speakers who have knowledge of real-world robotics and see demonstrations from advanced high school level robotic competitors.
RCBIs robotics program is made possible by the support of the NASA West Virginia Space Grant Consortium.
For information, contact RCBIs Mike Friel at 304-781-1686 or mfriel@rcbi.org.
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YouTube’s New Father Figure – National Review
Posted: at 2:10 pm
Like countless men, I recently discovered the online lectures of Jordan P. Peterson, a professor of psychology at the University of Toronto who rose to Internet fame and notoriety in November of 2016. The obscure professor had posted videos to his small YouTube channel voicing opposition to Canadas Bill C-16, which prohibited discrimination on the basis of gender identity a concept that can include misgendering people by refusing to refer to them by their preferred pronouns. Peterson denounced the postmodernist motivations of the law, whose totalitarian end game, he believed, was to criminalize free speech.
As things are wont to unfold on the Internet, Petersons videos and media coverage snowballed until he eventually caught the eye and became a three-hour guest on popular YouTube channels such as the Rubin Report and the Joe Rogan Experience. Petersons animated divertissements won instant fans through his particularly engaging mix of topics: free speech and political correctness, the history of totalitarianism, personality traits and psychological well-being, heros-journey mythology, and the stories of the Old Testament.
Wise nuggets from his interviews and lectures were uploaded at an accelerating pace, and Peterson amassed millions of views. His own channel leapt from obscurity to 300,000 subscribers and counting. Peterson next set up a Patreon account to raise money, vowing to fast-track the video uploading and promising a lengthy series of lectures on the Bible, and his newfound flock ponied up over $40,000 in monthly support, which Peterson says he wants to use to create an online university. Though his book Twelve Rules for Life: An Antidote for Chaos isnt due out until September September of 2018, that is it is fast climbing the Amazon ranks from preorders. Hes tweeted out that he has all ten of the top ten higher-education podcasts on iTunes. Reddit communities, memes, and clever-slogan-stamped products are popping up every day.
Peterson says his online audience is 90 percent male. These huge numbers of men, many of whom are willing to donate $5 or $10 per month, have embraced a 54-year-old paternal authority figure who tells them that theyre a mess and need to get their lives in order. It works because Peterson connects his message to something eternal, offering mytho-intellectual fatherly advice that men, especially Millennial men, are starved for in an age of perpetual and trivial digital distraction.
To use one of his own refrains, he has ascended to the top of the dominance hierarchy when it comes to motivating males in the digital age.
Peterson has become an Internet hero partly by being a cartographer of the human soul. He talks at length about mapping your environment, ever weighing goals and results, risks and rewards, and what happens when unexplored territory chaos, the flood, the serpent in the garden suddenly appears and shatters your world.
One of his popular lecture series, taken directly from his UT classroom, is called Maps of Meaning, also the title of his 1999 book. Peterson presents men a roadmap for dealing with their past, the unresolved alarms that discordantly sound in our minds clamoring to be attended to, but that we are all too keen to tune out. If you have a memory thats more than 18 months old but still causes negative emotions, says Peterson, then its something you have yet to resolve. The brain needs to mark case closed on negative experiences to understand what went wrong so as to avoid making the same mistake in the future. Thats pretty intuitive when youre five and learning to ride a bike, but it gets a lot harder the older you get.
Id always thought I was a pretty well-adjusted person, free from things like petty envy or road rage. Sure I had problems, but I always thought they were worries about the future, not demons from my past. Then I discovered Peterson on YouTube, and he helped me understand that I share in the human condition, which is to say, Im a mess.
* * *
In this bleak midwinter, years into a midlife crisis, I received some bad news I didnt take very well. I fell into my habit of aversion and avoidance, and in doing so built up a dragon in my mind that could torment me at will. After five days of subconscious alarms going off, unattended to, everyday life suddenly fell to pieces.
I became wracked with fear and sorrow, constantly weeping in a way Id never experienced before. At one point misguided by meditation teaching and wrapped up in knots about consciousness, thinking, and trying not to think about not thinking I was ready to dial 911 for an ambulance to come sedate the torment away. But the idea of waking up in a New York mental institution with real loonies emboldened me to ride out the panic, which eventually subsided, as such episodes always do.
From that near crack-up things gradually improved as I clawed my way out of the dark place by tapping the instinct for self-preservation, and by seeking wisdom from a variety of books from different traditions from Nietzsches thoughts on affirming life by viewing its sufferings as an aesthetic phenomenon, to James Allens classic 1903 self-help tome As a Man Thinketh, and to the surprisingly entertaining and enlightening 1948 book by Dale Carnegie called How to Stop Worrying and Start Living, which combined stories of everyday folks conquering their demons with wise words from the great minds of Western literature. Gradually my world inched back toward messy normalcy.
All this coincided with the rise of Jordan Peterson, whom I discovered as if by fate, and his words became a daily regimen. I joked to friends that I was in therapy, and that it was actually quite sophisticated in a 70s Woody Allen kind of way. With Dr. Ps constant message of sort yourself out, each day the little epiphanies grew larger. There were times when Dr. P described my issues so precisely it made the hair stand up on the back of my neck. This made me realize that all human problems are pretty much the same, and that its Petersons archetypal, big-picture approach that is resonating with men at this particular moment in time.
Although the medium he uses is cutting-edge, giving his therapy sessions near-infinite reach, what Peterson teaches is not new but timeless: 4,000-year-old Biblical tales, mythologies of the past two millennia, and ideas from 19th- and 20th-century figures such as Nietzsche, Dostoyevsky, Solzhenitsyn, and Jung. Dr. P isnt just a therapist for men at a time of masculine crisis; no, the man who draws so much on patriarchal archetypes is fast becoming YouTubes new ideal male authority figure.
Firm but caring, Peterson is not a rigid drill sergeant out to eradicate your knee-jerk adolescent revolt. Thats a different kind of self-help guru for a different kind of man. Instead, Dr. P encourages, which, as he points out, means to instill with courage. In cognitive therapy, removing fear doesnt work. You dont make the bad stuff go away be retreating to a safe space, to use a popular buzzword; you do so by making yourself stronger. Peterson doesnt tell you what you should do, because only you can figure out your purpose but he can point out a few places to look. In short, Peterson speaks the way I always wished my father had.
But we cant choose our parents, and accepting them for who they are is another part of sorting yourself out. My own dad, kind and supportive as hes been to his adult son, would score in the 99th percentile for conscientiousness (work, discipline, order) in the Big Five personality test that Peterson often mentions, and in single digits for openness (variety, intellectual curiosity, aesthetic sensitivity, in touch with feelings) hardly the ideal for a writer son in search of wisdom and truth.
Imagine if you did everything you know you should be doing but arent, Dr. P says, and imagine what your life would be like in ten years. Then imagine the opposite, a complete cave-in to the worst of your tendencies. But change is so difficult as to seem impossible, as Dr. P himself says and right on cue I found a lecture in which he tells the story of Noah. What do you do when your Great Flood comes along and destroys your sense of external identity, when you lose your job or your spouse leaves you? Why, you be like Noah, who had Gods favor for his ability to adapt, to reinvent himself as shipbuilder and captain in order to survive, and in so transforming himself saved the world.
You dont wall yourself inside a safe space of ideology, territory, or experience. Learning and what is a life well lived but constant learning? requires the constant tearing down and transformative rebuilding of the boundaries of your experience as you acquire new information.
* * *
Change starts with little things, which despite being little feel immovable from the density of their weight. For years I would rise, often from a restless night, and go directly to my desk, hoping for some good news on the computer to jump-start my day. Id soon become distracted with all the trivialities of the news. Then, coffee ingested and ready to work, Id find my back was a wreck from sitting too soon after rising, which Id been told repeatedly by a chiropractor not to do.
With Dr. Ps voice in my head encouraging me to imagine what I could be if I stopped doing the things I know I shouldnt be doing, and started doing the things I know I should, I wondered what to do first thing in the morning. I mean besides the obvious and necessary.
I settled on something embarrassingly banal, the kind of thing old folks do: I would take a walk around the block, and have my first impressions of the day come from outside rather than a computer screen.
This simple act of will kicked my brains positive emotions into overdrive. Doing something different makes you feel different, which makes you think different, and finally be different. The front stoops of my neighbors, which I had so often passed, averting my eyes to the red-brick eyesores, were suddenly radiant with the beauty of flowers. Birds and squirrels went about their business of daily survival, oblivious to human folly and existential dread. And then I beheld a tree I had never noticed before, covered with heart-shaped messages I assumed were there to commemorate the site of some tragic accident. But when I investigated, the messages turned out to be timeless quotes on happiness and friendship put there to inspire and uplift anyone willing to notice. And I never had. One of the Old Testaments central messages, according to Peterson, is quite simple: pay attention.
Pay attention. Sort out your past. Author your future. Take responsibility for something. Identify not with that part of you that can be shattered, but the part that rebuilds itself from shatters. Face your fears one step at a time, and note with each voluntary approach how you didnt perish, but instead were strengthened.
I slept soundly last night and awoke with the sun. As I strolled on Day Two of the new walk-around-the-block routine, my mind was fertile and alert. What could come of this glorious day? When I eventually sat down at my desk, I began writing this.
Countless men are grateful to Jordan Peterson for having the courage to speak his mind on a contentious social matter. This temporal issue brought him many enemies, but his timeless messages earned followers that vastly outnumber them. The sheer numbers testify that he is the right man at the right time, someone capable of showing young men that cleaning up their room has cosmic significance, and that imposing a little order upon chaos is good for the soul, which in turn is good for the world.
READ MORE: Q&A Stephen Mirarchi: Fatherhood as Heroism Q&A Greg Popcak: The Standards of Fathers and Fatherhood The Transformative Power of Fatherhood
Christian Chensvold is a New Yorkbased writer whose op-eds have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, among other places. He is the founder of Ivy-Style.com.
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A Florida university is making Quidditch a (virtual) reality – Quartz
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Quartz | A Florida university is making Quidditch a (virtual) reality Quartz I hold in my hands what looks and feels like a wand from a Harry Potter film. But this isn't one of the cheap replicas you can buy in a souvenir shop. It was 3D-printed right here, in the high-tech workshop where I'm standing. And once I put on a ... |
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A Florida university is making Quidditch a (virtual) reality - Quartz
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Can virtual reality reduce high blood pressure at a church in South LA? – Rapid City Journal
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LOS ANGELES | The Rev. Kelvin Sauls believes health and faith are two sides of the same coin.
He brings yoga and Zumba classes to his church in South L.A. because he knows African-Americans are particularly vulnerable to diabetes and heart disease.
"We can't save people's souls in the sanctuary and kill their bodies in the fellowship hall," Sauls likes to say.
Now he's collaborating with Cedars-Sinai Medical Center to try to reduce high blood pressure in the community. The project has enrolled many of his congregants at Holman United Methodist Church and uses everything in the public health toolbox, including weekly dinners and classes, fitness trackers, nurse check-ins and even virtual reality.
African-Americans suffer from high rates of hypertension, which makes them much more likely to have strokes or heart attacks.
But when they're diagnosed with the condition, the doctor leaves the room and the patient is left wondering what to do next, said Dr. Bernice Coleman, a nurse scientist who heads the project for Cedars-Sinai. She wanted to find a way to help without focusing on cutting calories or losing weight.
"Everyone's been on a diet," Coleman said. "The thing in the middle that nobody understands is salt."
On a recent Monday evening, people started filtering into the church for dinner _ curried cabbage, salad with mushrooms, and for dessert, sliced watermelon. Coleman took the stage to teach the group about genetics and the importance of recording family medical history to know your risk factors.
"What happened to Grandma? What happened to Grandpa?" Coleman asked. They began filling out family trees.
Each week consists of dinner and a class. They've learned about recommended salt intake and diabetes, and taken cooking and tai chi classes. Everyone enrolled was given a blood pressure cuff and a Fitbit fitness tracker to monitor their steps.
Sharon Jackson, 62, joined the program because she has high blood pressure. She wants to get off the medicine that controls her levels.
About 1 in 3 adults in the United States has high blood pressure, which contributes to 1,000 deaths a day nationwide.
Jackson now checks her Fitbit to make sure she's getting enough exercise, and measures her blood pressure at home every morning and evening. It's already coming down, she said.
When someone has high blood pressure, the blood in their arteries _ the tubes that carry blood from the heart to other parts of the body _ pushes too hard against the arteries' walls. Eating salt can worsen the problem because it makes the body retain water.
Jackson said she's now cautious and seeks out nutrition information when she goes to her favorite restaurants. "They put salt in everything!" she said.
Thresa Thomas and Princess Benson, also enrolled in the program, recently went grocery shopping together and stayed away from salty foods.
Popcorn? "I said, 'Heck no,'" Thomas said.
Across the country, doctors are using virtual reality to practice surgeries, teach families about complicated medical treatments and distract patients from unpleasant or painful procedures.
At Cedars-Sinai, Dr. Brennan Spiegel has been fitting patients with virtual reality goggles for two years.
"We've been focused on the in-patient side, using virtual reality to transport patients outside the four walls of the hospital ... to fantastical destinations where they can relax or de-stress," Spiegel said.
Plus, virtual reality is such an immersive sensory experience that it prevents the brain from processing outside signals and can actually reduce the amount of pain patients feel, he said. Many studies have confirmed that virtual reality games can ease a patient's pain.
The project at Holman United Methodist Church gave Spiegel an opportunity to see how virtual reality might work in healthcare outside the hospital.
He designed a virtual reality smartphone app, which participants can use by clipping an eyeglasses-like device onto their smartphones.
When they launch the app, it appears they're in the middle of the kitchen, with different foods sitting on a counter: black beans, salmon, gumbo, lasagna, fruit smoothies. Each dish's sodium content pops up above it.
Look down, and they're transported to a 3-D rendering of the inside of a human body, where they can see how a pumping heart deteriorates with years of high blood pressure.
"You're sitting there, all of a sudden in your own chest, watching your heart beat," Spiegel said. "The whole idea is to just hijack the brain into rethinking the role of food, and in this case salt and health, and we're testing this now to see how people experience it and if it's helpful to them."
Spiegel said he was surprised by how much some people struggled to use the app or even just their smartphones.
"It was amazing how difficult it was," he said. "We have to really think about, if we're going to scale these technologies, what it actually takes to do it."
The app also offers a way to alleviate stress, which can contribute to high blood pressure. In the app, users can sit on a virtual beach at sunrise and listen to chirping birds and the sound of the ocean while Sauls, the church pastor, recites a calming meditation.
"I want to get the real one," said Jackson, 62. Her son has virtual reality goggles, and she wants more apps that can help her relax.
Benson, 51, said the app revealed the sodium in raw chicken and shellfish.
"You wouldn't ever think of it, that foods already have salt," she said.
Recently, Benson noticed that a packet of noodles her son was about to prepare for his child had 1,200 milligrams of sodium. She warned him against cooking them.
African-Americans tend to develop high blood pressure more often and younger than other groups. One out of three African-Americans in L.A. County said they'd been diagnosed with high blood pressure, compared with 1 out of 4 whites and 1 out of 5 Latinos and Asians, according to the most recent county health survey in 2015.
And that is those who know. Many people with hypertension aren't diagnosed because the condition doesn't always have symptoms it's often called the "silent killer."
Dr. Paul Simon, chief science officer at the L.A. County Department of Public Health, said it's an important but difficult problem to address because it's affected by what people eat at home and in restaurants, how much they exercise and their stress levels, which are in turn influenced by their lifestyles and where they live.
"Even if you have the best intentions, it's very difficult, for example, if you want to be physically active, but where in your neighborhood is there a park?" he said. "If you want to eat more healthfully, there may not be a lot of food options in your neighborhood that are more affordable."
Juanita Cannon, 71, loves Southern cooking. But now when she cooks, she pours a little salt into her hand and sprinkles it over the pan, instead of shaking it in directly, she said.
Because the program has her paying attention to exercise and eating, she's also started doing water aerobics. She set an hourly alarm on her phone to remind her to stand up usually from quilting, her favorite hobby now that she's retired and walk around a bit.
"I've even lost 10 pounds, which I've been trying to do for 50 years," she said, laughing.
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Can virtual reality reduce high blood pressure at a church in South LA? - Rapid City Journal
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