My thoughts, generally centrist but often seen as conservative, on either accepted norms or controversial topics - with no regard for political correctness or 'progressive' modernisation. In many ways I feel society is slipping backwards. New isn't always better!
Saturday, December 21, 2019
Numerology Schmology
Sunday, October 13, 2019
Race: a huge blunder of science
Modern events have seen all of that change, where migration and domination of introduced species has led to loss of diversification, a supposed 'sin of mankind', the result of European colonisation and globalisation. Sadly most if not all of this has happened under the banner of religion, either Christianity or to a lesser extent Islam.
Yet there is another train of thought, that of the Vedas - where Ice Ages have periodically interrupted millions of years of humanity by forcing retreat and dieback on a massive scale. The last period of maximum glaciation ended roughly ten thousand years ago, and since then the melting ice caps and glaciers have changed the topography of the planet vastly. The Vedic thought is that their culture has survived through all of this for millions of years by retreating to areas protected by the Himalayas.
The problem with science, the substitute "Almighty" of atheists, is that it is relative and imperfect (unlike the Absolute, Divine Creator, Supreme Being, Big Dude In The Sky or whatever you identify with) and can make monumental mistakes.
'Cos that's when history "began".
Back then everyone was a joke teller.
Thursday, August 29, 2019
Western Astronomy vs Puranic Cosmology
The thing I am trying to address here is the potential humiliation of the TOVP if they try to build a model based on the spiritual, non-scientific (some would say 'mythological') Puranic model of ancient times – so old that it is literally pre-historic. Modern Jyotish is based largely on the Surya Siddhanta (of which Śrīla Bhaktisiddhanta wrote a commentary) and differs vastly from the Puranic model, aligning more closely with Western astronomy, the difference being that western is geocentric and uses the tropical zodiac and Jyotish uses instead the sidereal zodiac and is heliocentric - a difference in point of view rather than mathematic abstractions. Nevertheless, Siddhantic Cosmology uses basically the same formulae for calculations as Western astronomy, so it makes little difference when it comes to transits, eclipses, etc which system you use.
This is all semantics regarding NASA vs Rahu and Ketu. The Moon's North Node is the same as Rahu. The Moon's South Node is Ketu. The Moon's North and South Nodes mark the points where the Sun/Earth/Moon orbital planes intersect. If a lunation (new or full) occurs near the nodes an eclipse occurs. That is the geometry. It is not necessary for NASA to acknowledge Rahu and Ketu as planets for their calculations to be made. The Nodes are invisible points and the calculation of the timing of eclipses is exactly the same no matter what they are called in either astronomy or Jyotish. You can argue that their knowledge is deficient but it doesn't change the geometry.
Therefore SB must be describing the Cosmos in some other time or circumstance, eg on another plane or dimension, as in viewed from the Heavenly Planets or a different cycle of Yugas where our current situation is not the normal cosmology that generally prevails. We know for a fact that the orbits of all bodies change over millennia, even the Fixed Stars. To say that Vedic Cosmology is static and always applies is a questionable proposition.
Therefore, what the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam describes (Puranic cosmology) and what we see (modern astronomy) don't have to concur for both to be valid. Different time and circumstance. For the TOVP to build a Puranic model and say "this is reality, NASA has got it all wrong", and expect to be well received – well, they're stark raving mad.
No longer do I feel discumbobulated with the clash of paradigms. We use modern methods to observe and calibrate the current real world we live in. We use the Puranas to marvel at the incomprehensible timeless qualities of the Supreme Personality of Godhead and to wonder at the vastness of all His creation.
Wednesday, August 28, 2019
Weblog trivia
https://www.natureaustralia.org.au/explore/australian-animals/are-kookaburras-laughing-or-screaming-/
Typos in Śrīla Prabhupāda's books
Personally I have no objection to the numerous typos in Śrīla Prabhupāda's books - and I am certainly not criticising Him. Not only do I not mind them, I value them - as they provide a valuable function! These typos serve to identify His Divine Grace's original books because they have since been removed from the edited, so-called 'corrected' and changed modern BBTi versions.
Besides, most of the typos are so glaringly obvious as mistakes that they generally don't cloud any meaning. Forr eximple, you moste probably hav no trouble undastanding wot this sentence meenz. Similarly with figures, when different numbers describe the same phenomena (such as 10,000 yojanas and 1,000,000 yojanas for the same distance) we can do the sums in our head and work out, with simple arithmetic, which one is correct.
Distances between planets in 5th Canto, Book Two, Chart Three differ not only from the texts - the texts differ from the purports. Even the heavenly bodies change names in some places!
It is no wonder Vedic Cosmology has devotees confused the world over. It definitely seems to have confused the editors, proof-readers and typsetters! I could not find a single Sanskrit reference to the distance between the Earth and the Sun anywhere in the texts (either in the Devanagari script, the Sanskrit, the transliterations, or nor the English translation of the Sanskrit). It appears in Chart Three as 100,000 yojanas; elsewhere in the purports as 93 million miles; yet not a single mention in the actual Sanskrit texts - at least not in the 5th canto which deals with our position in the material universe in detail. If it exists somewhere else in Sanskrit I would be very grateful if someone can show me where in the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam it is (not in the English in the purports which is NASA's figure of 93 million miles).
I used the search tools built into Vedabase, Gitabase and Vanipedia, with the words 'Sun', 'Earth', 'distance', 'above' - even including the Boolean term AND between them to narrow down the results - and didn't find ANYTHING in the actual Sanskrit-to-English text. There are plenty of references everywhere else but they all use figures based on western astronomy, not Vedic. I guess this is why Śrīla Prabhupāda uses the 93,000,000 figure. As far as I could fathom the actual figure of 100,000 yojanas (or 800,000 miles) comes from the Viṣṇu Purana, not the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam.. but that still doesn't explain how 100,000 yojanas found its way into Chart Three mistakenly as double that figure.
So we have these unusual entries:
#SB 5.22.8, the is Moon listed as 100,000 yj above the Sun; whereas
#Chart Three it is drawn as 200,000 yj; and elsewhere
#SB 5.22.11, the bold Text says that the 28 Stars are 1,600,000 miles above the Moon; yet in the purport it reads "above the Sun";
#Not only that but the calculation for the distance of the 28 Stars above the Earth at 4 million miles only adds up using the distance of the Moon being 800,000 miles above the Sun instead of 1,600,000 suggesting again that the Text is correct and that Chart Three is wrong; and
#93,000,000 miles for Earth/Sun distance; oddly, always in miles, not yojanas - as used by NASA the mile is an imperial measurement, not Vedic). Nowhere in the body of the text EXCEPT THE PURPORTS is the height of the Sun above the Earth given;
#SB 5.24 chapter introduction states that below Rahu "by another 1,000,000 yojanas" whereas text 4 says 10,000 yj re: Siddhaloka etc.;
#Chapter 24 goes on to say that the seven Subterranean planets, each the same size as Earth, are 10,000 yj apart yet Chart Three shows them as not starting until 70,000 yj beneath the Earth which is about 1,000 diameter. How anyone can interpret subterranean as meaning 'inside hollow Earth' is obviously taking its meaning literally and disregarding the arithmetic. They can't all be the same size and yet fit inside it! Yes, 'subterranean' means 'below the earth's crust' as in underground - but certainly not 'below the Earth's plane! Perhaps an overzealous editor substituted or suggested the word not knowing the correct context.
These are just few typos that I found by double-checking a few chapters of just one book. My point is, the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam is wonderful, but regarding these minor discrepancies, anyone who takes EVERYTHING they read literally, especially the multitude of contradictions in the 5th Canto, is sure to be getting the wrong picture. Perhaps they spent a little too much time experimenting in Haight-Ashbury during the 60s? Maybe that explains how some people can accommodate both a Flat Earth and a Hollow Earth at the same time.
It's about this point that I remember something a little birdy told me that I'd forgotten (the 'something', not the person). She (who I won't name to respect her privacy) joined the movement as a teenager in the early 70s. I met her during 1988/89, soon after she'd come back to Australia to resume karmi life after a decade and a half in the movement, much of it overseas. Her former husband was responsible for outing one of the fallen ZAS "gurus".
Two things she said -
Either way I never paid a great deal of attention to what the little birdy said and didn't understand the relevance as I was more interested in other things at the time.
Now.... whether or not any or all of that is true...
On the whole Śrīla Prabhupāda's "Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam" is a masterpiece. As I have said before, the typos that it does contain help identify it as the original because subsequent (edited and altered) editions don't contain many of them. Therefore they serve a valuable purpose rather than detract from the great body of work."
हरे कृष्ण
Monday, August 05, 2019
Herd immunity - science or myth?
To begin with, I'm a strict vegetarian for religious reasons and steadfastly refuse to use vaccines that are grown in animal tissue.
Yet, I can't seem to win here. If herd immunity works, then surely I don't need shots, being one of the small percentage of the public that abstains from getting jabbed. But if 'herd immunity' validly exists and I use that to skip a jab seeing as "I'm protected by others", then I'm labelled a parasite for bludging off society. If it's a myth then there's no protection whether you're vaccinated or not. If enough of the population has had flu shots, why should I worry? The strain is supposed to die out without enough hosts for it to multiply. Therefore I can skip the jab and avoid the risk of getting flu from it ha ha!
Don't get me wrong - I'm not an Anti-vaxxer - I'm pro-choice. Actually, I'm all for immunisation (eg tetanus antibodies booster); pretty much ok with inoculation such as variolation; sitting on the fence with inactivated vaccines but quite alarmed and somewhat wary about attenuated "live" vaccines such as flu shots - which can give you a bout of influenza that you may have otherwise avoided. Mind you, Australian flu vaccines are supposed to be different to overseas ones and don't have attenuated "live" microbes. They're supposedly thoroughly killed off and there's no chance of getting flu from them. Still, the vaccine is incubated in chicken eggs and then inactivated. This year's jab is 47% effective. Last year it was 36%. At those rates I'd sooner take my chances and stay chicken egg free. Though I might still get the flu regardless.
You didn't know there is a difference between vaccination, immunisation and inoculation? Thought they were all the same? That's because these three terms are wrongfully used interchangeably in a slipshod manner (hardly anyone even knows what variolation is so I didn’t count that one). They are all completely separate procedures that use different mechanisms to artificially induce immunity or even better, a response from your immune system.
As for "herd immunity", the term comes from observation of natural resistance that some animals have in a community. It isn't the same as vaccine-induced 'protection' because natural immunity is life-long and far more effective. Most adults don't realise that their childhood jabs are no longer protecting them, whereas kids that have had measles or chicken pox will never ever have to deal with them again. There's every chance that elderly citizens can succumb to diseases they've been vaccinated for because most wear off - like pneumonia, shingles, diptheria, tetanus, hepatitis A & B. And influenza - because it constantly mutates and past jabs won't protect from future strains.
The best protection by far is a healthy immune system. You can't find that in a needle or a pill bottle because it is a result of a healthy lifestyle - good diet, exercise, avoiding allergens, toxins and chemicals - and even having good thoughts and healthy warm emotions! All these promote a good immune system, your first defence against any attacking pathogen.
Childhood diseases are actually good for the individual as long as they don't suffer permanent injury (or worse still, die) because their immune system's response gives them lifelong protection. It is far better to catch a disease as a kid than as a senior because old folk don't bounce back so good. That's why they die of 'ordinary diseases' that would only send a kid to bed for a couple of days or at most a week or two. Catching measles as a veteran is potentially lethal whereas very few of us died as kids from it. Well in fact none of us if you're reading this.
I'd like to note here that as a child I was constantly getting sick on a routine yearly basis - either otitis media (infection of the middle ear), tonsilitis, or hives (I still don't like the smell of caladryl lotion!). As an undiagnosed coeliac, most likely all three, all inflammatory reactions, were a result of wheat, although the hives might've been from the sprays they used in those days. I enjoy them now without any allergic reaction. I was diagnosed just before my 55th birthday, soon after my 16yo daughter received the same news. Strangely my mother was a trained nurse yet missed picking up on it even when I complained that my lunchtime brown bread sandwiches made me feel ill. When I asked to have white bread like all the other kids I was told to stop complaining, "wholemeal bread is good for you". No it wasn't!
Ok, back to 'herd immunity'.
It's not a scientific rule. It's an idea. Herds can still get sick, just that it won't spread like wildfire and they're less likely to succumb when most of the members are resistant to a particular disease. Yet this natural resistance is far, far stronger than any artificially induced vaccination, a point often glossed over in pro-vaxx circles where those who have been jabbed may be unwittingly carrying around supressed microbes of a virus that infect unvaccinated people including anti-vaxxers.
So.... Herd Immunity is an ideological concept, not a scientific fact based on exact numbers. True, different diseases need different percentages of populations to minimise spreading but it doesn't eliminate disease. It prevents epidemics breaking out... in theory, that is. Still the numbers required are approximate because it's guesswork. That's not science. That's politics, guilt-trips, peer pressure, emotional blackmail. I find this whole "for the greater good" compulsory vaccination propaganda an impingement on personal freedom. Every individual in society has the right to choose otherwise we live in a dictatorship. Yet it makes complete sense that because viruses rely on suitable hosts to breed and multiply, limiting the number of available hosts restricts any disease from "going viral" (pun intended).
With myself, basically it comes down to this... If vaxxers really believe they're protected by their vaccinations, how can they blame anti-vaxxers for exposing them to potentially harmful pathogens? I thought your vaccination made you immune. What are you frightened of? How can you blame me or anyone else?
Because I'm a bludger, relying on herd immunity? Well then wtf are you worried about if herd immunity is protecting you!
The problem I find with these sorts of emotionally charged arguments is that it is hard to get unbiased information. Take for example global warming. Both sides of the argument presented data sets, graphs, meteorological and climatological groupthink, predictions and prognostications to backup their respective points of view. It is said, when debate degenerates into character assassination, name-calling, insults, foul language and uncivil antisocial behaviour it is fairly reasonable to assume that the offending party is losing the debate. Those with weak arguments get angry. Those who are quietly confident are patient, calmly presenting their case in an optimistic, gentle manner as they have nothing to fear. Aggression is a sign of a weakly placed Mars in the horoscope of the individual. Those with a strong Mars have no need to attack. They use others' agression by deflecting it back at them where their mistakes in thinking result in further complication. It is impossible to make wise decisions when one is angry, everyone knows this from practical example. No-one ever makes a smart choice by being hot-tempered. Eventually the detractor will self-implode out of sheer frustration. Game over.
"A gentleman tolerates insults silently. Wise men suffer fools gladly. In such circumstances, inaction is the only honorable course of action."
Sunday, August 04, 2019
CAGW
Saturday, May 04, 2019
Scientists against climate alarmism
Sunday, April 14, 2019
Two Buddhas, Two Kapilas?
हरे कृष्ण
After Adi Buddha's śūnyavādi philosophy of voidism was defeated by Adi Shankara's māyāvādī philosophy, a third incarnation appeared - this time the combined form of Kṛṣṇa and Radha, as Lord Caitanya - who in turn defeated Adi Shanka's impersonalism with acintya bheda-abheda philosophy of the Supreme Lord being simultaneously one with and different from His creation. This dualist bhakti yoga - ecstatic love in devotional service to the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa as preached by Lord Caitanya is also known as Dvaita-vada. Śrī Caitanya Mahaprabhu appeared in Mayapur, West Bengal in AD 1486 and established the sankirtan movement, the congregational chanting of the Lord's Holy Names, singing the famous Hare Kṛṣṇa Mahā-mantra that Iskcon devotees are renowned for in cities all around the world.