Archimandrite Pavel Stefanov

01.04.2008

НОВА ХИПОТЕЗА ЗА СОДОМ И ГОМОРА

Публикувано в: — pavel @ 23:2

story_asteriod_ap_jpg1069403040411540600.jpg

1 апреля 2008 г.

http://www.bogoslov.ru/text/293231/index.html

Британские исследователи выдвинули гипотезу, согласно которой в библейской истории о разрушении городов Содома и Гоморры описывается падение астероида на Землю. К таким выводам они пришли после того, как расшифровали клинопись с т.н. Планисферной таблички. Речь идет о копии записок шумерского астронома, выполненной около 700 года до н.э. и найденной в середине XIX века в руинах библиотеки царского дворца в Ниневии.

В копии, в частности, описывается астероид, как “приближающийся белый каменный шар”, который “стремительно пронесся” по небосводу.

При помощи компьютеров был восстановлен облик звездного неба, существовавший несколько тысяч лет назад. Сохранилось около половины нанесенных на табличку значков, и половина уцелевшего текста повествует об астероиде. За последние 150 лет разные исследователи предприняли пять неудачных попыток перевести табличку.

Как отметил ученый из Бристольского университета (Великобритания) Марк Хэмпсэлл, который смог подобрать ключ к надписи на табличке, размер и траектория астероида указывают на то, что он, скорее всего, врезался в Землю в австрийских Альпах, в районе Кёфельса. По мере сближения с планетой астероид из-за эффекта звукового удара оставлял за собой полосу разрушений, после чего столкнулся с земной поверхностью, что привело к катастрофическим последствиям.

Около двух третей астероида в виде обломков устремились дальше по направлению его движения: было опустошено около миллиона квадратных километров поверхности, а сила удара была сопоставима со взрывом мощностью в тысячу тонн в тротиловом эквиваленте, пишет газета “Таймс”, которую в понедельник цитирует сайт “Inopressa”.

М. Хэмпсэлл считает, что разрушения такого типа и масштаба, которыми может характеризоваться столкновение с астероидом, отразились, по меньшей мере, в 20 древних мифах, а также в ветхозаветной истории об уничтожении Содома и Гоморры.

Согласно Библии Содом и Гоморра - древние города, располагавшиеся в районе Мёртвого моря, население которых отличалось крайней распущенностью нравов, в частности, развратом и жестокостью к иноземцам.

В наказание за это Бог разрушил оба города, послав ангелов к Лоту, племяннику Авраама, с приказом бежать из города. В Ветхом Завете описывается, как во время ухода Лота с семьей из Содома с небес полились огонь и сера. Бог наказал им не оглядываться на то, что происходит с городами. Жена Лота ослушалась запрета, оглянулась и превратилась в соляной столб.

МЕДИТАЦИЯТА ПРОМЕНЯ МОЗЪКА

Публикувано в: — pavel @ 19:2

Kathy Sykes

Naomi Law

Scientists probe meditation secrets

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/7319043.stm


There is evidence that meditation changes brain structures

Scientists are beginning to uncover evidence that meditation has a tangible effect on the brain.

Sceptics argue that it is not a practical way to try to deal with the stresses of modern life.

But the long years when adherents were unable to point to hard science to support their belief in the technique may finally be coming to an end.

When Carol Cattley’s husband died it triggered a relapse of the depression which had not plagued her since she was a teenager.

“I instantly felt as if I wanted to die,” she said. “I couldn’t think of what else to do.”

Carol sought medical help and managed to control her depression with a combination of medication and a psychological treatment called Cognitive Behavioural Therapy.

However, she believes that a new, increasingly popular course called Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) - which primarily consists of meditation - brought about her full recovery.

It is currently available in every county across the UK, and can be prescribed on the NHS.

One of the pioneers of MBCT is Professor Mark Williams, from the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Oxford.

He helps to lead group courses which take place over a period of eight weeks. He describes the approach as 80% meditation, 20% cognitive therapy.

New perspective

He said: “It teaches a way of looking at problems, observing them clearly but not necessarily trying to fix them or solve them.

“It suggests to people that they begin to see all their thoughts as just thoughts, whether they are positive, negative or neutral.”

MBCT is recommended for people who are not currently depressed, but who have had three or more bouts of depression in their lives.

Trials suggest that the course reduces the likelihood of another attack of depression by over 50%.

Professor Williams believes that more research is still needed.

He said: “It is becoming enormously popular quite quickly and in many ways we now need to collect the evidence to check that it really is being effective.”

However, in the meantime, meditation is being taken seriously as a means of tackling difficult and very modern challenges.

Scientists are beginning to investigate how else meditation could be used, particularly for those at risk of suicide and people struggling with the effects of substance abuse.

What is meditation?

Meditation is difficult to define because it has so many different forms.

By meditating, you can become happier, you can concentrate more effectively and you can change your brain in ways that support that Dr Richard Davidson

Broadly, it can be described as a mental practice in which you focus your attention on a particular subject or object.

It has historically been associated with religion, but it can also be secular, and exactly what you focus your attention on is largely a matter of personal choice.

It may be a mantra (repeated word or phrase), breathing patterns, or simply an awareness of being alive.

Some of the more common forms of meditative practices include Buddhist Meditation, Mindfulness Meditation, Transcendental Meditation, and Zen Meditation.

The claims made for meditation range from increasing immunity, improving asthma and increasing fertility through to reducing the effects of aging.

Limited research

Research into the health claims made for meditation has limitations and few conclusions can be reached, partly because meditation is rarely isolated - it is often practised alongside other lifestyle changes such as diet, or exercise, or as part of group therapy.

So should we dismiss it as quackery? Studies from the field of neuroscience suggest not.

It is a new area of research, but indications are intriguing and suggest that meditation may have a measurable impact on the brain.

In Boston, Massachusetts, Dr Sara Lazar has used a technique called MRI scanning to analyse the brains of people who have been meditating for several years.

She compared the brains of these experienced practitioners with people who had never meditated and found that there were differences in the thickness of certain areas of the brain’s cortex, including areas involved in the processing of emotion.

She is continuing research, but she believes that meditation had caused the brain to change physical shape.

Buddhist monks

In Madison, Wisconsin, Dr Richard Davidson has been carrying out studies on Buddhist monks for several years.

His personal belief is that “by meditating, you can become happier, you can concentrate more effectively and you can change your brain in ways that support that.”

In one study he observed the brains of a group of office workers before and after they undertook a course of meditation combined with stress reduction techniques.

At the end of the course the participants’ brains seemed to have altered in the way they functioned.

They showed greater activity in the left-hand side - a characteristic which Davidson has previously linked to happiness and enthusiasm.

This idea that meditation could improve the wellbeing of everyone, even those not struggling with mental illness, is something that is exciting researchers.

Professor Williams believes it has huge potential.

“It involves dealing with expectations, with constantly judging ourselves - feeling we’re not good enough,” he said.

“And, that is something which is so widespread in our communities.

“All of these things are just thoughts. And, they will come up in meditation and learning to recognize what they are as thoughts, and let them go, can be enormously empowering for anybody.”

There is, of course, a distinct possibility that this research will come to nothing and that interest in meditation will turn out to be a passing fad, but for now this ancient discipline is being taken seriously by scientists as a tool with potential to make each one of us happier and more content.

НОВ СБОРНИК ЗА ЙЕЗУИТСКИЯ ОРДЕН

Публикувано в: — pavel @ 8:2

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The Cambridge Companion to the Jesuits

Series: Cambridge Companions to Religion

Edited by Thomas Worcester

College of the Holy Cross, Massachusetts

Hardback (ISBN-13: 9780521857314)

  • Also available in Paperback
  • Publisher Cambridge, CUP, March 2008

In stock

(Stock level updated: 03:45 GMT, 01 April 2008)

£45.00

Details

  • 13 halftones
  • Page extent: 374 pages
  • Size: 228 x 152 mm
  • Weight: 0.722 kg

Contents

  List of illustrations   page  ix
  Notes on contributors   x
  Introduction   1
THOMAS WORCESTER
Part I Ignatius of Loyola
1 The religious milieu of the young Ignatius   13
LU ANN HOMZA
2 Five personae of Ignatius of Loyola   32
J. CARLOS COUPEAU
3 The Spiritual Exercises   52
Philip Endean
Part II European Foundations of the Jesuits
4 Jesuit Rome and Italy   71
PAUL V. MURPHY
5 The Society of Jesus in the Three Kingdoms   88
THOMAS M. MCCOOG
6 Jesuit dependence on the French monarchy   104
THOMAS WORCESTER
7 Women Jesuits?   120
GEMMA SIMMONDS
8 Jesuits in Poland and eastern Europe   136
STANISŁAW OBIREK
Part III Geographic and Ethnic Frontiers
9 The Jesuit enterprise in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Japan   153
M. ANTONI J. ÜÇERLER
10 Jesuits in China   169
NICOLAS STANDAERT
11 The Jesuits in New France   186
JACQUES MONET
12 Racial and ethnic minorities in the Society of Jesus   199
THOMAS M. COHEN
Part IV Arts and Sciences
13 Jesuit architecture in colonial Latin America   217
GAUVIN ALEXANDER BAILEY
14 The Jesuits and the quiet side of the scientific revolution   243
LOUIS CARUANA
Part V Jesuits in the Modern World
15 The Suppression and Restoration   263
JONATHAN WRIGHT
16 Jesuit schools in the USA, 1814–c. 1970   278
GERALD McKEVITT
17 Jesuit theological discourse since Vatican II   298
MARY ANN HINSDALE
18 Jesuits today   319
THOMAS WORCESTER
  Select bibliography   328
  Index   336

 

–>

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