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| ARTICLES RELATED TO Accepted Dictionary | |  |  |  | Accepted Dictionary: Confessions Of A PsychicPsychic Reading
The
Concise Oxford Dictionary defines a psychic as "a person susceptible to
psychic influence," and a clairvoyant as
having a "faculty of perceiving, as if by seeing what's happening or
exists out of sight; exceptional insight."
These terms define the new type of clairvoyant emerging in almost every city,
town or area around the world. No longer does the word "psychic"
bring forth an image of an old woman in a long dress or robe, ribbons streaming
from her hair, shaking a tambourine and saying, "Cross my palm with silver
and I'll tell your fortune," or the guru sitting with legs crossed on a
snow-capped mountain contemplating the meaning of life.
From
Expanding the Psychic You by Keith Atkinson.
Read more here: » Psychic Reading: Confessions Of A Psychic |
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|  |  |  | Accepted Dictionary: Research on the effect of vibrations
on waterSahaja
Yoga: Research
on the effect of vibrations on water
With the spreading of Sahaja Yoga, it became well known that water
can be vibrated by Shri Mataji, directly by her personal impact or in the
presence of her photograph. Many people experienced medicinal properties of
such water. Vibrated water doesn't get spoiled when stored for a very long
time, like several months. For estimating the quality of the water we used
standard, worldwide accepted, sanitary chemical characteristics, which
indirectly characterize the degree of water contamination.
Read more here: » Sahaja Yoga: Research on the effect of vibrations
on water |
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| | |  |  |  | Accepted Dictionary: Paganism PornographyPaganism & Pornography
At times my political views seem to lead me into
contradictions. Last month saw me writing a furious letter to Penthouse
magazine concerning their misinformed story on Witchcraft. Within two weeks I
was writing to the head of the QuickTrip Corporation protesting the removal of Penthouse from their stores. You'd think I would
have been happy at a blow struck against a magazine that maligned my religion.
Not so. At stake is the free expression of ideas. Misinformation and censorship
are both threats to
that freedom. Of the two, I judge censorship to be the greater threat. As long
as publishing continues unimpeded, retraction of misinformation is possible.
When publishing is censored, even that becomes impossible.
Read more here: » Paganism: Paganism Pornography |
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|  |  |  | Accepted Dictionary: Divine
scriptures of ancient India - The VedasThe
Vedas
The Vedas
are the Divine scriptures of ancient India and in modern times can be traced as
least as far back as 12,OOO B.C. a lthough it is generally accepted tat the
Vedas appear at different times of the cosmic creation forte benefit of human
society. They are considered to be the revelations of the Divine nature, and
its relationship within and without us. "Mantra" is the term used to
mean Divine sound vibration or the word of God. There are teachings of mantras
(hymns), teachings of ritual, theology, and philosophy at the root of all the
vedic sciences. The point of all is the knowledge of the soul called "atma
vidya", being our real "self" and separate and distinct from the
material body , and the material world which surrounds us.
Read more here: » The
Vedas: Divine
scriptures of ancient India - The Vedas |
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| | | |  |  |  | Accepted Dictionary: Reinterpreting Vaastu In
India we must be grateful that the core beliefs, theoretical rigour and
application of the Vaastu Shastras are still
available, though in a depleted form. From the study of texts, dialogues with
practitioners and field application of the concepts I have been able to
reconstruct the overview of the Vaastu Shilpa Shastras and
give a guideline for present day application. There is a great deal of
resistance and deep feelings of distrust from the trained designers in the
'modern institutesÕ toward the assumptions and symbolism of the traditional
paradigm. It is almost as if they feel threatened that their hegemony would be
displaced. Are their fears valid? Is the basis of the Vaastu Shastras questionable
in its present day application? Is it a meaningless mumbo jumbo in the
'scientificÕ climate of today?
Read more here: » Vaastu Shastra: Reinterpreting Vaastu |
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|  |  |  | Accepted Dictionary: Baha'u'llah And the New FaithBaha'u'llah And the New Faith
Echoing the suffering of all the
messengers of God before him and the privations they suffered to fulfil their
sacred task, Baha'u'l-lah, the founder of the Baha'i religion, wrote: "We
have accepted to be abased, O believers in the Unity of God, that ye may be
exalted, and have suffered manifold afflictions, that ye might prosper and
flourish".
Born in Persia on November 12, 1817, Baha'u'llah's
unusual undertaking at age 27 has gradually brought into its fold several
million people from diverse backgrounds. For Baha'u'llah claimed to be the
Messenger of God - the Bearer of a Divine Revelation that fulfils the promises
made in earlier religions and which will generate the spiritual forces for the
unification of the world.
Read more here: » Bahai
- Bah‡'’: Baha'u'llah And the New Faith |
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|  |  |  | Accepted Dictionary: The Chemistry Of MetaphysicsMetaphysics
is a branch of philosophy that deals with the nature of existence, truth and
knowledge. It incorporates ontology (the science/nature of true being) and
epistemology (the study of the origin, methods and limits of knowledge). The
student of metaphysics is interested in first causes, the nature of
"reality" and in what lies beyond the sensory world. Metaphysics will
never be accepted as an integrated science by scientists because it does deal
with subjective territory, with events that do not fit perfectly within our
present prescripts of comprehension. Indeed, it will not become indefectible
and conclusive until the evolution of man-woman is consummated.
Read more here: » Metaphysics: The Chemistry Of Metaphysics |
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| | |  |  |  | Accepted Dictionary: The
Hymns of Dirghatamas in the Rig VedaThe Hymns of Dirghatamas in the Rig
Veda
Some scholars have claimed that the
Babylonians invented the zodiac of 360 degrees around 700 BCE, perhaps even
earlier. Many claim that India received the knowledge of the zodiac from
Babylonia or even later from Greece. However, as old as the Rig Veda, the
oldest Vedic text, there are clear references to a chakra or wheel of 360
spokes placed in the sky. The number 360 and its related numbers like 12, 24,
36, 48, 60, 72, 108, 432 and 720 occur commonly in Vedic symbolism. It is in the
hymns of the great Rishi Dirghatamas (RV I.140 - 164) that we have the clearest
such references.
Read more here: » Vedic Origins of the Zodiac: The
Hymns of Dirghatamas in the Rig Veda |
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| | |  |  |  | Accepted Dictionary: Accept Your Good - About AcceptanceAcceptance
can be an emotionally loaded subject. Some people get upset because they think
that they are accepting of their good, but it isn't showing up in their lives.
They want increased prosperity, more health, better relationships, and say,
"I accept it, but why isn't it here?" Other people believe that
they'll be selfish if they open themselves up for Universal good. Somehow,
they're afraid they're taking it from others. Many blocks to a better life stem
from old feelings of guilt or unworthiness. We may not be aware of the
feelings, but we get to experience the results by not accepting all that the
Universe gives us.
Read more here: » Acceptance: Accept Your Good - About Acceptance |
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| |  |  |  | Accepted Dictionary: God and Gods of HinduismGod and Gods of
Hinduism
The
most prevalent expression of worship for the Hindu comes as devotion to God and
the Gods. In the Hindu pantheon there are said to be three hundred and
thirty-three million Gods. Hindus believe in one Supreme Being. The plurality
of Gods are perceived as divine creations of that one Being. So, Hinduism has
one supreme God, but it has an extensive hierarchy of Gods. Many people look at
the Gods as mere symbols, representations of forces or mind strata, or as
various Personifications generated as a projection o of man's mind onto an
impersonal pure Beingness.
Read more here: » Hinduism: God and Gods of Hinduism |
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