Tag Archives: progress

Friday Link Roundup (on Monday): Scientific Advancement

Due to circumstances beyond my control, I was unable to update Future Conscience on Friday with our link roundup.  So I’m going to rectify the situation with today’s update.  It might be a bit late, but here’s last week’s Link Roundup!

As our Site of the Week last week was the Scientific American website, the link roundup will be focusing upon recent scientific advancements and progress.  Rather than pointing to articles that are very conceptual or too hypothetical, I wanted to highlight some recent studies and events that point to solid findings or breakthroughs.

With that said, here’s a quick look at five science stories that have been making the rounds recently:

1) Can we improve upon paper? – the first link is fittingly from the Scientific American website and looks at a possible way to improve the most ubiquitous of inventions – paper – into a battery.

2) New planets found near Sun-like stars – Four new planets have been discovered near two different Sun-like stars, leading to further research on possible future habitable planets.

3) Nanosensors used to measure cancer biomarkers – building on previous research, a team at Yale University has unveiled the first use of nanowire sensors to detect for signs of cancer.

4) Aids research suffers setback – human trials of an HIV blocking gel have proven to be unsuccessful and a big setback as there were early indications that it may have been successful.

5) Large Hadron Collider claims energy record – as it builds up to the main event the Large Hadron Collider has smashed through previous energy creation records, and this is only the beginning.

Obviously, these five links are but a minute part of the large amount of varied scientific research being done and published on a daily basis around the globe.  Now, more than ever, science is progressing in leaps and bounds and exploring possibilities that were just a few decades ago not even imagined.  It’s an exciting time to keep up with the world of scientific research and if you aren’t doing so already now is the time to start.

If you have come across any other recent scientific publications or news stories that you find particularly interesting, please let us know in the comments!

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The Neuroscience of Buddhist meditation and spiritual practice

A great video for you today which I found highlighted over on The Examiner, covering some of the latest thinking within the neuroscience community on the physiological effects of spiritual practice within the brain – with a particular focus on Buddhist mindfulness meditation.

I have embedded the hour and a half long video here for you, and the write-up over on The Examiner gives you a quick synopsis of its content.  I definitely recommend that you take a look, as Dr Daniel Siegel brings up some very interesting points that deserve our attention.  The lecture is quite long, and the majority of it is dedicated to the discussion of different aspects of the brain.  If you are just interested in the part directly referring to meditative practices, you will have to skip through to the second half.

There is one particular point of the video that I wish to highlight further, which is the necessity for secular societies to develop mindfulness practices – which are usually the arena of spiritual traditions.  He provides evidence that shows how such practices can directly lead to greater connectivity and integration of the aspects of our brains that promote empathy and compassion for others.

It is great to see this work being done in a scientific context.  What was previously seen as the domain of spiritual communities is now rapidly becoming important to the neurological community as they try to understand how different aspects of the brain relate to one another and in turn effect our behaviour and ability to create a more peaceful and coherent society.

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Some of the fundamental findings of these neurological investigations show that the practices being discussed all share two important aspects: an awareness of awareness, and an awareness of intention.  They allow us to relate to ourselves and our automatic processes on a meta level, which is one of the primary distinctions between humanity and our evolutionary siblings.

Dr. Siegel is arguing here that such practices, through continued and regular use, lead to the development of connectivity between the insula and prefrontal cortex areas of the brain and have been shown to have therapeutic effects within brain trauma patients that seemed beyond the help of modern medical practice.

What is occurring when we develop these areas of our brain is that we are changing the way that we perceive and evaluate the outside world, leading to a more empathetic, balanced, and attuned response to the world around us.  Dr Siegel argues that through the regular use of these practices we can form patterns of neuronal firing that will eventually integrate into our automatic responses and become an effortless process that does not require conscious effort.

It is a fantastic overview of the convergence of modern scientific study with ancient spiritual practice and teachings, and represents an understanding from the scientific community that empathy, attunement, and compassion (along with a number of other positive traits) are a fundamental aspect of a healthy mind and healthy society that must be promoted in practical terms.

If we are to continue into the future as a healthy and cohesive global society, it is imperative that we foster practices that develop our empathetic aspects – because without doing so our ‘progress’ will merely increase our capability to create disorder and chaos.

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What do we want to be? Futurists, ethics, and the social conscience

I wanted to take the opportunity today to briefly discuss once more the intent behind Future Conscience and the purpose of the site – to examine the changes in society that we feel are progressive and question the consequences of our path into the future.

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Society 3.0 – Where all of us have a voice

Today, more than at any other point in human history, we all have the capability to have our opinion’s heard and the possibility of having others listen to what we say. Modern technology and the global community that has formed around it has given us all a voice, the question now is how are we going to use it?

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