Salyavin, for the sake of brevity, I only mentioned one example. There are lots 
more. Then it begins to look like more than just a coincidence. 


So you don't believe in vibration or resonance?! In the simplest terms that's 
all that's being claimed and recommended. 

But I'm with you about Purusha. Though for me it would be Mother Divine. I love 
the relative and that's that!




On Wednesday, March 26, 2014 12:12 PM, salyavin808 <no_re...@yahoogroups.com> 
wrote:
 
  


You call them insights, I prefer hopeful coincidences. I remember the Ganesh 
illustration and thought the brain looks more like a cauliflower. To say it's 
an insight would mean it had some sort of profound meaning, he is claiming an 
awful lot for this. For instance, chanting sections of the ved is supposed to 
affect the part of the body where it resides. And it's supposed to affect it 
because of it's relationship with what is claimed to be a fundamental part of 
the universe - the ved itself. This ved is creating us. Apparently.

On a related note, I heard the ved while meditating once. Or rather experienced 
it, it was long before I'd heard of the concept or been to any TM courses or 
lectures so it came as a complete, and mindblowing, surprise to suddenly have a 
nice meddy interrupted by the opening up of a vast, nay infinite, inner space 
and this loud, omnipresent humming noise. Only lasted a second but it made me 
jump out of my skin and I nearly fell off my chair.

To most people that would be a confirmation of King Tony's ideas, but not me. I 
get very wary when unrepeated experiences are held up to be something amazing 
like that. I have no idea what happened really but my rationalist instincts 
suspect it's just something the nervous system does at certain times that got 
incorporated into, or started the huge mythos we all know and love.

After discussing it with our local "raja" I was also told to go on Purusha 
where experiences like that could stabilise and I'd become a rishi myself! 
Couldn't be bothered though, all those weird guys. Weirder than me some of 
them....

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <sharelong60@...> wrote :


salyavin, I think you were the one asking about Ganesh. Dr. Nader's insights 
begin on pg. 341 of his book on Veda and human physiology. Makes me appreciate 
his genius again. The illustrations clearly show the resemblance to the human 
brain and even specific parts: the pons, medulla, cerebellum, trigeminal and 
other nerves. 




On Wednesday, March 26, 2014 9:59 AM, salyavin808 <no_re...@yahoogroups.com> 
wrote:

 
Yes, we have no religion.

The trouble with your interpretation is that it sounds like you want to have 
your cake and eat it. Best of both worlds. Trouble is, it isn't what he means. 
I read his first book of discoveries and the claim is that vedic literature is 
present in human physiology. Not a metaphor, actually present. And responsible 
for. He claims to have a one-to-one correlation between Indian stories and the 
human body. I bet I could find similar coincidences with, say, the works of 
Steven King. Just read the section on jyotish, all the planets have a direct 
connection to parts of the brain, this is offered as an explanation for the 
"physics" of astrology but not all the planets are represented because the 
ancients didn't know about anything beyond the orbit of Saturn due to them not 
having telescopes.

You can go through the whole book like that, it makes no
sense and is astoundingly poor science, but it's used as justification for 
"modalities" like MVVT and other new age dropsy like yagya's. Believe one and 
you get an idea of how the rest of it works. Except it doesn't. Obviously, not 
beyond the expectations of a placebo anyway.

And the idea of deities as "aspects of natural law" sounds unfortunate to me, 
because the laws of nature are even less likely to change because of prayers 
than the god's appear to be. This is because they are laws rather than 
reasonable beings, laws don't change, that's what makes them reliable and stops 
the universe falling apart.

(Note I clicked on the 'show message history' bit so you know what I'm talking 
about.






---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <LEnglish5@...> wrote :


My interpretation of what he said is that the Ramayana can be seen as (among 
other things) an extended metaphor for how the human nervous system operates, 
with one-to-one correspondence between various literary/plot elements in the 
book, and actual aspects of our physical nervous system and how the parts 
interact.

So, from THAT perspective, the battles of the Ramayana can be seen as taking 
place in our bodies.

L




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