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Thursday, September 25, 2014

The Ten Best Serial Killer Movies

Se7en (1995)
It’s not quite certain if serial killer movies constitute a genre onto themselves or they can be seen as a sub-genre of thrillers whilst at times even verging into horror film territory. Either way, films about serial killers seem to capture the public’s imagination and some of the titles presented in this list have been major critical as well as commercial successes.
We’ve shied away from titles which delve too far into the realm of the fantastic, therefore titles like Halloween, which one might argue deals with a serial killer, have not been included. As per usual, we have also stayed away from television productions, which explains the omission of a title like Citizen X, which fans of genre might expect to find here or should seek out if they haven’t seen it yet.
With those guidelines set, we simply attempted to find ten of the best films dealing with serial killers. Some of these films deal primarily with the killer, others are more police procedurals focusing on the hunt for these killers although most titles are often a combination of the two.
It goes without saying that the majority of these films are not for the faint of heart but those who don’t mind a bit of a darker thriller, should find plenty to like here.

10. Frailty (Bill Paxton, 2001)
frailty-bill-paxton
The directorial debut of Bill Paxton, perhaps best known for his various roles in James Cameron films, Frailty is an underseen little film that deserves to be more widely recognised. The film stars Matthew McConaughey, Powers Boothe and Bill Paxton himself.
The movie starts as Fenton Meiks (McCaughey) walks into an FBI office in Texas and ask to speak to agent Wesley Doyle (Boothe). He informs him that his brother Adam is in fact the “God’s Hand” serial killer the police has been looking for for quite some time. He then proceeds to tell the main portion of the film, which is presented in flashback, describing how he and his brother grew up on a farm with their widower father (Paxton).
One night the boy’s father came into their room and told them he had received a vision from God, instructing him to find and destroy demons. Soon after he brings his first victim home and makes his sons watch as he kills the woman in cold blood after he claims to have seen her sins by touching her.
Fenton is disgusted and fears that his father has lost his mind but the younger Adam claims he can see the demons’ sins too and is eager to participate in his father’s holy task. And when the young Fenton escapes and makes his way to the town’s sheriff, things go from bad to worse.
The only film on this list to have some minor supernatural undertones, Frailty is worthy of this list as it presents an original and intriguing premise by first time director Paxton. He keeps most of the gore and violence off screen but manages to keep the tension high, especially during the flashbacks in which the strain on a young mind, whose father has seemingly gone insane, is explored.
Frailty received plenty of positive praise, plenty of nominations and wins at various festivals and award ceremonies and was singled out by James Cameron, Sam Raimi and even Stephen King as an exceptional frightful film. Whilst not perfect, as the pay-off simply isn’t quite as a good as the set-up, it’s a film that is well worth seeking out for fans of the genre and a confident debut by a first-time director.

9. Manhunter (Michael Mann, 1986)
Manhunter
Based on Thomas Harris’ novel Red Dragon, Manhunter was the first movie to bring Hannibal Lecter to the screen before the same character was made famous five years later by Anthony Hopkins in Silence of the Lambs. For some reason, however, his name is spelled differently in Manhunter (Lecktor as opposed to Lecter in the both the books and all other movies featuring the character).
Criminal profiler Will Graham (William Petersen) has retired ever since he caught Hannibal Lecktor (Brian Cox) in a case that took too much of a toll on him. His old boss, however, asks him to come back to to investigate a serial killer known as “The Tooth Fairy” (Tom Noonan). Will agrees to do so but as part of the investigation he must meet with Hannibal Lecktor, the man he put behind bars, and his fragile mind state will be tested as Lecktor still holds a grudge against the FBI profiler for putting him there.
Manhunter was remade 20 years later under its original title Red Dragon after two previous films with Anthony Hopkins had made the Lecter character extremely popular. Manhunter is the far superior film of the two adaptations of the same book and it also has to be noted that even though Hopkins created a classic villain with his interpretations of the Hannibal Lecter role, Brian Cox also portrays the killer in a highly chilling, disturbing and far more realistic manner.
One of Michael Mann’s earliest and best films, Manhunter is a great addition to the serial killer sub-genre and absolutely worth seeking out for those who have only seen the Hopkins films, if only to experience a totally different take on the character and material.

8. American Psycho (Mary Harron, 2000)
american-psycho-2000
Based on Bret Easton Ellis’ novel of the same name, American Psycho is a scathing satire of 1980’s greed and excess as well as a very darkly humorous spin on the serial killer sub-genre. The film was arguably Christian Bale’s breakthrough performance as he still best known for his role in Steven Spielberg’s Empire of the Sun thirteen years earlier when he was only a twelve years old kid.
Patrick Bateman (Bale) is investment banker, who embodies the greed, selfishness and cynicism of 1980’s yuppies. He is obsessed with success, fashion and style but has no taste whatsoever and neither do his friends. But what does set him apart is that he leads a double life as a seriously deranged serial killer. As a detective (Willem Dafoe) starts investigating him, Patrick’s cool seems to slowly fall apart and lines between reality and sick fantasies start to blur.
The most inspired choice of this adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis’ best-seller was to hand over the directorial duties to independent female director Mary Harron, who turned the satire of 80’s greed into a far more multi-faceted film giving the story an added layer of misogyny and masculine power plays.
A deeply dark black comedy and disturbing picture of self-absorption and 80’s excess, American Psycho divided audiences at the time but has since rightfully become a cult classic and is in some ways the most fun entry on this list, perfectly combining satire with gruesome violence.

7. Vengeance is Mine (Shōhei Imamura, 1979)
Vengeance is Mine (1973)
Based on the book of the same name by Ryūzō Saki about the real-life serial killer Akira Nishiguchi, Vengeance is Mine is a classic of seventies Japanese cinema and, being one of the earliest entries on this list, an important entry in the serial killer sub-genre.
The movie deals with Iwao Enokizu (Ken Ogata), who at the start of the movie is taken into police custody. Whilst being interrogated, the film presents us with the events leading up to Enokizu’s arrest through a series of flashbacks, initially presenting the viewer with his first two brutal murders as he kills two men and takes off with a large sum of money.
From there on in the film alternates between the present police interrogation, Enokizu’s 78-day period of being on run after his first two muders, in which he scams his way through Japan whilst committing further atrocities, and scenes of Enoziku growing up as a violent and rebellious child to a typical conformist Japanese father who also happens to be a devout Catholic on top.
Shot in a distant almost documentary-like fashion, Vengeance is Mine excels at portraying the complete lack of morals and remorse of a psychopathic individual. Enokizu seems to kill without giving it a second thought, at times without a clear motivation and certainly without any regret. The film gives plenty of food for thought as to why he might have turned out his way but refuses to give any clear or easy answers.
Vengeance is Mine was nominated for twelve Awards of the Japanese Academy and took home six, including Best Film, Director, Screenplay and Cinematography. Additionally the film also won Best Film, Director and both Supporting Actor and Actress Awards at the Blue Ribbon Awards, which are awarded by Japanese film critics and writers.

6. Memories of Murder (Joon-ho Bong, 2003)
memories-of-murder
The second feature of director Joon-ho Bong and arguably his real breakthrough as the film became a great success in South Korea, Memories of Murder is based on a 1996 play which in turn was based on the events relating to the country’s first serial killer case in the late eighties an early nineties.
A series of rapes and murders are occurring in a rural area in South Korea in 1986. The local small town cop assigned to the case, Park Doo-Man, has no idea how to handle the situation. After he arrests the wrong person an expert from Seoul , Seo Tae-Yoon, is sent over to help with the investigation. Both men’s styles couldn’t be more different as the local cop is used to beating confessions out of his suspects whilst Seo takes a more pragmatic investigative approach.
Initially Park isn’t even convinced he is dealing with a serial killer until Seo’s predictions come true and another woman is found raped and murdered. But as the investigation is not providing any results, both men seem to slowly be reaching the end of their tether.
Based on a real case which took place between 1986 and 1991 and which constituted the country’s first recorded serial killings, Memories of Murder was a huge critical as well as commercial success upon its release. It was also one of the films that really upped the ante for South Korean filmmaking at the time.
The film clearly deals with the rapidly changing political situation in South Korea in the late eighties as the country was emerging from a dictatorship as exemplified by the local police force’s brutal tactics. But despite the dark subject matter, the film also manages to be darkly humorous and it put its director, Jooh-ho Bong, clearly on the map.

5. The Silence of the Lambs (Jonathan Demme, 1991)
silence_of_the_lambs_ted levine_buffalo bill
Based on the novel of the same name by Thomas Harris, The Silence of the Lambs was Harris’ second book to be adapted to the screen featuring the character of Hannibal Lecter. Whilst Brian Cox gave a fine performance as Lecter in Michael Mann’s Manhunter, there’s no denying that Anthony Hopkins gave the definitive one when he made Lecter come to life in this classic chiller by Jonathan Demme.
Clarice Starling (Jodie Foster) is an FBI agent who gets assigned to the investigation surrounding Buffalo Bill, a serial killer who targets young women and removes their skin after killing them. Clarice’s superior, Jack Crawford (Scott Glenn), wants her to interview incarcerated psychopath Hannibal Lecter (Hopkins), as he believes he has vital information surrounding the killer and thinks that Starling might be the perfect agent to extract it from him.
But as a brilliant former psychiatrist, Lecter has a knack to get into people’s minds and in exchange for the information he might poses about Buffalo Bill, he insists on talking about Clarice’s past as well as being transferred to another facility. And as Clarice slowly hones in on Buffalo Bill, Lecter gets deeper and deeper into her psyche.
A fantastic thriller with such an intensity that it is often also referred to as a horror film, The Silence of the Lambs was a huge critical as well as financial success. Ted Telly’s screenplay, adapted from Thomas Harris’ novel, strikes a perfect balance between psychological study and gruesome excitement and both Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins shine in their respective roles, although it is of course Hopkins who ultimately steals the show as Lecter.
Whilst his Buffalo Bill character is overshadowed by Lecter, Ted Levine creates a truly unhinged and terrifying killer in the short amount of screen time that he is given. Scott Glenn rounds of the cast nicely as Foster’s boss and for the horror fans there are two great little cameos by George A. Romero and Roger Corman to be enjoyed.
Only the third film in the history of the Oscars to win all five major statues (Best Film, Director, Actor, Actress and Adapted Screenplay), The Silence of the Lambs became a monster hit and none of the three films featuring Lecter which followed in its wake ever came close to the craftsmanship on display here. A superior thriller and a great addition to the serial killer sub-genre, it’s a genuine modern classic.

4. Zodiac (David Fincher, 2007)
zodiac-pres
Based on the non-fiction book of the same name by former political cartoonist turned true-crime author Robert Graysmith, Zodiac is David Fincher’s superb thriller dealing with the hunt for the notorious “Zodiac” serial killer in the San Francisco Bay Area during the late sixties and early seventies.
A month after an initial attack on a couple, where the boy survives but the girl dies from her sustained injuries, a coded letter is received at the San Francisco Chronicle from a person calling himself the “Zodiac” claiming responsibility for the crime. As more coded letters arrive, crime reporter Paul Avery (Robert Downey Jr.) and political cartoonist Robert Graysmith (Jake Gyllenhaal) both start looking into the case.
At first Avery wants nothing to do with Graysmith but as time goes on the two men start working together more closely. In the meantime more assaults and murders occur and detectives Dave Toschi (Mark Ruffalo) and Bill Armstrong (Anthony Edwards) are assigned to the first case whilst detectives Jack Mulanax (Elias Koteas) and Ken Narlow (Donal Logue) are assigned to another. As more letters are received and frustration mounts when no real progress is made, the case starts taking a heavy toll on all those involved.
Whilst Zodiac didn’t do well at the box-office, it is certainly one of David Fincher’s greatest films. His stylish visuals are complemented with incredible period detail and all lead actors put in top notch performances. The screenplay perfectly balances the tension of the crimes and the hunt for the killer with the frustration and effect the lengthy unsolved case had on those trying to solve it.
The film competed for the Palme d’Or at Cannes and received various nominations at numerous award ceremonies but failed to win any. Nonetheless, Zodiac is one of David Fincher’s best works and an outstanding mystery thriller.

3. Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (John McNaughton, 1986)
Henry_Portrait_of_a_Serial_Killer
Loosely based on real-life serial killers Henry Lee Lucas and Otis Toole, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer is a chilling docudrama examining the psychopathic mind state of one of America’s most notorious mass murderers and his occasional participating roommate.
The movie follows Henry (Michael Rooker) as he randomly finds innocents targets and murders them. He lives with Otis (Tom Towles) who soon starts participating in the crimes and capturing them on video with a camera they took from one of their victims. The duo is also joined at their house by Otis’ sister, Becky (Tracy Arnold), who has left her abusive husband. Becky creates tension between the two men as she’s attracted to Henry, which ultimately drives a wedge between the two men.
A clear reaction to the unrealistic slashers of the mid-seventies to mid-eighties, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer is a terrifying clinical study of a killer without a conscience. The film was finalised in 1986 but received an X-rating and consequently sat on the shelves until Errol Morris sponsored the movie at the 1989 Telluride Film Festival.
The film received much critical praise and won various awards at international festivals but also caused plenty of uproar due to its violent and disturbing subject matter. Certainly not a movie for everybody, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer comes highly recommended for those who can stomach this kind of thing.

2. Psycho (Alfred Hitchcock, 1960)
psycho-2
There is no way that Psycho was not going to feature on this list. The granddaddy of the slasher film and featuring a main character inspired by real-life murderer Ed Gein, who also inspired Leatherface from the Texas Chainsaw Massacre as well as Buffalo Bill from the aforementioned Silence of the Lambs, Psycho is arguably the film whose massive success created the breeding ground for all the serial killer films which would follow in its wake.
Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) works for a real estate agent and when presented with the chance, she steals $40.000 on impulse and makes a run for it. After some time on the road, she stops at Bates Motel to spend the night. She is welcomed by Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins), who owns the motel and takes care of his mentally ill mother.
After having been invited for dinner by Norman, Marion returns to her cabin to have shower and go to sleep but is stabbed to death in what is arguably the most famous murder scene in the history of cinema. Concerned about Marion’s sudden disappearance, her sister Lila (Vera Miles) and lover Sam (John Gavin) go in search for her, especially as the detective who had been hired to find her by her employer (Martin Balsam) also vanishes without a trace.
When the two make it to Bates Motel and investigate further, they are about to find out how special a relationship Norman has with his mother.
What is there to say about Psycho that hasn’t been said before? The film was a radical departure from all that came before it and pushed the boundaries of what could be shown in a mainstream feature film. From its depiction of an illicit sexual relationship and nudity, graphic violence (for its time), killing off the lead character one third into the film and its psychological subtext, Psycho covered a lot of unknown cinematic ground to great effect.
Add to that its classic haunting score by Bernard Herrmann, Hitchcock’s master touch, especially evident in the classic shower scene, which uses 50 cuts of mainly close-up shots within a time period of three minutes and its twist ending and it is no wonder that Psycho became the sensation that it did. A film whose influence can not be understated and a must-see for every person interested in slasher films, serial killer movies or simply cinema as a whole.

1. Seven (David Fincher, 1995)
se7en
A superior and highly stylized thriller, Seven was an unexpected critical as well as commercial success, directed by David Fincher and starring Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman. It’s the second film on this list directed by Fincher but I simply had to include both Zodiac and Seven as they are both brilliant. Zodiac is obviously the more serious film out of the two but Seven holds a special place in my heart as it seems to do with a great many others too.
Detective William Somerset (Freeman) is a veteran in the police force and, weary from a 32-year career in which he has seemingly seen everything, ready to retire in a week. David Mills (Pitt) is the new kid on the block and eager to make an impression and a career for himself in the police force, as he is scheduled to replace the departing Somerset. But in the week before Somerset’s retirement, the two men are called to a gruesome murder scene, where a man has been force-fed to death.
Soon after, a second murder takes place in which a lawyer has been forced to cut off a pound of his own flesh. It appears a serial killer is on the loose, killing his victims in accordance with the seven deadly sins and neither Somerset nor Mills seem prepared for the diabolical game which lies ahead of them.
After having directed the troubled third entry in the Alien franchise, David Fincher came back with a vengeance when Seven was released in 1995. Starting with a magnificent credit sequence, set to an eerie remix of Nine Inch Nails’ “Closer”, the film grabs you from the very first moment.
Great cinematography by Darius Khondji of a seemingly always raining murky metropolis, a great screenplay, gruesome make-up effects and fine performances from both Pitt and Freeman, as well as from the supporting cast which includes Gwyneth Paltrow, R. Lee Ermey and John C. McGinley, as well as a remarkable down-beat ending all make Seven one of the best thrillers of the nineties. Often imitated but never surpassed, Seven is a highly stylized tour de force and must-see cinema for those who like their thrillers dark and tense.
Author Bio: Emilio has been a movie buff for as long as he can remember and holds a Masters Degree in Cinema Studies from the University of Amsterdam. Critical and eclectic in taste, he has been described to “love film but hate all movies”. For daily suggestions on what to watch, check out his Just Good Movies Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/goodmoviesuggestions.

Read more at http://www.tasteofcinema.com

Maa Durga = Cosmic ENERGY


Though it’s been held as the most epoch-making discovery of the modern time-- Albert Einstein's ( E= mc2) --- the fact was well known to the Rishis of the ancient India who could see the cosmos in multiple dimensions and as the embodiment of ENERGY. 
Therefore, apart from ‘the mass equal to energy’ fact – the seers of the ancient India were far ahead even to realize that this infinite COSMOS is pervaded by Knowledge – Super-consciousness, the thing modern science is yet to realize.
Thus the symbolic representation or the real manifestation of Maa Durga is all about the essence of material and the subtlest of the subtle “Shakti” {(Mass-Energy)-Knowledge-Blissfulness)} – the
uncanny phenomenon of the whole creation. --

We can manipulate Ageing to live longer

Why do we age?
There are hypotheses that damage to DNA probably affects cell renewal in stem cells, which in turn prevents repair in the body and contributes to loss of viability. Then there is the free radicals theory of ageing: the idea that as mitochondria in our cells burn energy with oxygen, it generates very highly reactive compounds, which creates damaging oxidative stress, which in turn accumulates with age and causes ageing. 
There are also things like telomeres, the tips of chromosomes that shorten with cell division. But because this also occurs with age (and is linked to cancer risk), people have said this drives the process of ageing."The thing with ageing, of course, is that it entails different levels – molecular, cellular, hormonal and physiological – different organs and different systems in the body, which makes it very complex and relatively difficult to study. We actually don't know much about ageing in the sense of its mechanisms – how and why we age. And what drives the process of ageing is still relatively poorly understood. If you look at it evolutionarily, our lifespan has only recently been so long."

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

THE VEDIC TEXTS AND SANSKRIT

We are only going to give a short summary of the Vedic texts here. We have already written a more complete analysis elsewhere and want to keep this introduction short. So, to begin with, the Vedic texts are written in Sanskrit. Sanskrit, which literally means “cultured or refined”, is the classical language of India and is the oldest and the most systematic language in the world. Forbes Magazine, (July, 1987) wrote: “Sanskrit is the mother of all the European languages and is the most suitable language for the computer software.” It is older than Hebrew or Latin. According to the PBS video “The Story of English” the first words in the English language came from Sanskrit. The word “mother” came from the Sanskrit word “mata” and “father” came from Sanskrit word “pita”. Believe it or not the word “geometry” came from a Sanskrit word called “Gyaamiti” meaning “measuring the earth”. The word “trigonometry” came from the Sanskrit word “trikonamiti”, which means “measuring triangular forms”. Numerous other similarities and connections can be found between Sanskrit and many other languages.

WHAT ARE THE VEDIC TEXTS

They started with Shruti. Shruti literally means “That which is heard”. For long periods of time there was no Vedic literature. It was a vocal or oral tradition, and passed down accordingly. The Vedas and Upanishads were in Shruti form for a long period of time. In fact, the word Upanishad means “Upa (near), Ni (down), Shad (sit).” This means that the teachings of the Upanishads are conveyed from Guru to disciple, when the disciple sits very close to the Guru.

The very first of the sacred books of Vedic culture, in fact the oldest books on earth, are called the Vedas. The word Veda means knowledge. The word Veda came from the root word vid meaning “to know”. The Vedas are the very first scriptures of Hinduism. Vedas, as described by the scriptures, were given by God. There are four Vedic samhitas, which are the Rig-Veda, Sama-Veda, Atharva-Veda, and Yajur-Veda. The Sanskrit word samhita means “put together”. They contain wisdom that has been assembled to teach men the highest aspects of truths which can lead them to higher levels of existence, as well as to God. The Vedas also discuss rituals and ceremonies to attain self-realization as well as wisdom dealing with many other aspects of life. These four samhitas primarily contain the basic texts of hymns, formulas and chants to the various Vedic deities.

To briefly described them, the Rig-Veda -- Veda of Praise -- contains 10,522 verses in 1,017 hymns in ten books called mandalas. The Rig-Veda is the oldest book in the world. The Rig-Veda was around for many years before it was finally compiled in written form. According to Bal Gangadhar Tilak and the Vedic tradition, it was written around 5000 BC. The Rig-Veda is older than Gilgamesh (2500 B.C.) and the Old Testament.

In the Rig-Veda there are 100 hymns addressed to Soma; 250 addressed to Indra; 200 hymns addressed to Agni; and many addressed to Surya. Few others are addressed to the Ushas, Aditi, Saraswati, Varuna, and the Asvins. Lord Vishnu is not addressed so often therein because the Vedas focused more on appeasing the demigods for blessings to attain material facility rather than liberation.

The Yajur-Veda, which is essentially the Veda of liturgy, contains some 3988 verses dealing with rules and regulations for conducting rituals and also offers various levels of wisdom and advice. It is based on the Rig-Veda and consists of prose as well as verse. This Veda is indeed a priestly handbook, even describing the details of how to make an alter.

The Sama-Veda, the Veda of chants, offers knowledge of music in 1549 verses. Sama means “melody”. The classical Indian music originated from this Veda. This Veda is also connected with the Rig-Veda. To some extent much of this Veda is a repetition of the Rig-Veda sung in melodious format. Invocations of this Veda are primarily addressed to Soma (the Moon-god as well as the Soma drink); Agni (the fire god); and Indra (god of heaven). The Chandogya Upanishad came out of this Veda.

The Atharva-Veda is said to be the knowledge given by the Sage Atharvana. It has around 6000 verses. Some state that sage Atharvana did not formulate this Veda but was merely the chief priest in the ceremonies associated with it. Atharvana who is mentioned in the Rig-Veda was considered as the eldest son of Lord Brahma (God of creation). The Atharva-Veda is also known as Brahma-Veda because it is still used as a manual by Hindu priests and Brahmins. Ayurveda is a part of Atharva-Veda. A large number of Upanishads also came from the Atharva-Veda.

Brahmanas are other Vedic books that provide descriptions as well as directions for the performance of rituals. The word originated from the Brahmana priests who conduct the Vedic rituals.

Aryanakas are additional books that contain mantras and interpretations of the Vedic rituals. These books also known as “forest books” since they were used by saints who had retired to meditate in the forests.

The Upanishads are texts by different saints that reveal ultimate truths. Many of them are connected with certain Vedas. The Upanishads basically explain the non-material aspect of the Absolute Truth and the oneness of Brahman. In this way, they do not really show that much about the personal nature of the Supreme Being. Thus, a person will not have much insight into the Supreme Being’s personal form by studying only the Upanishads. However, some of them do go into introducing the fact that there is more to understand about God beyond the Brahman.

The Upanishads also help explain the spiritual dimension of our real identity and our qualities which are the same as the Brahman, but are different in quantity. We are the infinitesimal whereas the Brahman and Bhagavan are the Infinite. Yet, if one does not complete the study of the Vedic literature, a misinterpretation of the Upanishads may lead one to think that this oneness of spiritual quality between ourselves or the jiva souls and the Brahman means that we are the same as Brahman, or that we are the same as God. But that is not accurate.

There are a total of 108 major Upanishads, and many more minor ones. The are 13 principle Upanishads which are named after the sages. These are: 1. Isa Upanishad, 2. Kena Upanishad, 3. Katha Upanishad, 4. Prasna Upanishad, 5. Mundaka Upanishad, 6. Mandukya Upanishad, 7. Aitareya Upanishad, 8. Taittiriya Upanishad, 9. Chandogya Upanishad, 10. Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, 11. Kaushitaki Upanishad, 12. Shvetashvatara Upanishad, and 13. Maitri Upanishad.

The Vedanta Sutras are another important book that also goes on to explain spiritual truths to the aspirant. But these are presented in codes, or sutras, that were meant to be explained by the spiritual master. So any edition of the Vedanta Sutras will mostly have large purports that help explain the meaning of the sutras. The basis of these explanations will depend on which school of thought in which the teacher has been trained. Thus, some will be more devotionally oriented, while others may be more inclined toward meditation on the impersonal Brahman. Vedanta essentially means the “End of the Vedas”, or the end of all knowledge.

The Itihasas are the Vedic histories of the universe, known as the Puranas, which are a large and major portion of Vedic literature. The Itihasas also include the Vedic Epics, such as the Ramayana and the Mahabharata.

The Ramayana is the story of Lord Ramachandra, an incarnation of Lord Vishnu, and His princess Sita. It was written by Valmiki who wrote the whole Ramayana as the narration of a crying dove (who just lost her lover to a hunter’s wicked arrow) to him. The original text

was written in very stylish Sanskrit language. This beautiful poem consists of 24,000 couplets. The Ramayana is a story which projects the Vedic ideals of life. There are many versions of the Ramayana. The Hindi version was written by sage Tulsi Das. The Malayalam version (Kerala state) was written by Thuncheth Ezuthachan.

The story in brief is as follows: Jealousy of his step-mother exiled Rama into the jungles along with his wife Sita and brother Lakshmana. There poor Sita was kidnapped by Ravana, the demon-king of Sri Lanka. Rama went to rescue her with the aid of the monkey-king Sugriva. In a great battle, Rama annihilated Ravana and his army. Thereafter, Rama along with Sita and Lakshmana returned triumphantly to their kingdom. Rama is an example of the perfect husband, Sita is the perfect wife, and Lakshmana is the perfect brother.

The Ramayana is a very cherished poem of the Hindus. The holy Deepavali festival is a celebration of victory of Rama over Ravana. Diwali or Deepavali is the “festival of lights” and is celebrated throughout India.

The Mahabharata is another of the world’s great epics which consists of episodes, stories, dialogues, discourses and sermons. It contains 110,000 couplets or 220,000 lines in 18 Parvas or sections. It is the longest poem in the world. It is longer than Homer’s Odyssey. It is the story of the Pandvas and Kauravas. The Bhagavad-gita is a chapter of the Mahabharata.

Apart from the 18 Parvas there is a section of poems in the form of an appendix with 16,375 verses which is known as Harivamsa Parva. So in total there are 19 Parvas, even though many saints do not consider the last Parva as important.

The Bhagavad-gita, which means the song of Bhagavan, or God, is a part of the Mahabharata, appearing in the middle of it. Many consider the Bhagavad-gita as the most important of the Vedic scriptures and the essence of the Upanishads and Vedic knowledge. Anyone interested in the most important of the Eastern philosophy should read the Bhagavad-gita. If all the Upanishads can be considered as cows, then the Bhagavad-gita can be considered as milk.

The Bhagavad-gita consists of 18 chapters and over 700 verses. It deals with all types of yogas, the means of self-realization. It is in the form of a very lively conversation between the warrior-prince Arjuna and his friend and charioteer Lord Krishna. This was spoken at the outset of the great Mahabharata war, in the middle of the battle field at Kuruksetra. This can still be visited just three hours north of New Delhi. Just before the beginning of the war, Arjuna refused to fight when he found he had to kill thousands of his own kinsmen to be victorious in the war. Lord Krishna advised him on a very large variety of subjects in a question and answer format. At the end, Arjuna took Lord Krishna’s advice and fought and won a very fierce war. The Gita has an answer to every problem a man may face in his life. It never commands anyone what to do. Instead it discusses pros and cons of every action and thought. Throughout the Gita you will not come across any line starting or ending with Thou Shalt Not. That is the reason why the Gita is the darling of millions of seekers of truth throughout the world.

There are many versions of Bhagavad-gita. The very first English translation of the Gita was done by Charles Wilkins in 1785, with an introduction by Warren Hastings, the British Governor General of India. One of the most popular translations was done by Sir Edwin Arnold, under the title The Song Celestial. One of most descriptive and accurate translations of the Gita was done by His Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, called The Bhagavad-gita As It Is. Almost all saints in India have published their versions of the Bhagavad-gita, some of which arrive at various conclusions or viewpoints. So one does need to display some caution in picking which edition to read. Most intellectuals in the world go through the Gita at least once in their life time. Aldous Huxley wrote in his introduction of The Song of God by Swami Prabhavananda and Christopher Isherwood: “The Bhagavad-gita is perhaps the most systematic scriptural statement of the perennial philosophy”. The Gita won the interest and admiration of great intellectuals such as Von Humboldt of Germany and Emerson of America. It has also influenced many Western thinkers, such as Hagel and Schopenhauer.

Robert Oppenheimer, the very first Chairman of Atomic Energy Commission and father of Atom bomb was a great admirer of the Bhagavad-gita. He learnt Sanskrit during the Manhattan Project to understand the true meaning of the Gita. He really shocked the world, when he quoted a couplet from the Gita (Chapter 11:12) after witnessing the first Atomic Explosion in the state of New Mexico, which reads, “If hundreds of thousands of suns rose up into the sky, they might resemble the effulgence of the Supreme Person in the universal form.” Later when he addressed congress regarding the Atom Bomb he said the Atom Bomb reminded him of Lord Krishna who said in the Bhagavad-gita, “Time I am, the devourer of all”.

The Puranas are the Vedic religious histories of the universe which expound various levels of the Vedic truths. They are divided into three sections. The six Puranas that address Lord Vishnu are: 1. Vishnu Purana, 2. Narada Purana, 3. Srimad Bhagavata Purana, 4. Garuda Purana, 5. Padma Purana, and 6. Varaha Purana.

The six Puranas that address Lord Siva are: 1. Matsya Purana, 2. Kurma Purana, 3. Linga Purana, 4. Vayu Purana, 5. Skanda Purana, and 6. Agni Purana.

The six Puranas that primarily address Lord Brahma are: 1. Brahma Purana, 2. Brahmanda Purana, 3. Brahma-Vaivasvata Purana, or the Brahma-Vaivarta Purana, 4. Markandeya Purana, 5. Bhavishya Purana, and 6. Vamana Purana. Besides these, there are an additional 18 to 22 minor Puranas.

The 20 major Puranas include all the above as well as the Shiva Purana and the Harivamsa Purana. Of all Puranas, the Srimad Bhagavata Purana addressed to Lord Vishnu, and which discusses the detailed pastimes of Lord Krishna, is considered the most important. It contains 15,000 stanzas in 12 cantos. It was written by Sage Badarayana, also known as VedaVyasa or Vyasadeva. Vyasadeva, after writing all of His previous Vedic books, said the Bhagavatam was His own commentary and conclusion of all Vedic thought. The greatest exponent of the Srimad-Bhagavatam is Sage Suka, the son of Sage VedaVyasa. This book was recited to King Pariksit by Sage Suka in one week before the death of the King by the bite of a serpent. Much of the book is in dialogue form between King Pariksit and Sage Suka.

The Srimad-Bhagavata consists of stories of all the Avataras of Lord Vishnu. The 10th chapter of the book deals with the story of Lord Krishna in detail. The last chapter deals exclusively with the Kali-Yuga, the present age, and about the last Avatara of Lord Vishnu, Kalki. There is also a vivid description of the Pralaya or the great deluge in the last chapter.

According to the Bhagavata Purana the universe and creation came into existence because God in a pastime (Lila) willed to do so, and to manifest His material inferior energy. According to this scripture, there are nine different ways of exhibiting Bhakti or devotion to God like listening to stories of God, meditating, serving and adoring his image and finally self-surrender. This book is an authority on Vaishnavism in Hinduism and is a primary text to all Viashnavas (worshipers of Lord Vishnu and His avataras) including those of the Hare Krishna Movement.

The Agamas are another group of scriptures that worship God in particular forms, and describe detailed courses of discipline for the devotee. Like the Upanishads, there are many Agamas. They can be broadly divided into three sets of Agamas, namely:

Vaishnava Agamas - worship God as Lord Vishnu;

Shaiva Agamas - worship God as Lord Shiva;

Shakti Agamas - worship God as Mother Goddess.

There is no Agamas for Lord Brahma (God of creation). Shaivites have 28 Agamas and 108 Upa Agamas (minor Agamas). Shaktas recognize 77 Agamas. There are many Vaishnava Agamas of which the Pancharatra is one of the most important. Each Agama consists of philosophy, mental discipline, rules for constructing temples and religious practices.

The Tantras started during the Vedic age, which consist of cosmology, yogic exercises, etc. Tantra is very important and very vast. The Sanskrit word Tantra means to expand. Tantrism researched into Astronomy, Astrology, Palmistry, Cosmology, as well as the knowledge of the Chakras and Kundalini power, etc.

பரப்ரம்மம் ஸ்தூலப் பொருள்கள் சூக்கும்ப் பொருள்கள்

கண்ணுக்குத் தெரிகின்ற ஸ்தூலப் பொருள்களெல்லாம் பஞ்ச பூதங்களாலானவை. சூக்கும்ப் பொருள்கள் அனைத்தும் அவற்றின் தன்மாத்திரைகளால் ஆனவை. அண்டத்திலும், பிண்டத்திலும் யாவும் இவ்வாறே அமைந்துள்ளன. எனவே பிண்டமாகிய நம் உடலில் நடைபெறும் இயக்கங்களுக்கும், உணர்வகளுக்கும் அண்டத்தோடு நாம் கொள்ளும் தொடர்பு நிலைகளுக்கும் சூக்குமமான தொடர்பு உண்டு. அந்த அடிப்படையில் இப்போது நாம் ஜாக்ரதா, சொப்னம், சுஷுப்தி என்ற மூன்று நிலைகளுக்கும் மற்றவைகளுக்கும் உள்ள தொடர்பைக் குறித்து இப்போது பார்க்கப் போகிறோம். அதாவது விழித்திருக்கும் இயல்பான நிலை, கனவு, கனவற்ற உறக்கம் என்ற மூன்று நிலைகள். இவற்றை அவஸ்தைகள் என்றும் சொல்வார்கள். உணர்வுகள் என்றும் சிலர் சொல்கிறார்கள்.
இந்த அவஸ்தைகள் ஒன்றுக்கொன்று வேறுபட்டவை போலத் தோன்றினாலும், உண்மையில் இந்த மூன்று அவஸ்தைகளும் துரியத்தில் அடங்கியுள்ளன. எனினும் துரியம் இந்த மூன்று நிலைகளையும் கடந்த பேருணர்வாக, தூய அறிவு ஒளி உணர்வாக உள்ளது. துரியத்தை ஈஸ்வரன் என்றும், ப்ரம்மம் என்றும், ப்ரணவம் என்றும் கூறுவார்கள். துரியத்தின் மேலான நிலையே துரிய அதீதம். இதுவே பரப்ரம்மம். இந்த மூன்று அவஸ்தைகளுக்கும் போக்குவரவு உண்டு. எனவே இவற்றை மாயா காரியங்கள் என்றழைப்பார்கள். ஆனால், துரியத்திற்கு போக்கு வரவு இல்லை. அது சுத்தமனதோடு தரிசிக்கும் போது துரியம் என்றும், மனதற்ற பரிசுத்தமான நிலையில் தரிசிக்கும் போது துரியாதீதமென்றும் பாகுபடுத்திச் சொல்கிறார்கள். உண்மையில் அது ஏக வஸ்துவாக இருந்தாலும் மனதின் நிலையினால் இரண்டு நிலையாக தோன்றுகிறது.
பிரணவத்தைப் பொறுத்த வரை அ காரம், ஜாக்ரதையாகும், உ காரம் சொப்னமாகும், ம காரம் சுஷுப்தியாகும். இந்த மூன்றும் சேர்ந்த ஓம் இந்த மூன்று நிலைகளையும் கடந்த துரியமாகும். இதிலே மகாரத்தில் உள்ள புள்ளியே துரிய அதீதமாகிய பரப்ரம்மமாகவும், லிங்கமாகவும், சதாசிவமாகவும் சூக்குமமாக நின்று இயக்குகிறது, அந்த புள்ளி இல்லை என்றால் ஒம் இல்லை. இதையே அ காரமாகிய ஆண் ப்ரம்மமென்றும், ம மாயையாகிய சக்தி அல்லது ஹரி என்றும், உ பரப்ரம்மத்தின் அம்சமாகிய சிவமென்றும் சொல்லப்பட்டுள்ளது. அ காரம் தமோ குணத்தையும், ம காரம் இரஜோ குணத்தையும், உ காரம் சத்துவ குண்த்தையும் உணர்த்துவதாகும். மேலும் அ என்பது நான் என்பதையும், உ என்பது இது என்பதையும், ம என்பது அல்ல என்பதையும் குறிப்பதாகவும் சொல்வார்கள். எனவே ஓம் என்பது ''நான் இது அல்ல(அஹம் ஏதத் ந;)'' எனப் பொருள்படுகிறது.
இனி துவைதம், விசிஷ்டாத்வைதம், அத்வைதம் இந்த மூன்றையும் அவஸ்தைகளோடு தொடர்புபடுத்தி உபநிடதங்கள் விளக்குகின்றன. அதாவது, ஜாக்கிரதை என்கிற விழிப்பு நிலையில் ஜீவனாகிய நான் வேறு, ஜகத் வேறு, பரம்பொருள் வேறு என்ற நிலை காணப்படுகிறது. இது துவைதம். சாதனங்கள் புரிவதற்கும் அதில் முன்னேற்றம் அடைவதற்கும் துவைத நிலையே உகந்ததாக இருக்கிறது. அடுத்து சொப்னமாகிய கனவு நிலையில் காணும் உலகக் காட்சிகளும், தெய்வீகக் காட்சிகளும் மனதின் கற்பிதங்களே. ஒரு பொருளாகிய மனது கனவில் பல பொருள்களாகத் தோன்றிக் கொண்டிருக்கிறது. மனோ விகாரங்களே புறப் பொருளாகப் பொருள் படுத்தப்படுகின்றன. இதுவே பேதாபேதமாகிய விசிஷ்டாத்வைத நிலை. கனவற்ற உறக்கமாகிய சுஷுப்தியில் நான் இல்லை. என்னால் காணப்படும் புறப் பொருள்களுமில்லை. வெறும் பிரக்ஞை மட்டும் தன்மயமாக இருக்கிறது. இது இரண்டற்ற அத்வைத நிலை. இந்த மூன்று அவஸ்தைகளிலும் மனிதன் பக்குப்படுகிறான். எனவே இந்த மூன்று அவஸ்தைகளையும், மூன்று நிலைகளையும் ஒன்றை உயர்த்தி, ஒன்றைத் தாழ்த்தி போருள்படுத்துவது அறியாமையே ஆகும்.
முக்தி அடைய முயல்கின்ற ஜீவன் பரம்பொருளை நோக்கி பயணப்படும் போது அத்வைதம், விசிஷ்டாத்வைதம், துவைதம் என்ற மூன்று நிலைகளையும் அடைந்து பக்குவப்படுகிறான். சாதாரணமான மனிதன் தன் வாழ்வில் இந்த நிலைகளை அவஸ்தைகளாக உணர்ந்து பக்குவப்படுகிறான்.

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Tuesday, September 23, 2014

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Reading from books is better for you than reading online

Just half an hour of reading, either with a book or a tablet, can have a multitude of positive effects on your mental health, and 'slow reading clubs' are popping up around the world to do just that. Just don't check Twitter halfway through...

Image: Frida Sakaj
The Slow Reading Club of Wellington in New Zealand is a small group of people who all go to a cafe at the same time, shut their phones off, and read for an hour. It doesn’t sound that revolutionary, but the ‘slow reading’ movement has been gaining momentum around the world, and research has suggested that it could be having many significant effects on the participants’ brains.
Members of the group would happily tell you that the benefits they’re getting from their commitment to 'slow reading' include improvements in concentration and the ability to think through difficult concepts and emphasise with other people's feelings and beliefs, and a slew of recent studies seem to back these claims up.
According to Jeanne Whalen at the Wall Street Journal, a study published last year in the journal Neurology and conducted by researchers from the Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center and Departments of Neurological Sciences at the Rush University Medical Center in the US, showed that in 300 elderly people, those that engaged regularly in activities that challenged them mentally, such as reading, had slower rates of memory loss as they aged. And last year, a separate study published in Science revealed that reading literary fiction could actively improve your ability to understand and empathise with other people’s mental states and beliefs. 
"Yet reading habits have declined in recent years,” says Whalen. "In a survey this year, about 76 percent  of Americans 18 and older said they read at least one book in the past year, down from 79 percent in 2011, according to the Pew Research Center."
Because many of us now read more on our phones than we are from books and even tablets, we’ve unwittingly changed the way we take in words. In 2006, an eye-tracking report by scientists at the US-based research group, Nielsen Norman, showed that people read web pages in an “F” pattern, scanning the top line all the way, then halfway across the next few lines, and then only down the left side of the page, all the way down to the bottom of the article. This kind of reading helps us scan quickly for important words to spark our interest, but does nothing for our ability to actually gain a deeper understanding of what we’re reading. 
And as much as rich multimedia-laden content captures our attention, with a mixture of words, sounds, and moving gifs, videos and image galleries, studies have shown that together they can lead to lower comprehension than just reading plain text, says Whalen at the Wall Street Journal. So while access to the Internet wherever we go has placed all the information in the world at our very fingertips, consuming it quickly from a smartphone screen, as we navigate our way through all the bells and whistles offered up by multimedia, is not as effective as focussing our attention on one text, and reading it slowly, whether it's in a physical book, or on a tablet screen.
Someone pass us a paperback, we're off to find the nearest cafe with a fireplace and something mulled. 
Source: Wall Street Journal

Robot captures first images of Great Pyramid's secret chamber

An autonomous robot has transmitted the first images from inside a tiny chamber in the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt - something that no one has seen in 4,500 years.


Thought to be a gigantic tomb built for the pharaoh Khufu over a 10 to 20-year period that ended around 2560 BC, the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt is the single remaining vestige of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. When it was first built, it was 146.5 metres high before crumbling to 138.8 metres tall, where it stands now. 
There are three known chambers in the Great Pyramid - the base chamber sits on the bedrock and supports the rest of the pyramid, while the upper two chambers are called the Queen’s and King’s Chambers. Extending from the north and south walls of the Queen’s Chamber are two tunnels - about 20 cm by 20 cm - that are blocked off by stone doors. No one knows what these tunnels were originally intended to do, but one theory is that they led to a secret chamber.
According to Rowan Hooper at New Scientist, researchers have tried several times to solve this mystery by sending little robots into the Great Pyramid. In 1993, a robot made it 63 m up the south wall tunnel to find a small pair of stone doors set with metal pins. This was strange enough because metal was not found in any other part of the Great Pyramid, so what function was it performing here? Door handles, perhaps? Or a key?
Almost a decade after that, another robot drilled into a stone block in the tunnel and found a small, strange, empty chamber that ended with a large stone block. 
This year, a team of engineers led by Rob Richardson from the University of Leeds in the UK decided to investigate this mystery further. It developed a new robot to help them explore the chamber. They got it to crawl up into the tunnel and use its flexible “micro snake” camera to see into and around all the nooks, crannies and corners. This robot found 4,500-year-old hieroglyphs written in red paint and carvings in the stone that could have been made by the stone masons when the chamber was being built.
"If these hieroglyphs could be deciphered, they could help Egyptologists work out why these mysterious shafts were built,” Richardson told Hooper at New Scientist.
"Red-painted numbers and graffiti are widespread around Giza,” added Egyptologist Peter Der Manuelian from Harvard University and director of the Giza Archives at the Museum of Fine Arts in the US. "They are often masons' or work-gangs' marks, denoting numbers, dates or even the names of the gangs."
The robot also got its stretchy camera in and around the mysterious empty chamber to look at the back of the stone door for the first time. This allowed it to film parts of the metal pins that had never been seen before, and their beautifully looped tips suggest that rather than being functional, they were probably just ornamental features.
Egyptologist Kate Spence from the University of Cambridge in the UK, who was not involved in the study, says it’s almost certain that these tunnels were made to be symbolic rather than functional. "The metal pins look like symbolic door handles, and the shafts from the Queen's Chamber are oriented north-south, not east-west, so I strongly suspect that their function is symbolic and relates to the stars, not the sun," she told New Scientist.
Source: New Scientist

Bio-reactive food expiry label could cut food waste

A researcher has created a use-by-date label that decays as the same rate of food, in order to drastically reduce unnecessary food waste.


Known as the Bump Mark label, this new bio-reactive expiry date is made from gelatine, a protein that reacts to environmental conditions such as temperature and light - and anything else that affects food.
Developed by Sloveiga Pakstaite from Brunel University in London, the label has been named the UK winner of the James Dyson Award for innovatively tackling the global problem of food waste.
Each year the UN estimates that seven MILLION tonnes of food is wasted in the UK alone, often because it’s passed its marked use by date. However, much of this food would still be fine for consumption.
But the Bump Mark, because it contains an edible substance, can actually work out when something is no longer safe to eat.
"Gelatine sets solid but it has this property that when it is fully expired it loses its structure,” Pakstaite told the International Business Times UK.
The design works by placing gelatine on top of a textured plastic sheet - and when food goes off, the label will feel bumpy instead of smooth. This means it would also help people who are visually impaired to find out if what they were about to eat had gone off.
As Anthony Cuthbertson explains for the International Business Times UK:
“It can be used with different foods with varying expiration dates, such as milk or meat, by increasing or decreasing the concentration of the gelatine, whereby the higher the concentration, the longer the label will last.”
Pakstaite has now received £2,000 from the Dyson Foundation to further develop the device.

Source: International Business Times UK

String Theory

In physics, string theory is a theoretical framework in which the point-like particles of particle physics are replaced by one-dimensional objects called strings. In string theory, the different types of observed elementary particles arise from the different quantum states of these strings. In addition to the types of particles postulated by the standard model of particle physics, string theory naturally incorporates gravity, and is therefore a candidate for a theory of everything, a self-contained mathematical model that describes all fundamental forces and forms of matter. Aside from this hypothesized role in particle physics, string theory is now widely used as a theoretical tool in physics, and it has shed light on many aspects of quantum field theory and quantum gravity.

Many theoretical physicists believe that string theory is a step towards the correct fundamental description of nature. This is because string theory allows for the consistent combination of quantum field theory and general relativity, agrees with general insights in quantum gravity such as the holographic principle and black hole thermodynamics, and because it has passed many non-trivial checks of its internal consistency.


We live in a wonderfully complex universe, and we are curious about it by nature. Time and again we have wondered--- why are we here? Where did we and the world come from? What is the world made of?It is our privilege to live in a time when enormous progress has been made towards finding some of the answers. String theory is our most recent attempt to answer the last (and part of the second) question.

So, what is the world made of? Ordinary matter is made of atoms, which are in turn made of just three basic components: electrons whirling around a nucleus composed of neutrons and protons. The electron is a truly fundamental particle (it is one of a family of particles known as leptons), but neutrons and protons are made of smaller particles, known as quarks. Quarks are, as far as we know, truly elementary.
Our current knowledge about the subatomic composition of the universe is summarized in what is known as the Standard Model of particle physics. It describes both the fundamental building blocks out of which the world is made, and the forces through which these blocks interact. There are twelve basic building blocks. Six of these arequarks--- they go by the interesting names of updowncharm,strangebottom and top. (A proton, for instance, is made of two up quarks and one down quark.) The other six are leptons--- these include the electron and its two heavier siblings, the muon and thetauon, as well as three neutrinos.
There are four fundamental forces in the universe: gravity,electromagnetism, and the weak and strong nuclear forces. Each of these is produced by fundamental particles that act as carriers of the force. The most familiar of these is the photon, a particle of light, which is the mediator of electromagnetic forces. (This means that, for instance, a magnet attracts a nail because both objects exchange photons.) The graviton is the particle associated with gravity. The strong force is carried by eight particles known as gluons. Finally, the weak force is transmitted by three particles, the W+, the W- , and theZ.
The behavior of all of these particles and forces is described with impeccable precision by the Standard Model, with one notable exception: gravity. For technical reasons, the gravitational force, the most familiar in our every day lives, has proven very difficult to describe microscopically. This has been for many years one of the most important problems in theoretical physics-- to formulate aquantum theory of gravity.
In the last few decades, string theory has emerged as the most promising candidate for a microscopic theory of gravity. And it is infinitely more ambitious than that: it attempts to provide a complete, unified, and consistent description of the fundamental structure of our universe. (For this reason it is sometimes, quite arrogantly, called a 'Theory of Everything').
The essential idea behind string theory is this: all of the different 'fundamental ' particles of the Standard Model are really just different manifestations of one basic object: a string. How can that be? Well, we would ordinarily picture an electron, for instance, as a point with no internal structure. A point cannot do anything but move. But, if string theory is correct, then under an extremely powerful 'microscope' we would realize that the electron is not really a point, but a tiny loop of string. A string can do something aside from moving--- it can oscillate in different ways. If it oscillates a certain way, then from a distance, unable to tell it is really a string, we see an electron. But if it oscillates some other way, well, then we call it a photon, or a quark, or a ... you get the idea. So, if string theory is correct, the entire world is made of strings!
Perhaps the most remarkable thing about string theory is that such a simple idea works--- it is possible to derive (an extension of) the Standard Model (which has been verified experimentally with incredible precision) from a theory of strings. But it should also be said that, to date, there is no direct experimental evidence that string theory itself is the correct description of Nature. This is mostly due to the fact that string theory is still under development. We know bits and pieces of it, but we do not yet see the whole picture, and we are therefore unable to make definite predictions. In recent years many exciting developments have taken place, radically improving our understanding of what the theory is.
  If you want to learn more, visit the sites listed below. I also highly recommend the popular science book "The Elegant Universe: Superstrings, Hidden Dimensions, and the Quest for The Ultimate Theory" (W. W. Norton & Company, 1999), written by Prof. Brian Greene, a well-established string theorist.
  • The Official String Theory Website: An excellent introductory site for the nonspecialist, including RealAudio interviews with leading string theorists, and a tour of the Big Bang.
  • The Elegant Universe: The companion site for the 3 hour PBS series based on Brian Greene's book. You can even watch the series online. (Unfortunately, it is nowhere near as good as the book! It is visually stunning, but the physics content is extremely low and the approach is excessively propagandistic. You can read a critical NY Times review of the series here.)
  • Particle Adventure: A very nice tour through the main ideas of the Standard Model of particle physics.(Also available in Spanishand other languages).
  • The Science of Matter, Space and Time: Another nice presentation of the concepts of particle physics.
  • Einstein's Unfinished Symphony: An article on string theory that appeared recently in TIME magazine, on occasion of TIME's designation of Einstein as the person of the 20th century.
  • Strings '00 Pictures: Photos of some of the world's leading string theorists, at the most important yearly conference on the subject (see also the ITP M Theory Program and Strings 96 pictures).
  • Black Holes, Strings and Quantum Gravity: A public lecture by Prof. Juan Maldacena, undoubtedly the most influential string theorist in the last few years (also available in Spanish).
  • Superstrings! Home Page: A nice site where many aspects of string theory are explained.
  • Duality, Spacetime and Quantum Mechanics: A public lecture by Prof. Edward Witten (IAS Princeton), arguably the world's most influential theoretical physicist, and a leading contributor to string theory
  • The Theory of Strings--- A Detailed Introduction: An extensive description of the basic ideas of the theory, by Prof. Sunil Mukhi, a leading string theorist.
  • String Reviews: List of downloadable review articles on various topics in string theory. Most of them are highly technical, but some of the articles in the "Colloquia/Semipopular" category are intended for a wider audience.
  • String Theory and the Unification of Forces: An explanation of the ambitious goal of string theory, by Prof. S. Mukhi.
  • The Second Superstring Revolution: A (somewhat technical) report on the latest developments in string theory, due to Prof. John Schwarz, one of the fathers of the theory.
  • Black Holes, Quantum Mechanics and String Theory: A series of 10 lectures on string theory, intended for the general public, by Prof. Finn Larsen.
  • ITP Teachers' Educational Forum on String Theory: Is it the Theory of Everything?: A set of lectures on string theory, intended for highschool teachers.
  • M-theory, the theory formerly known as Strings: A brief introduction to some ideas of the theory, presented by the Relativity & Gravitation group at Cambridge University.
  • String Theory in a Nutshell: A brief account of string theory, including some words on the latest developments, by Prof. J. M. Figueroa-O'Farrill.
  • What is String Theory?: A longer introductory description of the basic ideas of the theory, due to K. LLoyd.
  • Superstring Theory: An explanation of some of the ingredients of the theory, written some time ago by Prof. Brian Greene, for the graduate program at Cornell University.
  • String Theory: A short introduction to string theory by Prof. Robert Dijkgraaf, written for physicists.
  • M-Theory: strings, duality and branes: a non-technical article by Prof. J.P. Gauntlett, which appeared in Contemporary Physics (available in Postscript only).
  • Other String Links
  • Other Science Links.

Book of the Week: THE FUTURE OF THE MIND



For the first time in history, the secrets of the living brain are being revealed by a battery of high tech brain scans devised by physicists. Now what was once solely the province of science fiction has become a startling reality. Recording memories, telepathy, videotaping our dreams, mind control, avatars, and telekinesis are not only possible; they already exist.

The Future of the Mind gives us an authoritative and compelling look at the astonishing research being done in top laboratories around the world—all based on the latest advancements in neuroscience and physics. One day we might have a "smart pill" that can enhance our cognition; be able to upload our brain to a computer, neuron for neuron; send thoughts and emotions around the world on a "brain-net"; control computers and robots with our mind; push the very limits of immortality; and perhaps even send our consciousness across the universe.

Dr. Kaku takes us on a grand tour of what the future might hold, giving us not only a solid sense of how the brain functions but also how these technologies will change our daily lives. He even presents a radically new way to think about "consciousness" and applies it to provide fresh insight into mental illness, artificial intelligence and alien consciousness.

With Dr. Kaku's deep understanding of modern science and keen eye for future developments, The Future of the Mind is a scientific tour de force--an extraordinary, mind-boggling exploration of the frontiers of neuroscience.

About the Author:
Dr. Michio Kaku is a professor of physics at the City University of New York, cofounder of string field theory, and the author of several widely acclaimed science books, including Hyperspace, Beyond Einstein, Physics of the Impossible, and Physics of the Future.