Different ways of perceiving the world
Asked how we perceive the world outside, there are, of course, several ways to answer.
Asked how we perceive the world outside, there are, of course, several ways to answer.
Once again providing kids and kids at heart the chance to explore science the fun way, The Mind Museum opens its 5th traveling exhibit, the “Science Circus: Step Right Up!” This is supported in part by Mastercard, Limkaco Industries, Uratex, and Thompson Hardware and Lighting Center.
In the spirit of gift giving this Christmas, Nestlé Health Science encourages you to share the most valuable gift you could give to your family —the gift of health.
For over 50 years now, abundant scientific and statistical proof of the existence of such psychic abilities as telepathy, clairvoyance and telekinesis have been available for scrutiny by any interested individual or institution in both Western and Eastern European countries.
“SCIENTISTS have demonstrated that both the brain and the body change constantly, according to how we use them,” writes British journalist and author Neville Hodgkinson in the introduction to his latest book, “I Know How To Live, I Know How To Die.” “They tell us, for instance, that when we fall in love or become parents, massive brain reorganization takes place. Millions of old neural networks fall away, as millions of new ones form.”
Women suffering from low libido got some hope this week when a panel of health experts said the U.S. government should approve an experimental pill intended to boost sexual desire.
The fictional Gotham City, known in comic books as Batman’s home, could be sitting right atop majestic Mt. Makiling—home to around 30 different bat species.
I received with a feeling of regret the news that the well-known Japanese researcher on the messages of water, Masaru Emoto, died recently in Japan.
A New York State appeals court on Wednesday heard arguments on whether chimpanzees held in captivity should be recognized as “legal persons” entitled to live in freedom.
The Inquirer’s Sept. 6, 2014 issue carried a front page news that aroused my interest. It was about a first successful experiment in “brain-to-brain” contact, or telepathy.
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