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Column: Solutions for humanity lie in the miracle of Creation

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“Mankind is blessed with instinct, emotion and sometimes uncontrollable urge”

by Frederick Sinclair, pictured is author Guy Murchie,

What mankind needs, is the motivation to actively engage solutions and to resolve  problems in new ways.  A motivated populace in this day and age , can indeed overcome inertia thru expanded  vision, passion,  inspiration and strength.  What then can spark such a state of super humanity? For some, it is sourced in faith, morality and belief in higher power, but billions still fall prey to  ignorance, greed, lust for power, control and just plain evil.

Catalysts are needed that will quicken an awakening of a renewed humanity guided by the power of enhanced applied consciousness. Such stimulus needs to be readily accessible to the masses, non denominational, able to be deeply absorbed by many ages, all educational levels and applicable to a variety of situations. A seemingly tall order, until author Guy Murchie spent 17 years in the exploration of science, biology and  philosophy of Creation and assembled it into “THE SEVEN MYSTERIES OF LIFE”.  Buckminster Fuller states that Murchies’ work “ Embraces all the most important information about everything humanity needs to know for continuance aboard planet Earth, or anywhere else in the Universe.”   The more than 600 pages reveals the structure and function of Creation from the sub atomic to the galactic, bringing forward the divine majesty of Creation. Deep beauty, power and grace emerges from heightened awareness of our connection in Creation. Following articles will reflect the revelations of Guy Murchie as we examine the body, mind and spirit of Creation.

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 Consider the earth to be a living being, infused with more life and nature than we normally perceive.  Human senses register only a manageable portion of Creations’  full spectrum of frequencies and patterns. Limited perception can simplify functioning, but it can also result in wrong conclusions. Examples are; how railroad tracks that appear to merge into one point in the distance is dispelled by the simple application of logic or perhaps by simply riding the train. The illusion of standing perfectly still and experiencing no movement whatsoever is a very real state of rest ,on one level, but not accurate from other perspectives. Standing ‘still’ at the equator, the earth’s 24 thousand mile circumference,  with one complete rotation in 24 hours, you are actually moving 1,000 miles per hour.  Sensory perception functions perfectly well in the normal  human bandwidth for drawing conclusions and taking action, but deeper investigation and understanding is certainly prudent in situations where more is at stake than ‘meets the eye’.

Mankind is blessed with instinct, emotion and sometimes uncontrollable urge. In nature these primal functions are mostly an expression of environmental pressures and survival. Where is the  balance between the luxury senses of man and the baseline of ruthless evolutionary engine driving natural selection. Take for example the most ferocious and numerous mammalian predator on the planet. The shrew, of which there are 30 species in North America alone, has 4 times the metabolism of a mouse and eats up to three times their own body weight per day. Hunting every waking minute and facing starvation only four hours after satiation, the shrew has a ferocious disposition and if isolated with another, with no other food present, will cannibalize his neighbor. Four hours later a ferocious appetite again overcomes the shrew and it will he consume itself, tail first, to death.  Are there parallels to such primal survival instincts present in mankind? How would we advise the shrew to resolve its’ predicament? 

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