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Explore

An Arrow Through Time

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By Stephan A. Schwartz

Excerpt:

There is no siren whose call is quite so exquisite as the music of the future. For as long as writing has existed there are records showing we have sought to know its form. Last year alone literally billions were spent by widows, lovers, spies, and presidents. All seeking, like an arrow through time, some way to answer: “In the future, what will… ?” Serving up answers are prophets, psychics, experts, and fiction writers.

In Biblical antiquity, prophets were recognized because they could interpret dreams. Although not all dreams relate to the future in the Bible, most do, like Daniel’s interpretation of King Nebuchadnezzar’s dream. [1] Alternatively individuals have their own dreams, as Joseph did when an angel came to him and told him “to take Mary as your wife. For the child within her has been conceived by the Holy Spirit.” [2]

But it was a tricky business, one could be accused of being a false prophet, and many Christians believed then, and still believe today, that when such dreams are accurate they do not come from the individual, but from God. As Peter made clear, “no prophecy recorded in Scripture was ever thought up by the prophet himself. It was the Holy Spirit within these godly men who gave them true messages from God.” [3]

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Full Text of the Article – Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing March/April 2008, Vol. 4, No. 2

Publication History: EXPLORE March/April 2008, Vol. 4, No. 2

Categories : Essays & Columns, Explore Journal, Magazine & Occasional Pieces, Papers & Research Reports

The Beingness Doctrine

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Naomi Klein has written a book, Shock Doctrine, whose premise is that a formal strategy for forcing social change began evolving on the right as long ago as the 1950s, based on an extremist view of conservative free market capitalism.

As Eric Klinenberg wrote in his Book Forum review, “Why do so many nations have economic policies more laissezfaire and social programs less generous than their citizens prefer? Naomi Klein argues that the answer lies in a simple two-step strategy, honed over three decades by an international cabal of freemarket fundamentalists: First, exploit crises—whether due to economics, politics, or natural disasters—to advance an agenda that would never survive the democratic process during ordinary times. Next, create a ‘corporatocracy,’ in which multinationals and political leaders align to promote their interests at the public’s expense.”1

In her extraordinarily well-documented work, Naomi Klein describes how the tactics of this strategy have now reached a level of sophistication such that in settings as disparate as Iraq and Katrina, it has forced change that would otherwise have been unacceptable through normal democratic processes. A change wrought under the guise of responding to some kind of social catastrophe, whether natural, like a hurricane, or man-made such as the early policies under Paul Bremmer in the first days of the occupation of Iraq. Klein points out that often this occurs with disastrous consequences, as anyone familiar with Katrina’s aftermath, or today’s headline on Iraq can see. If you have not read this book, I urge you to do so. It will give you a perspective through which much that seems chaotic and disconnected will be revealed as not only connected, but deliberate. The book is so disturbing that it forced me to consider if an alternative life-affirming strategy existed that had proven it could work. A kind of counter–Shock Doctrine.

Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing
January 2008 (Vol. 4, Issue 1, Pages 15-17)

Categories : Essays & Columns, Explore Journal, Papers & Research Reports

By the Numbers

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He was a small black boy. About nine years of age. I was the same age give or take a year, and we had both been brought to the train station. I can no longer remember where, but somewhere in the Deep South. It could have been Florida, or maybe Georgia. Nor do I know, if I ever knew, what part of the year it was, although it was very hot, and the caged metal fans that stood sweeping the room moved air so hot it hurt to have it blow on my skin. I was with the black woman who took care of me, a doctor’s son. Her name is lost to me now, and no one living can tell it to me. He was with his grandmother. I watched him walk across the tiles of the station as I sat in one of the worn wooden pews that lined the vaulted waiting room.
There were two drinking fountains jutting from the wall. One sign read “Whites Only.” I was a compulsive reader of signs, proud of my ability to do so. Like many signs, though, I am not sure I understood what it meant.

Publication History: Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing
November 2007 (Vol. 3, Issue 6, Pages 558-560)

Categories : Essays & Columns, Explore Journal, Papers & Research Reports

Water . . . Water . . . Part One: Hot and Salty

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Most of us know very little about water. It comes in two types, salt and fresh. It has two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom and is written H2O. In the Dead Sea and the Great Salt Lake, you can float. A random collection of facts—like knowing a dozen Latin tags—is usual, even for many in science or medicine. For most Americans, access to water is a given. Like the right to vote, it seems a birthright. And when you turn on a tap, do you ask whether you can drink the water that comes out? Probably not.
I want to suggest you consider expanding your world view. And that you follow the rapidly evolving water story, because whether you do so or not, water is about to change your life and will profoundly affect the lives of your children and grandchildren in ways both great and small. Water matters to our lives at every level, from the personal to the geopolitical. Its role in global warming, as well as its atomic structure and how it interacts with consciousness, all matter. Water has always driven destiny and is driving ours now. This is my first column on water. There will be others. I believe water will be a far bigger factor in our future than petroleum.

Publication History: Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing January 2007 (Vol. 3, Issue 1, Pages 11-12)

Categories : Essays & Columns, Explore Journal, Papers & Research Reports

A Different Kind of Woman

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Where did it start? The pill is probably as good a place to begin as any. Suddenly, pregnancy was an option. Every act of intercourse was not a dice roll with fate. For a woman under 50, it is hard to imagine the fearful count that began after a night of young love before the first signs of your period or the fateful conversations with girlfriends, “I’m a week late,” began. The middle-aged women of today knew to a level of precision their daughters will never understand exactly when their period was supposed to start. The rise and fall of the menstrual cycle pulsed through the culture of the young like a secret beat that parents could not hear.
As the tension built to two weeks, everything else in a girl’s life faded into a gray mist. The hours. The minutes tolled, until someone had to be told. And then, if there was mercy, the release: “It started in gym class.”
And for some it didn’t, and then there were the furtive conversations “to find someone.” The trip in a car, sometimes with the boyfriend, but often not. The brown sandwich bag on the seat of the car in which $200 in crumpled bills, donated by friends, or achieved by selling the “adda-pearls” your grandmother had given you at birth and added to each year at your birthday, like steps through childhood.

Publication History: Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing
May 2006 (Vol. 2, Issue 3, Pages 198-199)

Categories : Essays & Columns, Explore Journal, Papers & Research Reports
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Explore Journal, January 2012

Stephan A Schwartz
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