NAMAH
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20

Volume 20, Issue 3

NAMAH Journal Volume 20, Issue 3

Articles in this Issue

Transcending nature
Volume 20, Issue 3

Transcending nature

By James Anderson - Oct 15, 2012

This article is a journey of discovering the body through means of the spirit. The author shares his efforts at self-healing through inner means: its trials, joys and strengths with all who are openminded about such an approach.

The law of change
Volume 20, Issue 3

The law of change

By Alok Pandey - Oct 15, 2012

Change denotes progress and an increasing perfectibility. It is the phenomenon of change that helped the transition from simpler to increasingly complex forms in biological, social and psychological matrices. It is the pressure for change that has increased our cognitive repertoire, expanding our horizons of knowledge and experience. An evolution of consciousness would lead to a qualitative progress in the very paradigm of change, paving the way for the manifestation of a species that exceeds the present functioning of the mind.

The new humanity
Volume 20, Issue 3

The new humanity

By Nolini Kanta Gupta - Oct 15, 2012

The world is in the throes of a new creation and the pangs of that new birth have made mother Earth restless. It is no longer a far-off ideal that our imagination struggles to visualise, nor a prophecy that yet remains to be fulfilled. It is Here and Now.

Moving matter
Volume 20, Issue 3

Moving matter

By James Anderson - Oct 15, 2012

Once again we have the privilege of following the journey along with this author. Willing to share his experiences with others with a singular will to help us understand things better through example, it is fascinating to see how he simplifies the complex knots that tie us to our earthly existence. His journey through matter takes the within and the without as two poles of a single movement and reveals to us the inter-connectedness of matter and spirit and the eventual possibility of the conquest of matter and physical life by the power of the Spirit.

Moving Forward
Volume 20, Issue 3

Moving Forward

By Unknown Author - Oct 15, 2012

If we look at the phenomenon of evolution and its underlying forces and processes, we can question the wisdom of nature in bringing out our present humanity. We have neither the strength of a lion nor the swiftness of a deer. We have lost the spontaneity and simplicity of the vegetal and the animal world and replaced it with a complex mental structure, a haze and a maze that often conceals more than it reveals. We have disinherited the natural resistance of the animal world and replaced it with an unending list of medicines and diagnoses that often only add to the burden of health rather than relieve it. We have been endowed with intelligence, but often enough it only adds a crookedness and cunning to the stealth and camouflage of our animality. The insect hedonism has found gigantic proportions. Our speech, an instrument of communication, becomes very often one for division; it confuses more than it clarifies.