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Re: COMMUNION AS AN ADVANCED RELATIONSHIP
8/21/2007 9:23:55 AM

Hello Dear Steven,

First, I am so glad to see you posting at this forum. Welcome, and always feel free to post anything you find interesting. You are so valuable member of our Community and I very appreciate your friendship, opinion and contribution. BTW, if one of the most honored persons for me, our dear Judy (Golden) Smith takes you so seriously and with honor, if I were never seen you - I will know who you are !

Dear Rajaram, Zvonimir, Anamaria, Sarah, Joe, Judy, Bill, Juliana, Joyce, Luella, Neil, Sami, Janet, Judy W., Monica, Bruce, Natalya, Georgios, Dimitra and all of you my friends ... I owe you a great apology and more greater THANK YOU. My time ate one BIG CIVILIZED ANIMAL :) called "struggle to survive" ... I cann`t tell you always the same, but I will get this race with my duties, and write all owed responses.

STEVEN, THANK YOU FOR THE CONGRATS FOR THE POTW AWARD! I APPRECIATE IT VERY MUCH!

HUG YOU and BLESS YOU ALL!

Yours,

Branka

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Rajaram S.K.

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Re: COMMUNION AS AN ADVANCED RELATIONSHIP
8/22/2007 7:32:56 AM

Hello friends,

Scientists: Artificial life likely in 3 to 10 years

 

Friends, I love all your posts and informations contained therein. Here, I have a very interesting Scientific Future ARTIFICIAL LIFE informations to share with you all for your lovely comments on this "COMMUNION AS AN ADVANCED RELATIONSHIP."

What might happened to our Future ADVANCED RELATIONSHIP WITH THE COMMUNITY, AT THAT TIME????? 

Follow the following, as to what our Great Scientists are upto;

  • Story Highlights
  • Scientists working to create the first cell of synthetic life
  • Artificial life could be used to fight diseases, climate change
  • Some worried creating life could "run amok"
  • WASHINGTON (AP) -- Around the world, a handful of scientists are trying to create life from scratch and they're getting closer.

Experts expect an announcement within three to 10 years from someone in the now little-known field of "wet artificial life."

"It's going to be a big deal and everybody's going to know about it," said Mark Bedau, chief operating officer of ProtoLife of Venice, Italy, one of those in the race. "We're talking about a technology that could change our world in pretty fundamental ways -- in fact, in ways that are impossible to predict."

That first cell of synthetic life -- made from the basic chemicals in DNA -- may not seem like much to non-scientists. For one thing, you'll have to look in a microscope to see it.

"Creating protocells has the potential to shed new life on our place in the universe," Bedau said. "This will remove one of the few fundamental mysteries about creation in the universe and our role."

And several scientists believe man-made life forms will one day offer the potential for solving a variety of problems, from fighting diseases to locking up greenhouse gases to eating toxic waste.

Bedau figures there are three major hurdles to creating synthetic life:

  • A container, or membrane, for the cell to keep bad molecules out, allow good ones, and the ability to multiply.

  • A genetic system that controls the functions of the cell, enabling it to reproduce and mutate in response to environmental changes.

  • A metabolism that extracts raw materials from the environment as food and then changes it into energy.

    One of the leaders in the field, Jack Szostak at Harvard Medical School, predicts that within the next six months, scientists will report evidence that the first step -- creating a cell membrane -- is "not a big problem." Scientists are using fatty acids in that effort.

    Szostak is also optimistic about the next step -- getting nucleotides, the building blocks of DNA, to form a working genetic system.

    His idea is that once the container is made, if scientists add nucleotides in the right proportions, then Darwinian evolution could simply take over.

    "We aren't smart enough to design things, we just let evolution do the hard work and then we figure out what happened," Szostak said.

    In Gainesville, Florida, Steve Benner, a biological chemist at the Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution is attacking that problem by going outside of natural genetics. Normal DNA consists of four bases -- adenine, cytosine, guanine and thymine (known as A,C,G,T) -- molecules that spell out the genetic code in pairs. Benner is trying to add eight new bases to the genetic alphabet.

    Bedau said there are legitimate worries about creating life that could "run amok," but there are ways of addressing it, and it will be a very long time before that is a problem.

    "When these things are created, they're going to be so weak, it'll be a huge achievement if you can keep them alive for an hour in the lab," he said. "But them getting out and taking over, never in our imagination could this happen."

  • http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/science/08/20/artificial.life.ap/index.html

  • S.K. Rajaram
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    Rajaram S.K.

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    Re: COMMUNION AS AN ADVANCED RELATIONSHIP
    8/24/2007 7:15:23 AM

    Hello friends,

    Scientists recreate out-of-body experiences (no drugs)

    Thu Aug 23, 6:08 PM ET

    CHICAGO (AFP) - For centuries, people have claimed to have had out-of-body experiences but now scientists have recreated the sensation without using drugs in the first experiments of their kind, a study said Thursday.

    As many as one in 10 people say they have experienced the sensation of being awake and seeing their own body from another location, according to the study published in the journal Science.

    "Out-of-body experiences have fascinated mankind for millennia. Their existence has raised fundamental questions about the relationship between human consciousness and the body," said Henrik Ehrsson, a neuroscientist formerly of University College London, and now at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden.

    Now neuroscientists have manipulated a group of perfectly healthy volunteers into thinking they had moved outside their bodies by distorting their perception of reality.

    Using virtual reality goggles to mix up the sensory signals reaching the brain, they induced the volunteers into projecting their awareness into a virtual body. Participants confirmed they had experienced sitting behind their physical body and looking at it.

    The illusion was so strong that the volunteers reacted with a palpable sense of fear when their virtual selves were threatened with physical force.

    The findings suggest there may be a scientific explanation for these types of out-of-body experiences, which are often thought of as delusional or paranormal, and the scientists believe their research could have important applications.

    "The invention of this illusion is important because it reveals the basic mechanism that produces the feeling of being inside the physical body," said Ehrsson.

    "This represents a significant advance because the experience of one's own body as the center of awareness is a fundamental aspect of self-consciousness."

    And inducing people to have out-of-body experiences could have wide-ranging uses, he believes.

    "This is essentially a means of projecting yourself, a form of teleportation. If we can project people into a virtual character, so they feel and respond as if they were really in a virtual version of themselves, just imagine the implications.

    "The experience of video games could reach a whole new level, but it could go much beyond that. For example, a surgeon could perform remote surgery, by controlling their virtual self from a different location."

    But scientists still don't know exactly what causes such experiences which have often been associated with traumatic experiences such as car accidents and linked to compromised brain function in epileptics, drug addicts and stroke victims.

    "Brain dysfunctions that interfere with interpreting sensory signals may be responsible for clinical cases of out-of-body experiences," said Ehrsson.

    "Though, whether all out-of-body experiences arise from the same causes is still an open question."

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070823/ts_alt_afp/usscienceparanormal;_ylt=AgyXV9yoUpTVHeXYmm6MUn6s0NUE

    S.K. Rajaram
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    Rajaram S.K.

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    Re: COMMUNION AS AN ADVANCED RELATIONSHIP
    8/24/2007 7:59:00 AM

    Hello friends,

    Huge Hole Found in the Universe

    Astronomers find a hole in the universe

    AP - 1 hour, 3 minutes ago

    WASHINGTON - Astronomers have stumbled upon a tremendous hole in the universe. That's got them scratching their heads about what's just not there. The cosmic blank spot has no stray stars, no galaxies, no sucking black holes, not even mysterious dark matter. It is 1 billion light years across of nothing. That's an expanse of nearly 6 billion trillion miles of emptiness, a University of Minnesota team announced Thursday.

    The universe has a huge hole in it that dwarfs anything else of its kind. The discovery caught astronomers by surprise. 

    Robert Roy Britt
    Senior Science Writer
    SPACE.com
    2 hours, 18 minutes ago

    The universe has a huge hole in it that dwarfs anything else of its kind. The discovery caught astronomers by surprise.

    The hole is nearly a billion light-years across. It is not a black hole, which is a small sphere of densely packed matter. Rather, this one is mostly devoid of stars, gas and other normal matter, and it's also strangely empty of the mysterious "dark matter" that permeates the cosmos. Other space voids have been found before, but nothing on this scale.

    Astronomers don't know why the hole is there.

    "Not only has no one ever found a void this big, but we never even expected to find one this size," said researcher Lawrence Rudnick of the University of Minnesota.

    Rudnick's colleague Liliya R. Williams also had not anticipated this finding.

    "What we've found is not normal, based on either observational studies or on computer simulations of the large-scale evolution of the universe," said Williams, also of the University of Minnesota.

    The finding will be detailed in the Astrophysical Journal.

    The universe is populated with visible stars, gas and dust, but most of the matter in the universe is invisible. Scientists know something is there, because they can measure the gravitational effects of the so-called dark matter. Voids exist, but they are typically relatively small.

    The gargantuan hole was found by examining observations made using the Very Large Array (VLA) radio telescope, funded by the National Science Foundation.

    There is a "remarkable drop in the number of galaxies" in a region of sky in the constellation Eridanus, Rudnick said.

    The region had been previously been dubbed the "WMAP Cold Spot," because it stood out in a map of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation made by NASA's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotopy Probe (WMAP) satellite. The CMB is an imprint of radiation left from the Big Bang, the theoretical beginning of the universe.

    "Although our surprising results need independent confirmation, the slightly colder temperature of the CMB in this region appears to be caused by a huge hole devoid of nearly all matter roughly 6 to 10 billion light-years from Earth," Rudnick said.

    Photons of the CMB gain a small amount of energy when they pass through normal regions of space with matter, the researchers explained. But when the CMB passes through a void, the photons lose energy, making the CMB from that part of the sky appear cooler.

    S.K. Rajaram
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    Re: COMMUNION AS AN ADVANCED RELATIOSHIP
    8/24/2007 8:32:55 AM

    Hello Branka im delighted with this forum, i working as network manager and i have similar opinions like you, i like this forum and i just want to say hi Branka this is great work you been doing.

     

    Jugoslav -Berkut

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