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...subjective experience, the T.M. technique provides a natural means of arriving at "transcendental" or "pure" consciousness. This field also is called absolute, is unmanifest like the vacuum state, yet can be directly experienced. The following list of expressions have all been used by physicists in describing the quantum vacuum state and by T.M. practitioners in describing their experience of pure consciousness: perfectly orderly; perfectly stable; nonchanging; the source of all change; unbounded; the basis of natural laws; the state of least excitation; the field of all possibilities...

Author: By Kenneth G. Walton, | Title: The Potentials of T.M. | 4/25/1978 | See Source »

...this absolute field of pure consciousness that is discussed by Maharishi as not only the source of thought, but the source of the entire relative (that is, manifest) world. I suspect it is more than coincidence that this understanding gained from subjective experience bears such a great resemblance to the understanding of a very basic aspect of nature gained through the methods of physical science...

Author: By Kenneth G. Walton, | Title: The Potentials of T.M. | 4/25/1978 | See Source »

...species, but still an array smaller than that of all other species combined. Thus, by carefully studying not only humans but also the social behavior of other species, be they ants, herring gulls or chimpanzees, we may learn something which is applicable to ourselves. Sociobiology is more of a pure scientific discipline than Emmerich allows for. The elitist politics are injected by him, not DeVore, Wilson, Trivers or any other serious sociobiologist. In fact, sociobiology stresses the cross cultural unity of mankind and of "human nature." Last year Emmerich was burning books, this year he's shooting at lecterns...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: One More Time | 4/20/1978 | See Source »

...tempting for young choreographers to hide behind the trappings of the art, because dance itself is so difficult to construct well. As "pure dance," only one of last weekend's offerings was wholly successful. Howard Fine's "Dream Journal," the opening work on the program, unfolded a beautifully organic pattern on the motif of the softly curving arc. Dancers tumbled their arms like water-wheels in the fall of the current, or turned on one leg, the others bent at right angles the way a feather spirals in a funnel of air. All the edges here had been washed smooth...

Author: By Juretta J. Heckscher, | Title: More Than a Theory | 4/19/1978 | See Source »

...factors" vary, but only about 5 per cent of the Class of '82 earned their acceptance letters on pure academic merit...

Author: By Jaleh Poorooshasb, | Title: Congratulations, You're In | 4/15/1978 | See Source »

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