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Date: Sunday, January 11, 2009, 6:51 AM
Yoga Tantra
Dalai Lama Quote of the WeekHere is how to alternate analytical and stabilizing meditation: After analyzing with individual investigation, desist from such analysis and set the mind single-pointedly on the meaning you have understood. However, before the mind becomes too settled, switch again to analytical meditation, alternating in this way between stabilizing and analytical meditation. Gradually, the power of analysis itself will be able to induce physical and mental pliancy...with respect to calm abiding, but to a greater degree. Generation of a bliss of physical and mental pliancy, induced through the power of analysis, no longer requiring alternation between analytical and stabilizing meditation, marks the attainment of fully qualified special insight--and thereby the attainment of the path of preparation--and from this point on, you have a union of calm abiding and special insight. You now have powerful means for realizing the emptiness of inherent existence in order to overcome obstructions when it is brought to the level of direct perception.Though specific tantras, or even specific passages in tantras, emphasize either stabilizing or analytical meditation, it is necessary to alternate these two equally until special insight is attained through the bliss of mental pliancy being induced, not by the power of stabilizing meditation, but by the power of analysis itself. Therefore, it is not sufficient merely to withdraw the mind inside or even first to become mindful of the view of emptiness and then set merely in stabilizing meditation. Analysis is necessary. This is the thought of all three masters expert in Yoga Tantra.--from Yoga Tantra: Paths to Magical Feats by H.H. the Dalai Lama, Dzong-ka-ba and Jeffrey Hopkins, translated and edited by Jeffrey Hopkins, published by Snow Lion Publications* * * Not getting the Special Announcements? Catch up on the latest News from Snow Lion.You can now find the archives of past quotes we've sent out by clicking the links at the bottom of our new, updated Subscription Lists page.
Keep inspired during the week...read past quotes from our Archives!
You can now find the archives of past quotes we've sent out by clicking the links at the bottom of our new, updated Subscription Lists page. SNOW LION PUBLICATIONS is dedicated to the preservation of Tibetan Buddhism and culture by publishing books about this great tradition. Tibetan culture is seriously endangered in its homeland and is striving to continue outside of Tibet. To support this effort, in addition to publishing and distributing books, Snow Lion offers a wide range of dharma items, purchased primarily from Tibetans in exile. These include visual art and ritual objects, statues and thangkas, videos, traditional music, and many gift items offered through our webstore and "Snow Lion Buddhist News & Catalog" (Newsletter)--over 2000 items--the largest selection anywhere. To browse the complete list go to www.snowlionpub.com and select any of the categories in left-hand margin.When you choose to purchase from Snow Lion you are directly supporting the large effort to publish more Buddhist texts and help the Tibetan people.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT. You are receiving this announcement from Snow Lion Publications because you have previously subscribed on our website. To continue receiving messages, we recommend that you add weblion@snowlionpub.com and weblion1@lightlink.com to your address book. If you'd like to change or cancel your subscription, please visit our subscription pages at www.snowlionpub.com/pages/lists.php, www.snowlionpub.com/pages/unsubscribe.php, or email us at weblion@snowlionpub.com. Please note that these announcements are also available in plain text, if you are having trouble receiving them.
YOGA TANTRA:
Paths to Magical Feats
by H.H. the Dalai Lama,
Dzong-ka-ba and Jeffrey Hopkins,
translated and edited by Jeffrey Hopkins
more...
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The Practice of Non-violence
Dalai Lama Quote of the WeekEverybody loves to talk about calm and peace, whether in a family, national, or international context. But without inner peace how can we make real peace? World peace through hatred and force is impossible. Even in the case of individuals, there is no possibility to feel happiness through anger. If in a difficult situation one becomes disturbed internally, overwhelmed by mental discomfort, then external things will not help at all. However, if despite external difficulties or problems, internally one's attitude is of love, warmth, and kind-heartedness, then problems can be faced and accepted.- - - - - - - - - The necessary foundation for world peace and the ultimate goal of any new international order is the elimination of violence at every level. For this reason the practice of non-violence surely suits us all. It simply requires determination, for by its very nature non-violent action requires patience. While the practice of non-violence is still something of an experiment on this planet, if it is successful it will open the way to a far more peaceful world in the next century.--from The Pocket Dalai Lama by the Dalai Lama, compiled and edited by Mary Craig
Keep inspired during the week...read past quotes from our Archives!
Archive of Weekly Quotes by the Dalai Lama
Archive of Weekly Dharma Teachings SNOW LION PUBLICATIONS is dedicated to the preservation of Tibetan Buddhism and culture by publishing books about this great tradition. Tibetan culture is seriously endangered in its homeland and is striving to continue outside of Tibet. To support this effort, in addition to publishing and distributing books, Snow Lion offers a wide range of dharma items, purchased primarily from Tibetans in exile. These include visual art and ritual objects, statues and thangkas, videos, traditional music, and many gift items offered through our webstore and "Snow Lion Buddhist News & Catalog" (Newsletter)--over 2000 items--the largest selection anywhere. To browse the complete list go to www.snowlionpub.com and select any of the categories in left-hand margin.When you choose to purchase from Snow Lion you are directly supporting the large effort to publish more Buddhist texts and help the Tibetan people.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT. You are receiving this announcement from Snow Lion Publications because you have previously subscribed on our website. To continue receiving messages, we recommend that you add weblion@snowlionpub.com and weblion1@lightlink.com to your address book. If you'd like to change or cancel your subscription, please visit our subscription pages at www.snowlionpub.com/pages/lists.php, www.snowlionpub.com/pages/unsubscribe.php, or email us at weblion@snowlionpub.com. Please note that these announcements are also available in plain text, if you are having trouble receiving them.
THE POCKET DALAI LAMA
by the Dalai Lama,
comp. & ed. by Mary Craig
more...![]()
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Snow Lion Publications is happy to send you a weekly quote from various Tibetan Buddhist teachers.Visit our website for these related items:
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- Read the Latest Edition of
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Communication in Space
by Jonathan Graham
Abstract: This paper describes the development of travel and communication in space. It is our destiny to travel and communicate throughout the galaxy.
Orbital theory begins with the German astronomer Johannes Kepler (1571-1630). He empirically derived three laws that describe planetary motion in our solar system and the orbits of artificial satellites: (This accomplishment is especially impressive because he preceded Sir Isaac Newton and so did not have the benefit of Newton’s physics.)
1) The orbit of a satellite with respect to the earth is an ellipse, the earth being at one of the foci.
2) A line drawn from the earth to a satellite sweeps across equal areas in equal times.
3) The square of the time a satellite takes to complete one orbit is proportional to the cube of its mean (average) distance from the earth.
The first law deals with the shape of an orbit, a circular orbit being a special case of the ellipse. The second law covers the speed of a satellite at various points along the orbit, and the third law has to do with the satellite’s orbital period. The closer a satellite’s orbit is to the earth, the faster it moves and the shorter its orbital period.
The French-Italian astronomer Joseph Louis Lagrange (1736-1813) calculated stable points in the orbit of one body around another where gravitational forces were balanced. His work was relatively forgotten until it was noticed that asteroids in the orbit of Jupiter tended to gather at these Lagrangian points, L1 through L5.
[GRAPHIC]
Lagrangian Points
In 1969 Gerard K. O’Neill, a physics professor at Princeton, asked his students to design a large living environment in space, rather than on a planet or a moon. He published papers at Princeton in 1974 on the construction of space colonies at L5, the most stable position in the lunar orbit, 240,000 miles from the earth.
In this plan solar-powered magnetic launchers would propel material from the moon to L2 where they would be caught by a large “catcher’s mitt.” Then the material would be moved to L5 where it would be used to build large space habitats for thousands of people.
One design is two counter-rotating cylinders (with a net spin of zero) pointed always toward the sun. Each cylinder would be built of strips of land and glass and would have a diameter of up to four miles and a length of up to twenty miles. A cylinder this size would rotate once every two minutes to provide one G of centrifugal force and would house up to one million people.
Lunar ore is rich in aluminum and titanium, and oxygen would be a plentiful by-product of the solar-powered refining process. Carbon, nitrogen, and hydrogen are scarce on the moon, so these would have to be transported from the earth. In particular, liquid hydrogen would be carried in large tanks to make thousands of gallons of water. Alternatively, these raw materials might be obtained in a low-gravity environment from asteroids.
There are three kinds of asteroids, located between Mars and Jupiter. Collectively, they
are rich in iron, nickel, magnesium, water, hydrocarbons, and nitrogen. They could also provide raw materials for the construction of space colonies and space ships. They might be moved from their orbits by rockets and placed in orbits near the Earth, or a solar-powered manufacturing plant might be constructed at the Martian Lagrangian point, L5.
After the habitats are constructed, the space colonists could earn their living by manufacturing solar-to-electric power plants to be placed in geosynchronous orbit at an altitude of 22,323 miles in the equatorial plane. (The geosynchronous orbit, proposed by Sir Arthur C. Clarke in 1947, is the orbit most commonly used by television and other communications satellites today. It has the advantage of serving fixed-dish, rather than tracking, antennas.)
These satellite power plants would collect solar energy and beam it as microwave energy to receiving stations on earth where it would be sold as electricity at commercial rates.
Critics of this plan say the geosynchronous orbit is already crowded and the microwave energy is likely to be disruptive to communications and also ecologically harmful.
However, the idea of mining the moon for raw material, using solar power to smelt metals, and manufacturing large living environments and even planet-sized space ships in space remains tenable. The essential ingredients for living: light, air, gravity, land, and food could be easily supplied to a living environment in space.
The far side of the moon would be an especially good environment for radio astronomy because antennae and other receiving equipment would be shielded from radio-frequency interference from the earth. Large parabolic reflectors might be constructed in craters or mounted on poles above the moon’s surface. Received signals could be combined to create a very large virtual “dish” with great focusing power. Data gathered from this equipment could be transferred to the earth by lunar-orbiting satellites.
Radio-frequency signals from the earth to the moon or to space colonies at L4 or L5 take about one and one-quarter seconds to travel one way, not long enough to stifle interactive communication. In space-to-space transmissions there is no atmosphere to absorb the shorter wavelengths, so transmission frequencies above the radio frequency range, including laser light, x-rays, and positrons could be used for communication. Optical lenses, small parabolic reflectors, and electrostatic and magnetic fields might focus these shorter wavelengths and particles.
Plans for colonizing Mars in the next two hundred years might include the construction of a “shuttle bus” placed in an elliptical orbit around Earth and Mars with a period of two years. Signals from Earth to Mars take between three and twenty-two minutes to travel in one direction, depending on the relative position of the two planets, and Mars would be eclipsed by the Sun at its greatest distance from the earth every two years.
Because of these time delays, communication would be less interactive, giving each party time to compose letters of information rather than sentences. A radio-controlled robot on Mars would necessarily be intelligent enough to make decisions while awaiting further communication from Earth.
To travel to Alpha Centauri, 4.3 light years away, would require a voyage of at least one hundred years, at speeds attainable by the present liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen yields water plus energy travel technology. This implies a robot-only crew, generations of people, or folks cooled in suspended animation.
Travel distances will be the major restriction for interstellar people-to-people communication. There are eleven stars within 11.1 light years from us, a possible limit for human migration, using present travel technology. At greater distances than these, we might communicate with non-human intelligence.
Fusion power, converting hydrogen to helium plus energy, will be the breakthrough in interstellar travel. Traveling near the speed of light, the passengers will experience time-dilation effects, extending travel distances and human migration throughout the galaxy.
According to relativity theories, developed by Max Planck and Albert Einstein in the early 1900s, a distance like 100 light years would take much less than 100 years to travel, as measured on the ship. As the ship approaches the speed of light, the travel time becomes almost instantaneous.
There are two major designs that can provide artificial gravity for interstellar travel: One is a flat ship or an apartment building that accelerates and decelerates at one G, a space elevator. The other is the rotating Stanford torus, living in a doughnut.
The front part of the interstellar space ships will be a huge scoop to collect free hydrogen in space to use as fuel. The middle part will either be an apartment building or some variant of a rotating wheel or cylinder. The rear part of the space ship will be the fusion engine, using the controlled power of a hydrogen bomb for propulsion.
Interstellar space ships will be like small traveling stars. They will communicate throughout the galaxy by modulating their fusion reactions and exhaust. The output of entire stars might also be modulated by gravity or by huge plates in space with electrostatic or magnetic fields for communication at maximum distances.
Interstellar communication will be slowly interactive. Requests for physical supplies will not be an important item of conversation, since the travel time will be so great. Scientific data, music, philosophy, and the visual arts might be the major subjects of conversation for mutating gene pools of divergent civilizations.
These red-shifted long-distance messages will become historical records, traveling backwards in time through an expanding universe. Such communication would tend to be one-way and documentary in nature. It could be made more effective by including if-then-else or case a, b, c,… type logic in questions that anticipate long-awaited replies. The problem of administrators hogging the mikes might be overcome by sorting information contained in the conglomerate of many individual data packets at the receiver.
There are one hundred billion stars in our Milky Way galaxy, which rotates once every 200 million years. It has a diameter of 100,000 light years and is 5 to 10,000 light years in thickness.
Human transportation and communication will be forever limited to our galaxy, but conversations with non-human intelligence beyond our galaxy are possible. The Local Group, the half-dozen galaxies of which we are a part, is a further boundary.
http://dingo.care-mail.com/cards/flash/5409/galaxy.swf
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