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“After an hour, Donnie emerged from the water, suitably impressed. "This place is incredible! The coral comes in so many different shapes - some look like trees, some like flowers, some like human brains - and in so many colors! And I didn't touch a singe one, tutu just like you said."
Rachel smiled. "Your ancestors would be proud. There's an old Hawaiian saying: 'The land is the chief, man is its servant."
Donnie considered that. "Does that include the ocean?"
"Yes. Haleola told me that to ancient Hawaiians the aina - the land, sea and air - were all interconnected. The aina provided all the basics of life, and so they respected and cared for it.”
― Daughter of Moloka'i
Rachel smiled. "Your ancestors would be proud. There's an old Hawaiian saying: 'The land is the chief, man is its servant."
Donnie considered that. "Does that include the ocean?"
"Yes. Haleola told me that to ancient Hawaiians the aina - the land, sea and air - were all interconnected. The aina provided all the basics of life, and so they respected and cared for it.”
― Daughter of Moloka'i
“I was asked to speak about survival. The difficulty for me is that survival is the least of my desires. I'm interested in a lot more than mere survival”
―
―
“The eleven iPhones are set up identical to the Androids. But it’s a whole different scenario as far as the Bitcoin wallets. They all have currency in them, and none has been sent out. I labeled each one with the amount in each of the wallets. It comes to a total of more than four billion.”
“Four billion? Are you sure it’s not million?”
“I’m sure, Boss. Four billion in available cryptocurrency.”
― Uncanny Alliance
“Four billion? Are you sure it’s not million?”
“I’m sure, Boss. Four billion in available cryptocurrency.”
― Uncanny Alliance
“The night was when all the failures were remembered longer.”
― A Story of Yesterday
― A Story of Yesterday
“Meanwhile, in Europe, the Renaissance continued, and I began to see the full scope of the Second Insight. The power of the church to define reality was diminishing, and Europeans were feeling as though they were awakening to look at life anew. Through the courage of countless individuals, all inspired by their intuitive memories, the scientific method was embraced as a democratic process of exploring and coming to understand the world in which humans found themselves. This method—exploring some aspect of the natural world, drawing conclusions, then offering this view to others—was thought of as the consensus-building process through which we would be able, finally, to understand mankind’s real situation on this planet, including our spiritual nature. But those in the church, entrenched in Fear, sought to squelch this new science. As political forces lined up on both sides, a compromise was reached. Science would be free to explore the outer, material world, but must leave spiritual phenomena to the dictates of the still-influential churchmen. The entire inner world of experience—our higher perceptual states of beauty and love, intuitions, coincidences, interpersonal phenomena, even dreams—all were, at first, off limits to the new science. Despite these restrictions, science began to map out and describe the operation of the physical world, providing information rich in ways to increase trade and utilize natural resources. Human economic security increased, and slowly we began to lose our sense of mystery and our heartfelt questions about the purpose of life. We decided it was purposeful enough just to survive and build a better, more secure world for ourselves and our children. Gradually we entered the consensus trance that denied the reality of death and created the illusion that the world was explained and ordinary and devoid of mystery. In spite of our rhetoric, our once-strong intuition of a spiritual source was being pushed farther into the background. In this growing materialism, God could only be viewed as a distant Deist’s God, a God who merely pushed the universe into being and then stood back to let it run in a mechanical sense, like a predictable machine, with every effect having a cause, and unconnected events happening only at random, by chance alone.”
― The Tenth Insight: Holding the Vision
― The Tenth Insight: Holding the Vision
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