sábado, 31 de mayo de 2014

Today's Words of Wisdom

In any setback or failure that you experience, find in it the Will of Heaven and do all that you can to open up a new path in your life.

From "The Laws of Courage", written by Master Ryuho Okawa
http://amazon.com/o/ASIN/4876883815/hsmail-20/



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[mpnews] Ancestral medicina china sería la solución para el dolor crónico

[mpnews] Ancestral medicina china sería la solución para el dolor crónico

Link to MysteryPlanet.com.ar

Ancestral medicina china sería la solución para el dolor crónico

Posted: 30 May 2014 10:01 PM PDT

Un estudio publicado en Enero de este año en el Journal of Current Biology ha provisto evidencia definitiva que apoya la eficacia de los ancestrales remedios herbales chinos, los cuales han sido utilizados por siglos para tratar el dolor. El remedio viene de la Corydalis yanhusuo, una planta que crece en en Siberia, el norte de China y Japón …

Biblioteca Pleyades Newsletter

  
Mayo / May  31, 2014  


Enlaces Rápidos
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Amigos de Biblioteca Pleyades,

Les enviamos algunos enlaces de Artículos Destacados de las ultimas "Novedades Semanales", para una eventual mayor accesibilidad por parte de Ustedes.

 

La elección de "Artículos Destacados" es realizada por "nosotros". Vuestra elección podría ser diferente a la nuestra. Aconsejamos ver toda la lista de "Novedades Semanales" y decidir por uno mismo.

 

Un fraternal saludo y hasta la próxima semana,

 

Biblioteca Pléyades

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Nadie sabe exactamente que van a hacer los Pleyadianos todavía,

pero compartiré esto con ustedes:

 

Aquellos que viven en el sistema alrededor de Alción,

no se puede confiar en algunos de ellos,

puesto que tienen agendas escondidas.

 

Aquellos de Taygeta, me dicen,

tienen un objetivo muy claro:

el de mantener la idea de libertad.


Simplemente porque un grupo es etiquetado como "Pleyadianos"

no quiere decir que estén aquí para 'ayudarnos'.

Capitulo 5 - El Compendio de Andrómeda

Fuente

 

 

English

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Friends of Biblioteca Pleyades,

We sent you some links of Featured Articles from latest "Weekly News" for a possible greater accessibility. 

 

The choice of "Featured Articles" is done by "us". Your choice may be different from ours. We advise you to see the whole list of "Weekly News" and decide by yourself.

 

Fraternal greetings, and will be till next week,

 

Biblioteca Pleyades

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Nobody knows exactly what the Pleiadians  are going to do yet,

but I will share this with you:

 

Those that live in the system around Alcyon,

 some of them cannot be trusted, as they have hidden agendas.

 

Those from Taygeta, I am told, have a very clear objective:

to maintain the idea of freedom.

 

Just because a group is labeled "Pleiadians"

doesn't mean they are here to 'help us.'

Chapter 5 - The Andromedan Compendium

Source

 

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Italiano

 

Amici di Biblioteca Pleyades,
Vi inviamo alcuni collegamenti relativi ad Articoli Scelti delle ultime "Novità della Settimana" per renderli più accessibili.
   

 

Siamo "noi" a selezionare l'elenco degli "Articoli Scelti". La vostra scelta potrebbe essere diversa dalla nostra. Vi consigliamo di vedere tutto l'elenco di "Novità della Settimana" e decidere da voi.

 

Un fraterno saluto e alla prossima settimana,

 

Biblioteca Pleyades

 

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Ancora nessuno sa esattamente cosa farano i Pleiadiani, 
ma voglio condividere questo con voi:

Coloro che vivono nel sistema intorno Alcyon 
non si puoi fidare d'alcuni loro, 
poiché essi hanno delle agende nascoste.

Mi dicono che quelli di Taygeta,

hanno un obiettivo molto chiaro:
mantenere l'idea di libertà.

Solo perché un gruppo sia etichettato "Pleiadiani"
non significa che essi sono qui per 'aiutarci'.

Capitolo 5 - El Compendio de Andrómeda

Fonte

 

Enlaces Semanales - Weekly Links

Español 
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El Tiempo y La Muerte

Muchos de nosotros tememos la muerte.  Creemos en la muerte porque se nos ha dicho que nos vamos a morir. Nos asociamos con el cuerpo, y sabemos que los cuerpos mueren. Pero una nueva teoría científica sugiere que la muerte no es el evento terminal que pensamos. Un aspecto conocido de la física cuántica es que ciertas observaciones no se pueden predecir absolutamente. Continúe leyendo...


 

 Mas Artículos:
 
English 
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Existence (by a 16 Years Old Human Being)

As we continue to venture further into this physical realm of existence that we call reality, we must keep in mind that we are connected with everything in this universe on a higher level of existence in a way that is beyond the limitations of existing here and now. We are part of a fragmented consciousness; that is to say, a form of consciousness that exists beyond the physical world which has been subjected to experience physicality and put under the illusion of individuality, meaning that every sentient being and even inanimate matter is connected on a higher level. Continue reading...



Italiano 
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Germania e Cina Costruiscono La Nuova Via della Seta Attraverso la Russia

Contrariamente a quanto accaduto in Germania e in Russia, la stampa cinese ha dato molta attenzione alla "Nuova Via della Seta": un grande progetto ideato da Pechino per avvicinare la città a Berlino e Mosca sia geograficamente sia economicamente, ma a mio parere ha un significato geopolitico molto più grande.

Ecco perché, quando ha visitato Duisburg, città situata nella zona siderurgica e commerciale della Ruhr che, oltre ad essere il maggiore porto interno del mondo è l'hub dei trasporti e delle operazioni logistiche in Europa, il leader cinese Xi Jinping ha invitato a costruire la cintura economica della Via della Seta. Continua a leggere...



Altri Articoli:
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Este mensaje de correo electrónico fue enviado a pazuzun.misterio@blogger.com, por mailsunday@bibliotecapleyades.net |  
Biblioteca Pleyades | - | - | - | Italy

ScienceDaily: Strange Science News

ScienceDaily: Strange Science News


New printable robots could self-assemble when heated

Posted: 30 May 2014 09:44 AM PDT

New algorithms and electronic components could enable printable robots that self-assemble when heated. Printable robots — those that can be assembled from parts produced by 3-D printers — have long been a topic of research in Computer Science labs at MIT. Now researchers introduce a new wrinkle on the idea: bakable robots.

Aircraft wings that change their shape in flight can help to protect the environment

Posted: 30 May 2014 06:26 AM PDT

A top priority for any airline is to conserve as much fuel as possible – and this helps to protect the environment. A new project aims to reduce kerosene consumption by six percent, and integrating flexible landing devices into aircraft wings is one step towards that target.

Glow-in-the-dark tool lets scientists find diseased bats

Posted: 29 May 2014 03:27 PM PDT

Scientists working to understand the devastating bat disease known as white-nose syndrome now have a new, non-lethal tool to identify bats with WNS lesions -- ultraviolet, or UV, light. Millions of bats have died from this rapidly spreading disease and this new method allows for accurate detection of the disease without killing any more bats.

Pleasant smells increase facial attractiveness

Posted: 29 May 2014 03:16 PM PDT

Women's faces are rated as more attractive in the presence of pleasant odors, according to new research. In contrast, odor pleasantness had less effect on age evaluation. The findings suggest that perfumes and scented products may, to some extent, alter how people perceive one another.

Deception improved athletic performance

Posted: 29 May 2014 12:40 PM PDT

Researchers say a little deception caused cyclists in their 4K time trial to up their performance even after they realized they had been tricked. The findings support the idea that the brain plays a powerful role in how hard athletes push their bodies.

NASA missions let scientists see moon's dancing tide from orbit

Posted: 29 May 2014 11:25 AM PDT

Scientists combined observations from two NASA missions to check out the moon's lopsided shape and how it changes under Earth's sway -- a response not seen from orbit before. The lopsided shape of the moon is one result of its gravitational tug-of-war with Earth. The mutual pulling of the two bodies is powerful enough to stretch them both, so they wind up shaped a little like two eggs with their ends pointing toward one another. On Earth, the tension has an especially strong effect on the oceans, because water moves so freely, and is the driving force behind tides.

There's more than one way to silence a cricket: Co-evolution of crickets who lost their chirp

Posted: 29 May 2014 11:24 AM PDT

For most of us, crickets are probably most recognizable by the distinctive chirping sounds males make with their wings to lure females. But some crickets living on the islands of Hawaii have effectively lost their instruments and don't make their music anymore. Now researchers report that crickets living on different islands quieted their wings in different ways at almost the same time.

Think fast, robot: Algorithm that harnesses data from new sensor could make autonomous robots more nimble

Posted: 29 May 2014 08:20 AM PDT

One of the reasons we don't yet have self-driving cars and mini-helicopters delivering online purchases is that autonomous vehicles tend not to perform well under pressure. A system that can flawlessly parallel park at 5 mph may have trouble avoiding obstacles at 35 mph. Part of the problem is the time it takes to produce and interpret camera data. An autonomous vehicle using a standard camera to monitor its surroundings might take about a fifth of a second to update its location. That's good enough for normal operating conditions but not nearly fast enough to handle the unexpected.

Hoosier cavefish: New species from caves of southern Indiana has an anus right behind its head

Posted: 29 May 2014 08:20 AM PDT

A new eyeless cavefish is described from Indiana and named after the Indiana Hoosiers. It is the first new cavefish species described from the US in 40 years. Notably, it has an anus right behind its head, and the females brood their young in their gill chamber.

Can software suffer? The complicated ethics of brain emulation

Posted: 27 May 2014 06:49 PM PDT

Scientists may be years away from successfully emulating a human or animal brain for research purposes, but the significant -- and perhaps unexpected -- ethical challenges such work presents have been outlined in a thought-provoking article.

Tastier low-fat products: Bacteria may improve low-fat products, help dairy producers

Posted: 27 May 2014 03:53 PM PDT

Consumers may have more palatable low-fat products and milk producers a solution to an industry-wide problem through use of a unique strain of lactic acid bacteria, according researchers. Low-fat products tend to have inferior texture and flavor because removing fat makes their structure rubbery. After examining bacteria from the dairy environment for more than 15 years, the researchers found a strain that mimics fat.

ScienceDaily: Most Popular News

ScienceDaily: Most Popular News


Domestication of dogs may explain mammoth kill sites and success of early modern humans

Posted: 29 May 2014 12:41 PM PDT

A new analysis of European archaeological sites containing large numbers of dead mammoths and dwellings built with mammoth bones has led to a new interpretation of these sites -- that their abrupt appearance may have been due to early modern humans working with the earliest domesticated dogs to kill the now-extinct mammoth.

NASA missions let scientists see moon's dancing tide from orbit

Posted: 29 May 2014 11:25 AM PDT

Scientists combined observations from two NASA missions to check out the moon's lopsided shape and how it changes under Earth's sway -- a response not seen from orbit before. The lopsided shape of the moon is one result of its gravitational tug-of-war with Earth. The mutual pulling of the two bodies is powerful enough to stretch them both, so they wind up shaped a little like two eggs with their ends pointing toward one another. On Earth, the tension has an especially strong effect on the oceans, because water moves so freely, and is the driving force behind tides.

'Free choice' in primates altered through brain stimulation

Posted: 29 May 2014 11:24 AM PDT

When electrical pulses are applied to the ventral tegmental area of their brain, macaques presented with two images change their preference from one image to the other. The study is the first to confirm a causal link between activity in the ventral tegmental area and choice behavior in primates.

Obesity rates climbing worldwide, most comprehensive global study to date shows

Posted: 28 May 2014 05:42 PM PDT

Worldwide, there has been a startling increase in rates of obesity and overweight in both adults (28% increase) and children (up by 47%) in the past 33 years, with the number of overweight and obese people rising from 857 million in 1980 to 2.1 billion in 2013, according to a major new analysis. However, the rates vary widely throughout the world with more than half of the world's 671 million obese individuals living in just ten countries—the USA, China and India, Russia, Brazil, Mexico, Egypt, Germany , Pakistan, and Indonesia,

Cynical? You may be hurting your brain health

Posted: 28 May 2014 01:37 PM PDT

People with high levels of cynical distrust may be more likely to develop dementia, according to a new study. Cynical distrust, which is defined as the belief that others are mainly motivated by selfish concerns, has been associated with other health problems, such as heart disease. This is the first study to look at the relationship between cynicism and dementia.

Crow or raven? New birdsnap app can help

Posted: 28 May 2014 01:36 PM PDT

Using computer vision and machine learning techniques, researchers have developed Birdsnap, a free new iPhone app that's an electronic field guide featuring 500 of the most common North American bird species. The app enables users to identify bird species through uploaded photos, and accompanies a comprehensive website.

Light coaxes stem cells to repair teeth: Noninvasive laser therapy could radically shift dental treatment

Posted: 28 May 2014 12:05 PM PDT

Scientists have used low-power light to trigger stem cells inside the body to regenerate tissue. The research lays the foundation for a host of clinical applications in restorative dentistry and regenerative medicine more broadly, such as wound healing, bone regeneration, and more.

Toxins in the environment might make you older than your years

Posted: 28 May 2014 10:32 AM PDT

Why are some 75-year-olds downright spry while others can barely get around? Part of the explanation, say researchers is differences from one person to the next in exposure to harmful substances in the environment, chemicals such as benzene, cigarette smoke, and even stress.

Antarctic Ice Sheet unstable at end of last ice age

Posted: 28 May 2014 10:31 AM PDT

A new study has found that the Antarctic Ice Sheet began melting about 5,000 years earlier than previously thought coming out of the last ice age -- and that shrinkage of the vast ice sheet accelerated during eight distinct episodes, causing rapid sea level rise.

Extensive cataloging of human proteins uncovers 193 never known to exist

Posted: 28 May 2014 10:31 AM PDT

Striving for the protein equivalent of the Human Genome Project, an international team of researchers has created an initial catalog of the human 'proteome,' or all of the proteins in the human body. In total, using 30 different human tissues, the team identified proteins encoded by 17,294 genes, which is about 84 percent of all of the genes in the human genome predicted to encode proteins.

Water in moon rocks provides clues and questions about lunar history

Posted: 28 May 2014 07:54 AM PDT

A recent review of hundreds of chemical analyses of Moon rocks indicates that the amount of water in the Moon's interior varies regionally -- revealing clues about how water originated and was redistributed in the Moon. These discoveries provide a new tool to unravel the processes involved in the formation of the Moon, how the lunar crust cooled, and its impact history.

Flame retardants during pregnancy as bad as lead? Exposure linked to lower IQs in kids

Posted: 28 May 2014 07:52 AM PDT

Prenatal exposure to flame retardants can be significantly linked to lower IQs and greater hyperactivity in five-year old children. The researchers found that a 10-fold increase in PBDE concentrations in early pregnancy, when the fetal brain is developing, was associated with a 4.5 IQ decrement, which is comparable with the impact of environmental lead exposure. PBDEs have been widely used as flame retardants in furniture, carpet padding, car seats and other consumer products over the past three decades.

Universal antidote for snakebite: Experimental trial represents promising step toward

Posted: 28 May 2014 07:52 AM PDT

Another promising step has been made toward developing a universal antidote for snakebite. The results of this pilot study revealed findings that support the team's idea that providing fast, accessible, and easy-to-administer treatment can increase survival rates in victims of venomous snakebite.

Using thoughts to control airplanes

Posted: 27 May 2014 07:14 AM PDT

Pilots of the future could be able to control their aircraft by merely thinking commands. Scientists have now demonstrated the feasibility of flying via brain control -- with astonishing accuracy.

New biodiversity study throws out controversial scientific theory

Posted: 27 May 2014 07:13 AM PDT

Scientists have released ground-breaking findings that dismiss the 'Neutral Theory of Biodiversity'. The theory has dominated biodiversity research for the past decade, and been advocated as a tool for conservation and management efforts. The study, the largest of its kind, covers a broad range of marine ecosystems on Earth and has important implications for how marine conservation areas are managed.

HIV can cut and paste in human genome

Posted: 27 May 2014 07:12 AM PDT

A technology that uses the HIV virus as a tool in the fight against hereditary diseases -- and in the long term, against HIV infection as well -- has been developed in a first of its kind study. The technology repairs the genome in a new and safer manner. "Now we can simultaneously cut out the part of the genome that is broken in sick cells, and patch the gap that arises in the genetic information which we have removed from the genome. The new aspect here is that we can bring the scissors and the patch together in the HIV particles in a fashion that no one else has done before," says one researcher.

Heavily decorated classrooms disrupt attention and learning in young children

Posted: 27 May 2014 07:06 AM PDT

Maps, number lines, shapes, artwork and other materials tend to cover elementary classroom walls. However, new research shows that too much of a good thing may end up disrupting attention and learning in young children.

How DNA is 'edited' to correct genetic diseases

Posted: 26 May 2014 03:27 PM PDT

A major step forward in our understanding of how enzymes 'edit' genes has been made by an international team of researchers, paving the way for correcting genetic diseases in patients. Researchers have observed the process by which a class of enzymes called CRISPR -- pronounced 'crisper' -- bind and alter the structure of DNA. The results provide a vital piece of the puzzle if these genome editing tools are ultimately going to be used to correct genetic diseases in humans.

Sound and vision: Visual cortex processes auditory information, too

Posted: 25 May 2014 12:53 PM PDT

"Seeing is believing," so the idiom goes, but new research suggests vision also involves a bit of hearing too. "So, for example, if you are in a street and you hear the sound of an approaching motorbike, you expect to see a motorbike coming around the corner. If it turned out to be a horse, you'd be very surprised," researchers said.

Mind alteration device makes flies sing and dance

Posted: 25 May 2014 12:47 PM PDT

Scientists have developed a special device for the thermogenetic control of flies. This tool, called FlyMAD, enabled the scientists to target light or heat to specific body regions of flies in motion and to analyse the animals' brain cells. Compared to other techniques, FlyMAD allows highly improved temporal resolution. Using the new technology, scientists got new insight into the role of two neuronal cell types in courtship behavior of flies.