Biocentrism: How Life and Consciousness are the Keys to Understanding the True Nature of the Universe

Biocentrism: How Life and Consciousness are the Keys to Understanding the True Nature of the Universe

 

Book Review shared by Azeem Farooki

 

A book titled

Biocentrism: How Life and Consciousness are the Keys to Understanding the True Nature of the Universe “, published in the USA, has stirred up the Internet, because it contained a notion that life does not end when the body dies, and it can last forever. The author of this publication, scientist Robert Lanza has no doubts that this is possible

Beyond time and space Lanza is an expert in regenerative medicine and scientific director of Advanced Cell Technology Company. Before he has been known for his extensive research which dealt with stem cells, he was also famous for several successful experiments on cloning endangered animal species. But not so long ago, the scientist became involved with physics, quantum mechanics and astrophysics. This explosive mixture has given birth to the new theory of biocentrism, which the professor has been preaching ever since. The theory implies that death simply does not exist. It is an illusion which arises in the minds of people. It exists because people identify themselves with their body. They believe that the body is going to perish, sooner or later, thinking their consciousness will disappear too. In fact, consciousness exists outside of constraints of time and space. It is able to be anywhere: in the human body and outside of it. That fits well with the basic postulates of quantum mechanics science, according to which a certain particle can be present anywhere and an event can happen according to several, sometimes countless, ways. Lanza believes that multiple universes can exist simultaneously. These universes contain multiple ways for possible scenarios to occur. In one universe, the body can be dead. And in another it continues to exist, absorbing consciousness which migrated into this universe. This means that a dead person while traveling through the same tunnel ends up not in hell or in heaven, but in a similar world he or she once inhabited, but this time alive. And so on, infinitely. Multiple worlds This hope-instilling, but extremely controversial theory by Lanza has many unwitting supporters, not just mere mortals who want to live forever, but also some well-known scientists. These are the physicists and astrophysicists who tend to agree with existence of parallel worlds and who suggest the possibility of multiple universes. Multiverse (multi-universe) is a so-called scientific concept, which they defend. They believe that no physical laws exist which would prohibit the existence of parallel worlds. The first one was a science fiction writer H.G. Wells who proclaimed in 1895 in his story “The Door in the Wall”. And after 62 years, this idea was developed by Hugh Everett in his graduate thesis at the Princeton University. It basically posits that at any given moment the universe divides into countless similar instances. And the next moment, these “newborn” universes split in a similar fashion. In some of these worlds you may be present: reading this article in one universe, or watching TV in another. The triggering factor for these multiplying worlds is our actions, explained Everett. If we make some choices, instantly one universe splits into two with different versions of outcomes. In the 1980s, Andrei Linde, scientist from the Lebedev’s Institute of physics, developed the theory of multiple universes. He is now a professor at Stanford University.

Linde explained: Space consists of many inflating spheres, which give rise to similar spheres, and those, in turn, produce spheres in even greater numbers, and so on to infinity. In the universe, they are spaced apart. They are not aware of each other’s existence. But they represent parts of the same physical universe. The fact that our universe is not alone is supported by data received from the Planck space telescope. Using the data, scientists have created the most accurate map of the microwave background, the so-called cosmic relic background radiation, which has remained since the inception of our universe. They also found that the universe has a lot of dark recesses represented by some holes and extensive gaps. Theoretical physicist Laura Mersini-Houghton from the North Carolina University with her colleagues argue: the anomalies of the microwave background exist due to the fact that our universe is influenced by other universes existing nearby. And holes and gaps are a direct result of attacks on us by neighboring universes. Soul quanta So, there is abundance of places or other universes where our soul could migrate after death, according to the theory of neo-biocentrism. But does the soul exist? Professor Stuart Hameroff from the University of Arizona has no doubts about the existence of eternal soul. As recently as last year, he announced that he has found evidence that consciousness does not perish after death. According to Hameroff, the human brain is the perfect quantum computer and the soul or consciousness is simply information stored at the quantum level. It can be transferred, following the death of the body; quantum information represented by consciousness merges with our universe and exist there indefinitely. The biocentrism expert Lanza proves that the soul migrates to another universe. That is the main difference from his other colleagues. Sir Roger Penrose, a famous British physicist and expert in mathematics from Oxford, supports this theory, and he has also found traces of contact with other universes. Together, the scientists are developing quantum theory to explain the phenomenon of consciousness. They believe that they found carriers of consciousness, the elements that accumulate information during life, and after death of the body they “drain” consciousness somewhere else. These elements are located inside protein-based microtubules (neuronal microtubules), which previously have been attributed a simple role of reinforcement and transport channeling inside a living cell. Based on their structure, microtubules are best suited to function ascarriers of quantum properties inside the brain. That is mainly because they are able to retain quantum states for a long time, meaning they can function as elements of a quantum computer.

Anna LeMind writes science, psychology, self improvement and other related topics. She is particularly interested in topics concerning consciousness and subconscious, perception, human mind’s potential, as well as the nature of reality and the universe.

Source: Learning Mind

 

Azeem Farooki

 

FATHER: A Mentor of Spirituality

                                     

                                            FATHER: A Mentor of Spirituality

                     “It is a wise father that knows his own child.” — Shakespeare

                                                O my father and my best friend.

                                           An understanding spirit and loyal soul,

                                         A heart of tenderness, a mind all wisdom,

                                           Knowing how justice and love to blend.

                                            A teacher, loving, patient, and kind,

                                               A rock of strength to lean upon,

                                                   In time of joy and in stress.

                                             You’re my father, you’re my friend!

                                                           (Anonymous)

 

When a father teaches his son, it sounds like being in the past. When a son teaches his father we have to believe that we are in the modern age. But spiritual mentoring has no past, present or future. It is timeless and is always as modern as it is old. Spiritual influence of fathers on their children—a silent but very important effect—has remained unexplained. Maybe the spirituality of mother, which naturally speaks through her unconditional love, is over-shadowing the tacit spiritual value of fatherhood. Whereas mothers continue to perform the majority of primary care-giving tasks, such as feeding, bathing, and comforting the children, fathers, on the other hand, tend to take part in supplementary activities. Fathers’ role matters less to their children’s survival but appears great in assisting their cognitive and spiritual development. As a result the quality of father’s involvement appears to matter more for children than the quantity. Father’s engagement in child-centered activities, such as helping with homework, playing together, or attending sports events and attending school plays, are a critical factor in spiritually getting connected with his children. The key is paying attention to what children are interested in and following their lead. Moreover this kind of involvement promotes cognitive development by stretching the children’s current level ability, building on what they know right now and expanding it. Such engagements help children develop not only logical reasoning but also spiritual bonding and problem-solving skills that translate into various situations in their life.

 

The infant needs mother’s unconditional love and care physiologically. The child after six, begins to need father’s love, his authority and guidance. Mother has the function of making him secure in life, father has the function of teaching him, guiding him to cope with those problems, with which the particular society the child has been born into, confronts him. Father’s spirituality is reflected through his love which is not unconditional like mother’s love. His love and spirituality is guided by principles and expectations; it is to be patient, tolerant, and disciplined. Fatherly conscience says: “You did wrong, you cannot avoid accepting certain consequences of your wrong doing, and most of all you must change your ways if I am to love or just like you.” It gives the growing child an increasing sense of competence and eventually permits the child to become his or her own authority. The mature offspring come to the point where they are their own fathers. In this endeavor, it is the unexpressed spirituality of a father to perform a role in nurturing his children as perfect and complete whole persons. Abrahamic religions profess that God chooses ordinary men for fatherhood to accomplish His extraordinary plan. Prophet Ibrahim is one of those men whom God had chosen as His prophet so that he will direct his children and his household after him to keep the way of the God by doing what is right and just. Here is a purposeful obligation from God to every father, the purpose Prophet Muhammad (pbh) further carried on to teach the fathers of his ummah by presenting his own actions and conveying it through his “Ahadith.”

 

Motherly love which is the essence of her spirituality, by its very nature is unconditional. She is the home from where her children come from; she is nature, soil, the ocean. Father does not represent any such natural home. He represents the other pole of human existence; the world of thought, of man-made things, of law and order, of discipline, of travel and adventure. Father is the one who teaches the child, who shows him the road into the world. Father’s spirituality and love is tied with conditions. Its principle is “I love you because you fulfill my expectations, because you do your duty, because you are like me.” In conditional fatherly love, as with unconditional motherly love, we find both a negative and a positive aspect. The negative aspect is the very fact that fatherly love has to be deserved, that it can be lost if one does not do what is expected. In the nature of fatherly love lies the fact that obedience becomes the main virtue, that disobedience is the main sin—and its punishment the withdrawal of fatherly love. Father’s spirituality represents what God’s love is for the humans. God rewards obedience, and punishes disobedience. Its positive side is, since father’s love is conditioned, a child has to do something to acquire it; he or she has to work for it. Thus we can say fatherly spirituality is not naturally transmitted to the children, rather by seeking guidance of their father, they have to earn or derive it. They have to prove that they qualify for their father’s love and spiritual connection.

 

Fatherhood is about helping children become happy and healthy adults, at ease in the world, and be prepared to become fathers or mothers in the future. We often say that doing what is best for our kids is the most important thing we do. Before the industrial revolution, fathers often worked side by side with their sons and instructed their children in spiritual values. When industrialization took over fathers left their farms and headed to the factories. Fourteen-to-sixteen hour workdays set the stage for the absentee father. Eventually, fathers came to be regarded as merely breadwinners who fulfilled their paternal duties by providing food, shelter and paying for their children’s school and college expenses. Whereas in the past the industrialization took over father’s spiritual connection with his children, today the “I-Net” is chipping away their need of fatherly guidance, distracting them away from the spiritual and loving bond of fatherhood. The internet mind is depriving the new generation of an important evolutionary factor of human beings “the brain maturation and spiritual connection.” Today’s mind is poised to exploit an essentially unlimited external memory. The borderless virtual space of Internet seems to help shrink the world and links together hundreds of millions of human beings together. But this face-to-face and mind-to-mind connections does not connect humans heart-to-heart. It does not connect a child with his father not only spiritually but also cognitively. Therefore, today, helper parent’s role is especially important for promoting children’s spiritual and intellectual growth.

 

Parental care and acceptance influences important aspects of personality. Children who are accepted by their parents with love and spiritual connections, helps them to be independent and emotionally stable, have strong self-esteem, and hold a positive worldview. Those who are neglected, feel they were rejected and thus show the opposite—hostility, feelings of inadequacy, instability and negative worldview. A father’s love and acceptance in this regard, is as important as a mother’s love and acceptance. In fact, in the development of the children and solving their problems, a father is more implicated than a mother. Empathy, that is sharing parent’s feelings with their children, to be in tune with them, and help them feel as humans who have a soul and a consciousness, is an important characteristic that our teenagers need to develop; and fathers seem to have a surprisingly important role here, too. It has been seen that children who have fond memories of their fathers are more able to handle the day-to-day stresses of adulthood. William Wordsworth who has famously said, “A child is the father of the man,” has also said “Heaven lies about us in our infancy!” It all depends upon a Father, “A Mentor of Spirituality” to help his children keep on embracing that heaven which lies about them in their infancy.

 

 MIRZA ASHRAF

06/14/2014

 

“Did Man Create God?”by David E. Commings, MD. Submitted by Imtiaz Bokhari

The primary goal of the book is to allow the reader to develop a rational spirituality in

which their thinking brain and spiritual brain can live in peace. A basic assumption of most humans is that God created man and divinely influenced the writing of all his sacred books. This book dispassionately explores the possibility that in pre modern times our rational brain created the theory of a personal God to answer questions about the physical world like “Where did we come from?” and “Where do we go when we die?”

Thanks

Imtiaz 

Review: Did Man Create God? Is Your Spiritual Brain at Peace with Your Thinking

Brain?

by David E. Comings, M.D.

Mother Teresa was famous for her spirituality and religious ideals and yet we now know that for most of her adult life she had intense doubts about her faith. The majority of humans on this earth believes in a personal God and belongs to some form of organized religion. However, like Mother Teresa, at some time in their life many have had doubts and questions about their faith and the tenets of their religion but have lacked the scientific background to answer their doubting questions. Dr. Comings, a physician-scientist who has authored hundreds of articles in the field of human behavior, molecular genetics and neuroscience, has written this book to provide the scientific background to answer such questions in a context that is friendly and compassionate to religion and to man’s innate spirituality.

The primary goal of the book is to allow the reader to develop a rational spirituality in which their thinking brain and spiritual brain can live in peace. A basic assumption of most humans is that God created man and divinely influenced the writing of all his sacred books. This book dispassionately explores the possibility that in premodern times our rational brain created the theory of a personal God to answer questions about the physical world like “Where did we come from?” and “Where do we go when we die?” and to satisfy the transcendent yearnings of our spiritual brain. To add believability and authority to our sacred books the rational brain also proposed that God ultimately wrote these works.

In recent years, some of the major questions many people have relate to Intelligent Design (ID). Its proponents want ID to be taught in schools on a par with evolution. ID accepts that the world is 4.5 billion years old and that most living forms on earth are the result of a natural evolutionary process. However, it also proposes that certain aspects of living organisms are so “irreducibly complex” that they had to have been designed by a supernatural force. ID proposes that evolutionary processes were incapable of doing the job without such outside help.

Addressing this issue, Part I. Evolution, describes the basic aspects of evolution as originally proposed by Charles Darwin and as expanded upon by later scientists, along with some easy to understand basic concepts of genetics. One of the showpiece questions of ID relates to the sudden appearance of many of the major sub-divisions of modern life in a very short period of time during the Cambrian period, the so-called “Cambrian Explosion.” Borrowing from Stephen Gould’s book Wonderful Life, Comings shows the reader Gould’s magnificent drawings of many of these early forms.

Part II. Intelligent Answers to Intelligent Design, examines many of the concerns of the ID movement and of evolution skeptics in general by showing how modern molecular genetics has identified a number of mechanisms that allow rapid bursts of evolution, as during the “Cambrian explosion,” to occur. Several chapters specifically address the different ID issues of “irreducible complexity” and show how the eyes, ears, energy metabolism, blood clotting, cilia and flagella are not irreducibly complex but evolved naturally without outside help.

Other Review: Did Man Create God?

 

chapters answer the evolution skeptics’ concerns about aspects of the story of the Peppered Moth, the studies of Darwin’s finches in the Galapagos Islands, the evolution of man, and the origin of life.

The concept of Intelligent Design is not limited to the evolution of life forms. It also extends to the evolution of the earth and the universe. Part III. Cosmology provides the reader with a background relating to quantum physics and the many particles that make up the universe.To address the question “Does the Big Bang and the precision of many of the physical constants of the universe prove that God exists?” Comings proposes that they do not and that based on principles of quantum theory and other aspects of cosmology, hyperinflated bubbles of intense space energy allow for the creation of the universe as the result of natural rather than supernatural forces. Relying on a supernatural force to answer many of man’s most difficult questions simply postpones real answers since it does not address the issue of who made the supernatural force, or as Carl Sagan put it, “Who made the bubble maker?”

The book then shifts to an examination of the complexities of the human brain in Part IV.

The Neurology of Reason and Spirituality. It first addresses the site and mechanism of consciousness. Since this is clearly a product of the brain itself, when the brain dies so does consciousness. In one swoop this fundamental truth of modern neuroscience eliminates the idea of any part of us living on after life such as the “soul” or the “spirit.” This carries with it the loss of a heaven and a hell and of any eternal damnation for sins, real or imagined, that we may have committed. In subsequent chapters other aspects of the brain are explored including the miracle of the human frontal lobes, and the sections of the brain involved in pleasure, socialization, rational thought, hope, and happiness. The largest chapter of the book, The Spiritual Brain, is one of the masterpieces of the book. Located in the temporal lobes this area of the brain contains the centers for memory of facts and past experience (the hippocampus), the centers for emotional memory (the amygdala), and the centers for the processing of voices and the other sounds that we hear. Internal stimulation of temporal lobes by electrical probes during open brain surgery, by temporal lobe epilepsy, by the anoxia of near death, or by psychedelic drugs, can lead to intense feelings of spirituality and of a transcendence beyond one’s self. Many of the most influential religious figures in history appear to have had temporal lobe epilepsy, endowing them with intense convictions that they passed on to the less spiritually endowed.

Studies of the psychedelic drug DMT have shown that when highly intelligent subjects are given this short acting drug, these sophisticated individuals are totally convinced they were abducted into “contact” with a non-human being. Although they never left the room and although the sessions lasted only a matter of minutes, it was impossible to convince them that this abduction and “contact” did not happen. This suggested to Comings that the spiritual brain is at times incapable of distinguishing between internally generated “unreal” experiences and externally generated “real” experiences – providing us with important insights about the power and realness of spiritual experiences.

The chapter on The Meditating Brain, shows that when humans engage in conscious attempts to have a spiritual experience, as in various types of meditation, many parts of the brain other than the temporal lobes are involved, including the frontal and parietal lobes. This indicates there is a distinction between unconscious internally generated and conscious externally generated spirituality.

The chapter on The Hopeful Brain illustrates the enormous curative power of the placebo effect. When an individual has an expectation of benefit and believes in the healing agent, the body marshals endorphins and other healing compounds to control pain and illness. The final chapter in Part IV on The Biology of Faith and Reason illustrates the permanence of early childhood beliefs and the pleasurable and rewarding nature of spirituality.

Part V. The Genetics of Reason and Spirituality shows the important role of genes in our spirituality, in our religious attitudes, in our ability to reason (intelligence) and in both our bad and good or altruistic behavior. Genetic studies of the traits of spiritual and religious and spiritual but not religious indicate spirituality independent of religion is associated with better mental health than the former. Spirituality comes from the inside as an innate trait while religiosity comes from the outside as a learned behavior. The role of genes in spirituality is further explored in Part VI Natural Selection of Reason and Spirituality. Combined these chapters indicate that humans are inherently happy and good, independent of religion, and that spirituality played a critical role in the evolution and survival of man. A feeling of being associated with something that transcends one’s self became an important, rewarding, comforting, and innate part of the human condition.

Additional important chapters relating to the thesis of this book are presented in Part VII.

Other Aspects of Spirituality and Religion. One chapter examines the origins of the world’s major and minor religions. The fact that all three monotheistic religions so closely project the needs, fears, desires, and even the appearance of man is considered to be consistent with the probability that both the religions and the Gods of the religions, were created by man. Mystics, some of whom displayed the symptoms of temporal lobe epilepsy, along with myth and ritual played an important role in bringing a sense of spirituality to the masses. The chapter Psychedelics and Religion reviews the important role of psychedelic mushrooms and other plants is imbuing users with a sense of connectedness with a spirituality greater than themselves.

Different psychedelics have played a role in the origins of religion on several continents. Both the benefits and the evils of religion are discussed. The evils relating to religious Intolerance, wars, and terrorism are well known. The benefits have been documented in a number of well-controlled scientific studies indicating a longer life span in religious versus nonreligious individuals. The reasons for this are complex and include being a part of a supportive social group. The increased survival of individuals who help others is shown to occur independently of religion. Prayer can be beneficial health-wise, for individuals who pray for themselves. This situation allows the power of placebo effect to play a role. When a placebo effect is impossible, such as when individuals are prayed for by others in a randomized controlled fashion, prayer has been proven to be ineffective. The many internal inconsistencies in all the sacred books are most easily understood if man wrote them without divine guidance.

The problem of evil refers to one of the thorniest issues of religion – how can God allow so much evil to occur, both in the form of humans killing humans and natural disasters. While many explanations have been offered, only one explanation is completely satisfactory – that the theory of a personal God is manmade and that man created such a God. A God created by man would be powerless to prevent evil.

The latter portion of the final part of the book, Summary: Did Man Create God? asks Whether our thinking brain is incompatible with religion and faith. It is concluded that for some belief systems such as atheism or non-theism, agnosticism, secular humanism, Buddhism, and Jainism, the rational and spiritual brains are maximally compatible. For belief systems such as Unitarianism and Universalism, Reform Judaism, and Taoism, the rational and spiritual brain is compatible with only minor qualifications. For systems involving a belief in a personal God but not a belief that the Bible or Qur’an (Koran) are literally true – the rational and spiritual brains are compatible but with major qualifications.

Review: Did Man Create God?

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What are these qualifications? If our thinking brain understands that spirituality and reason involve distinct and separate parts of the brain, that both are hard-wired and controlled in part by our genes, that both had survival value and were selected during evolution, that humans sometimes firmly believe things that are not always based on fact, and that both rational thought and spirituality can provide significant degrees of pleasure, then our thinking brain can learn to co-exist with our spiritual brain even if it believed in God. All the above beliefs constitute a rational spirituality. However, a belief that the Bible or Qur’an are literally true, that one sacred book is better than another, that one God is better than another, and that one religion is better than another – provides a situation in which the rational thinking brain and the spiritual brain are totally incompatible.

Dr. Comings concludes that religious intolerance, wars and terrorism are based on irrational spirituality where there is an incompatibility between the rational and spiritual brain, where individuals believe that one person’s God is better than another’s and that the sacred books are the literal word of God. By contrast a rational spirituality allows individuals of all religions to live in peace. This book is a potentially life changing read for anyone who has ever had doubts about their faith or religion but wanted responses that were sympathetic to their spirituality.

 

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Capital in the Twenty-First Century By Thomas Pikkety

If anyone has any interest in economics, one should not miss the discussion surrounding the book by Thomas Pikkety, Capital in the Twenty-First Century.

It has been called a dynamite in the current economics thinking, and has become a must read among economists and policy makers.. Mr. Pikkety argues,  supported by his data of over 200 years and  about 20 countries, that rate of return on capital exceeds the rate of growth ( r>g). The average growth ( g ) is about 1.5 to 2 % but rate of return on capital ( r) is about 6 %. The capitalists are earning about three times more than the growth and leading to accumulation of wealth in top 1%. To make the matters worse, the tax rate on capital gains is much less than earned income. He further argues that inequality is not due to skills of lagging workers either. To reduce inequality, Mr. Piketty argues for an internationally enforced progressive wealth tax, where the rate of tax rises with the level of wealth.

Many economists has commented on his work, and following are some excerpts from article by Larry Summers , former Treasury Secretary. ( F. Sheikh )

Once in a great while, a heavy academic tome dominates for a time the policy debate and, despite bristling with footnotes, shows up on the best-seller list. Thomas Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century is such a volume. As with Paul Kennedy’s The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, which came out at the end of the Reagan Administration and hit a nerve by arguing the case against imperial overreach through an extensive examination of European history, Piketty’s treatment of inequality is perfectly matched to its moment.

Like Kennedy a generation ago, Piketty has emerged as a rock star of the policy-intellectual world. His book was for a time Amazon’s bestseller. Every pundit has expressed a view on his argument, almost always wildly favorable if the pundit is progressive and harshly critical if the pundit is conservative. Piketty’s tome seems to be drawn on a dozen times for every time it is read.

This should not be surprising. At a moment when our politics seem to be defined by a surly middle class and the President has made inequality his central economic issue, how could a book documenting the pervasive and increasing concentration of wealth and income among the top 1, .1, and .01 percent of households not attract great attention? Especially when it exudes erudition from each of its nearly 700 pages, drips with literary references, and goes on to propose easily understood laws of capitalism that suggest that the trend toward greater concentration is inherent in the market system and will persist absent the adoption of radical new tax policies.

Piketty’s timing may be impeccable, and his easily understandable but slightly exotic accent perfectly suited to today’s media; but make no mistake, his work richly deserves all the attention it is receiving. This is not to say, however, that all of its conclusions will stand up to scholarly criticism from his fellow economists in the short run or to the test of history in the long run. Nor is it to suggest that his policy recommendations are either realistic or close to complete as a menu for addressing inequality.

Start with its strengths. In many respects, Capital in the Twenty-First Century embodies the virtues that we all would like to see but find too infrequently in the work of academic economists. It is deeply grounded in painstaking empirical research. Piketty, in collaboration with others, has spent more than a decade mining huge quantities of data spanning centuries and many countries to document, absolutely conclusively, that the share of income and wealth going to those at the very top—the top 1 percent, .1 percent, and .01 percent of the population—has risen sharply over the last generation, marking a return to a pattern that prevailed before World War I. There can now be no doubt that the phenomenon of inequality is not dominantly about the inadequacy of the skills of lagging workers. Even in terms of income ratios, the gaps that have opened up between, say, the top .1 percent and the remainder of the top 10 percent are far larger than those that have opened up between the top 10 percent and average income earners. Even if none of Piketty’s theories stands up, the establishment of this fact has transformed political discourse and is a Nobel Prize-worthy contribution.

http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/05/thomas-piketty-is-right-about-the-past-and-wrong-about-the-future/370994/