[Meeting Martin Luther King Jr. in Boston]
Having lived in Boston for several years, I'm very used to a conversation with questions like "where are you from", "what do you do", etc at social events or church. Now, let's imagine that I lived in the year of 1953, just a few years after world war II. On an ordinary weekday morning, when I was on the Green Line B branch (which then was numbered "route #62") along Commonwealth Avenue toward downtown, I started a conversation with an African American guy who got up at the BU central stop. I quickly got into the typical Bostonian conversation:
"Hi, what's your name?"
"Martin." He said.
"I'm Jerome. Nice to meet you."
"Nice to meet you, too."
"Are you a student at BU?"
"Ya. I go to the divinity school."
"That's cool. What do you study there?"
"I'm a doctoral student in systematic theology."
"Wow, that sounds very hard-core. So did you come to Boston to attend this program?"
"Ya. I'm from Atlanta, Georgia. I moved here two years ago after getting my bachelor of divinity."
"So are you a pastor?"
"Yes, I am."
"Cool. So where are you heading right now?"
"I'm going to downtown to meet my finacee. She's a music student at New England Conservatory. We're going to get married in Alabama next month."
"Wow, congratulations!"
That's true. I met the civil right activist-to-be Martin Luther King Jr. in the city of Boston, where it's never a surprise to randomly run into a doctor or a professor on the street. In a few minutes, I heard more about his story. While living in the south most of his life, he did spent 4 years in Boston, where he attended Boston University and got his PhD in systematic theology. While racial segregation (which came to existence after the civil war) was still prevalent in the south, Boston was the first city where I felt he was free to do everything without discrimination. He really enjoyed this city. And instead of living in the dorm of BU, he rented an apartment at 397 Mass Ave, right next to today's Orange Line Mass Ave station.
Boston was also the city where he met his wife Coretta Scott. They got married in June 1953. And he was incredibly young as a doctoral student -- he skipped two grades in high school and completed college at the age of 19. By the time he started doctoral study in Boston (at the age of 22), he already obtained his first seminary degree. By the way, he was also the assistant pastor at Twelfth Baptist Church, an African-American congregation near Dudley Square.
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Now the conversation continued. Martin and I started talking about Christian church and theology.
"Which church do you go to?" He asked.
"The XXX church. It's an evangelical church."
"Ah, Christian evangelism." From his eyes, you could tell there was probably something in his head.
"What do you think about it?"
"Well, I'm a pastor, and I do build my ministry on the teaching of Jesus. But I hope your church is not like one of the typical American churches today. I think really miss the point of the gospel."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean, they've been focusing too much on individuals being saved and ignoring the injustice in this society. They miss their mission to liberate the oppressed."
"Well, isn't a Christian church supposed to share the gospel and convert sinners to God?"
"Yup, but doesn't the gospel free us? How can you say you're sharing the gospel while so many people in this country are oppressed and suffering from inequality?"
"You're right, but this should be the outcome of salvation, instead of the salvation itself..."
"(Sigh.) I think the some churches really need to shift focus." He breathed before continuing. "Old faiths like the bodily resurrection, virgin birth and miracles that contradict the science may not be necessary for Christianity today. Churches are called to realize the Kingdom of God on earth by exercising justice and mercy..."
Now I could sense where on the "church spectrum" he was. He was vastly influenced by Walter Rauschenbusch's social gospel, a theological thought popular in the early 20th century that called for a return to the "Kingdom of God" doctrine. Church's primary calling, in social gospel's perspective, is to bring God's kingdom on earth by applying Jesus' teaching to solve social issues and rescue the oppressed. Along with Mohandas Gandhi's nonviolent approach, it shaped King's theology and fueled the later movements he led.
And It was also interesting to see theologically how liberal his was. He casted his doubt on some essential doctrines that most Christian denominations held true back then. If you are from an evangelical background, this may get on your nerves. (But keep in mind that he lived before the age of neo-orthodoxy, and people often abandoned traditional views when running into doctrines that contradict scientific knowledge.) And this is probably why while many pastors today would say King's accomplishment was fueled by the Christian faith, but avoid talking too much about his view on doctrines.
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Let's get back on the train scene. At the Park Street underground station in downtown Boston, I said bye to the newly met friend Martin and saw him disappearing in the crowd. I could tell he's a brilliant and eloquent person, but might not expect two years later he'd be the person would be a key leader in the Montgomery bus boycott, nor decades later he'd deliver his famous speech in Washington. I might not agree with everything he said, but I'd definitely remember this conversation with Martin, a person that was once like me, who lived to Boston short-term to pursue a degree and was shaped by the personality of this city.
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[Afterthought] As a member of an American evangelical church (and also a foreigner of a minority group), the story of Martin Luther King Jr. continues to puzzle me. His view on certain doctrines are likely to be condemned as unorthodox by evangelical churches, but meanwhile, as the "saved" people, do we eager to live out and advocate the biblical justice in daily life as he did? Or we're always being "gospel-centered" while ignoring the all-inclusive nature of the biblical gospel?
(In pictures: Martin Luther King Jr.'s school, apartment and church in Boston.)
同時也有1部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過3萬的網紅POPA Channel,也在其Youtube影片中提到,當你用手輕掃BB的臉蛋,他會追著你的手來吮,你搔他的手心,他的五隻小手指仔就會捉緊你的手指…這些跟初生BB的互動畫面,家長肯定刻骨銘心,但除了溫馨以外,親子間身體接觸的重要性可能超乎你想像~ 參考資料 Ardiel, E. L., & Rankin, C. H. (2010). The impo...
scientific american mind 在 謝伯讓的腦科學世界 Facebook 的最佳貼文
來幫大家整理介紹「高度優異自傳式記憶者」的相關研究。
加州大學爾灣分校的麥高(James L. McGaugh)教授在2000年時,收到一名奇特受試者的來信。這位受試者名叫普萊斯(Jill Price)。
她自稱從11歲起就擁有強大的記憶,她不需要看日曆或日記,就可以記得1974年至今的每一天是星期幾,以及當天自己曾做過的事。
麥高教授的研究團隊立刻對此展開研究,試圖找出支持這個現象為真的證據。
他們先詢問了許多特定日子發生了什麼公共事件,例如1977年8月16日和1979年5月25日,結果普萊斯都順利答出當天的重大事件(分別是貓王去世以及芝加哥墜機)。
反過來測試重大公共事件(例如伊朗美國大使館人質危機)發生的日期,她也都順利答對。甚至是較不知名的公共事件(例如美國演員克羅士比過世的日子),她也擁有清楚的記憶。
至於個人的記憶測試,實驗人員檢視了她對於過去23次復活節的記憶,結果和其日記對照,只有出現一次錯誤。
在經過多項測試之後,麥高團隊終於確認普萊斯擁有高度優異的自傳式記憶,並在2006年發表論文。而普萊斯也在2008年出版了自己的回憶錄。
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多少人有此種優異記憶?
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麥高團隊把這種特殊的記憶形式,稱做「高度優異自傳式記憶」(highly superior autobiographical memory)。
在他們公開了研究報告、並在媒體的宣傳幫助後,共有數百人與他們聯繫,而在這些人之中,只有大約50名是真正的高度優異自傳式記憶者。
和對照組相比,前者在以下多項測驗中的表現都明顯較佳。例如他們可以答出隨機日子是星期幾、上小學和上大學的第一天發生什麼事、18歲生日如何慶祝、以及大學生涯最後一場考試的日期等等。其整體正確率達85%,對照組則只有8%。
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並非圖像式記憶
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關於這種「高優自傳記憶」,現在研究人員已經有越來越多的了解。首先,這不是一種「圖像式記憶」。高優自傳記憶者的記憶系統,並不是像攝影機一樣記錄下眼前的所有細節。
例如在一項測試中,受試者被要求記住許多支鑰匙分別對應到哪一個鎖頭,結果發現他們的表現和一般人並無差別,其中許多高優自傳記憶者在買菜時,一樣需要依賴記事本來記下要買的東西。
他們的記憶能力特殊點在於,他們會很有組織的將人生中發生的事件和日期連起來。另外,這種記憶能力似乎是天生的,而不是透過反覆背誦而來,而且他們也不知道自己是如何記住和答對的。
透過功能性磁振造影以及正子造影結果發現,這些高優自傳記憶者有兩個與記憶相關的腦區異於常人:鉤狀束與海馬旁回。
鉤狀束是負責連結顳葉與額葉的神經纖維,而海馬旁迴則是位在專司記憶的海馬迴旁邊(高優自傳記憶者的海馬旁回與其他腦區的連結較強)。
你也有高優自傳記憶或其他的特殊記憶能力嗎?或許也可以考慮和認知科學家與心理學家聯繫,並一起參與甚至合作研究喔!
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參考文獻:
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McGaugh and LePort (2014). Remembrance of All Things Past. Scientific American 310, 40 – 45.
《科學人》介紹:http://sa.ylib.com/MagArticle.aspx?Unit=featurearticles&id=2394
The Mind of a Mnemonist: A Little Book about a Vast Memory. A. R. Luria. Basic Books, 1968.
Memory and Emotion: The Making of Lasting Memories. James L. McGaugh. Columbia University Press, 2003.
Behavioral and Neuroanatomical Investigation of Highly Superior Autobiographi- cal Memory (HSAM). Aurora K. R. LePort et al. in Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, Vol. 98, No. 1, pages 78–92; July 2012.
scientific american mind 在 心靈解讀圖書館 Mind library Facebook 的最讚貼文
在解讀個案時,我常會建議個案配戴適合自己的水晶礦石
在靈魂最原始的設定與水晶都息息相關,包括本身的能量頻率感知及守護~
以下是水晶與科技的結合,靈性與科學是可以相互並存的與大家一起長知識! 😍
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hitachiglassYou know how much I LOVE talking about new technology, right? Well, this is one that is going to blow your mind, make an excellent case for the Crystal Movement, and also mop the floor with “limited data storage” forever!
大家都知道我超愛討論新科技。現在我要講一個會讓所有人大開眼界的東西。它會完全打破資料儲存空間有限制的既定印象!。這個最新的資料儲存設備在過去幾年都被科技公司列為機密。
There’s a new kind of storage device which many tech companies have been diving into in secret for the past few years, which Hitachi recently came out with a technology they are developing which is essentially a sheet of Quartz Glass, which could potentially save data up to 300 Million Years!
不過呢,日立公司宣布該公司正在開發一種用一小片水晶玻璃做的資料儲存裝置。它的資料保存期限可望長達三億年!
If you didn’t know anything about storage devices that we currently have, but anything from records, CD’s, USB sticks, magnetic tape, none of these can even lay a finger on this new, very impressive technology.
就算大家對現代的資料儲存科技一竅不通,也只需要知道一件事情: 這個跨時代的新科技會讓紙本、光碟片、隨身碟還是磁帶通通望塵莫及。
"The prototype is made of a square of quartz two centimeters wide and two millimeters thick. It houses four layers of dots that are created with a femtosecond laser, which produces extremely short pulses of light. The dots represent information in binary form, a standard that should be comprehensible even in the distant future and can be read with a basic optical microscope. Because the layers are embedded, surface erosion would not affect them."
- From the Scientific American Journal
"原型裝置是一塊兩公分寬、兩公釐厚的正方形石英。它有四層用飛秒雷射的瞬間脈衝光切割出來的點。這些點代表二進位的訊息。基本上這種標準化訊息就算在遙遠的未來也會有人看得懂,甚至可以用基本款的光學顯微鏡閱讀。這些層點是內嵌的訊息,所以不受表面侵蝕的影響。"
- 科學美國人雜誌
Now, while this is exciting, there’s more to it than just that. See, While Hitachi currently has an actual produceable thing which they will probably start marketing once they figure out a simple means of transferring data to say, computers and television, the basic model they have (see picture above) only has the data storage capacity slightly better than a CD.
更令人興奮的是,日立公司現在就已經有可以實際投產的商品了。只要研發人員想出辦法整合日常生活中的資料傳輸平台(好比說電腦和電視),他們就會將產品推出上市。目前基本款的儲存容量只比光碟片多一點點。
But that’s not to say that this tech is doomed, simply that it’s young… and even then, some people are already working on a bigger and better thing!
雖然基本款不怎麼樣,但也不代表這種科技毫無前景。現在這項產品只是還不成熟,而且還有很多人在研發容量更大,品質更好的產品!
Scientists in the University of Southhampton in the UK have been developing an even MORE incredible technology. It’s called “Superman” Crystals, and potentially has the storage capacity of up to 350 TB, and can last forever!
英國南安普頓大學的科學家們一直在開發一個更令人難以置信的技術:超人水晶。這種水晶的存儲容量可能多達350TB,而且資料可以永久保存!
There currently isn’t any demonstrated prototypes available to the public yet, and the 350TB of storage is speculation, but it does sound promising.
目前研發團隊還沒有公開展示任何原型產品,350 TB的儲存量也只是推測值,不過它的前景依舊值得期待。
Superman graphic
"The scientists used a femtosecond laser, which emits pulses of light in femtoseconds (one quadrillionth, or one millionth of one billionth of a second). The 5D read/write laser can record up to an estimated 360 TB/disc data capacity on nano-structured glass capable of thermal stability up to 1000°C -- and a practically unlimited lifetime.
The information encoding comes in five dimensions that include the size and orientation in addition to the three dimensional position of these nano-structures."
- Computerworld
『科學家利用飛秒雷射,也就是以飛秒為單位的光脈衝(一千萬億分之一秒,或十億分之百萬分之一秒)。超人水晶利用五維的讀寫雷射,一小片奈米結構的玻璃可以有將近360TB的儲存容量。它可以耐熱達攝氏1000度,而且使用壽命幾乎是無限。
除了三維的奈米結構位置之外,五維的資料編碼還會登入資料的大小和來源
-電腦世界
It seems Crystals still got some magic after all :) And they don’t have to just be in your pocket, they might be the basis for all of our computers in the future. I mean, they are now, but perhaps even more so :)
看來水晶還是挺神奇的。未來它們可能不光是會出現在人類的口袋裡面,還可能是所有電腦的基礎材料。
Perhaps the most exciting revelation of all, is the relationship that this has to the Crystal Skulls!
最有趣的是,這項發明讓我們聯想到它與水晶頭骨的關連!
註:水晶頭骨意旨馬雅文明中的水晶骷髏頭,據說水晶骷髏頭儲存了過去的重要歷史訊息以及知識,許多靈性層面的事物與科學正走在一起,靈性與科學是相互並存的。
圖:1.水晶玻璃做的資料儲存裝置.
2.超人水晶利用五維的讀寫雷射,一小片奈米結構的玻
璃可以有將近360TB的儲存容量
以上轉載於:
翻譯: Patrick Shih 2014年2月13日
華人區事件聯合行動團隊導航:
http://return-to-light.yolasite.com/
原文: http://thespiritscience.net/2014/02/13/data-storage-crystal-quartz-will-change-everything/
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當你用手輕掃BB的臉蛋,他會追著你的手來吮,你搔他的手心,他的五隻小手指仔就會捉緊你的手指…這些跟初生BB的互動畫面,家長肯定刻骨銘心,但除了溫馨以外,親子間身體接觸的重要性可能超乎你想像~
參考資料
Ardiel, E. L., & Rankin, C. H. (2010). The importance of touch in development. Paediatrics & Child Health, 15(3), 153–156.
Baley, J. (2015). Skin-to-Skin Care for Term and Preterm Infants in the Neonatal ICU. Pediatrics, 136(3), 596-599. doi:10.1542/peds.2015-2335
Denworth, L. (2015, July & aug.). The Social Power of Touch. Scientific American Mind.
Developmental milestones: touch - BabyCentre UK. (n.d.).
Fairhurst MT, Löken L, Grossmann T. Physiological and behavioral responses reveal 9-month-old infants' sensitivity to pleasant touch. Psychol Sci. 2014 May 1;25(5):1124-31.
How Important Is Physical Contact with Your Infant | Scientic American. (n.d.).
Morrison I, Löken LS, Olausson H. The skin as a social organ. Exp Brain Res. 2010 Jul;204(3):305-14.
Richards, S. (2012, September 1). Pleasant to the Touch. The Scientist.