Armstrong, Thomas. Many Kinds of Minds: The Theory of Multiple Intelligences. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. 1 (3): 013-019, 038-039, 9 pages (BF 309). |
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The seven intelligences are Linguistic: A way with words, Kinesthetic: The wisdom of the body, Spatial: Thinking with the mind's eye, Musical: Making the most of your melodic mind, Logical mathematical: The mathematical mind, Interpersonal: The great communicators, Intrapersonal: The intelligence of the inner self. Society is changing, and the primary intelligences required for successful adaptation will likely change as well. |
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Bennett, Hal Zina. Zuni Fetishes. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. 2 (1): 010-013, 4 pages (BF 309). |
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Animal fetishes are powerful tools for tapping the bounties of the intuitive mind. Every early culture had its own practices for accessing intuition. Once altered states were achieved, other practices were used to direct attention and intention toward solving a particular problem. Used in this way, fetishes help the owner make informed choices about their future and to get more in touch with their life purpose. |
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Billingsley, Lourdes. I Don't Know: A Dialogue on Intuition. Noetic Sciences Review. Spring 1995; 33: 019-023, 5 pages (BF 309). |
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This is an interview by the author with Rob Rabbin that shows how the meaning of intuition is experienced rather than explained. Rather than answer questions in the interview, Rabbin enquires into the motivation of the questioner. This approach has a way of circumventing the mind that gets directly at intuitive knowing. |
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Bowers, Kenneth S.; Regehr, Glenn; Balthazard, Claude; and Parker, Kevin Intuition in the Context of Discovery. Cognitive Psychology. January 1990; 22 (1): 072-110, 39 pages (BF 309). |
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Recent work with intuition emphasizes the errors of intuitive judgment in the context of justification. Instead this research views intuition as informed judgment in the context of discovery. The largely unconscious processes involved in generating hunches is quite different from the conscious processes required to test them. This vindicates the classical distinction between the context of discovery and the context of justification. |
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Burress, Charles. Listening Between the Lines. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. April 1996; (10): 040-045, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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Japanese culture seems to breed a deeper sensitivity and appreciation for the unexpressed, not just in communication, but in other areas of life. Therefore in Japan, communicating is an intuitive art form. In a country where "yes" can mean "no," learning to communicate requires sensitivity, patience, and emotional maturity. Major topics are East doesn't meet west, Literal differences, To speak or not to speak, A nation of intuitives? The art of intuition. |
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Feuerstein, Georg. Consciousness, Spirituality, & Noetic Science: An Interview with Willis Harman. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. 1 (4): 020-025, 042, 044-046, 10 pages (BF 309). |
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When you're blocked in any way, you're not open to the full dimensions of intuition. When you block off emotions, you also bock off intuition and creativity. There's no incompatibility between a mature science and a mature religion. The challenge is to get both to grow up. The whole history of the spiritual traditions show that as you pursue your own inner explorations, you run into the paranormal. Consciousness is and was present from the beginning. Evolution takes place within consciousness, not the reverse. |
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Feuerstein, Georg. Intuition, Co-Creativity, and the Third Millennium: An Interview with Barbara Marx Hubbard. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. 1 (3): 024-033, 10 pages (BF 309). |
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Each person has untapped growth potential. Once our basic needs are met, our growth needs for creative self expression and vocational work come to the fore. It is the intellectuals who believe the world is in a mess. Those of us who have a deeper intuition are being called to step forward in a new role. Creativity is the essence of life of the next stage. |
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Friedman, Milton. Intuitives in Washington. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. (7): 020-027, 8 pages (BF 309). |
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You will just know, Talking to portraits, The founding fathers and higher consciousness, Lessons of the Iroquios, Lincoln's dream, Clearinghouse on the future, Predicting desert storm, A second American revolution. Franklin welcomed the native American concept of intuition. The Indians believed that for someone to understand an idea fully it must be heard by the left ear (rational mind), the right ear (intuitive mind), and then evaluated by the heart. |
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Goldman, Caren. Intuitive Eating. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. October 1996; (13): 012-017, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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Trusting the intuitive wisdom of the body allows chronic dieters to make peace with food. Intuitive eaters no longer use food and obsessive dieting to numb or distract themselves from their feelings. They experience the highs, lows, and nuances of sensation that go along with being fully alive. The main topics are Eating mindfully, The five stages of intuitive eating, Healthy choices, Body and soul food, The ten principles of intuitive eating, A case for self empowerment. |
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Goldman, Caren. Wendy Palmer: The Intuitive Body. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. (7): 012-017, 051-053, 9 pages (BF 309). |
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Through a gentle form of aikido, a martial arts expert helps students develop body based intuition. If we create a still, open space in ourselves for intuition to enter, we will be able to hear, see, or feel the essential nature of things. When we gain access to our intuitive knowledge, we realize we already have what we want - wisdom, understanding, and connection. We can use basic practice to find out what our bodies are trying to tell us. |
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Harman, Willis W. Reconciling Science and Metaphysics: The Union Whose Time Has Come. Noetic Sciences Review. Winter, 1990/91; 17: 004-010, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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The consciousness puzzle (The concept of the self, Action at a distance), Toward a complementary science (The "primordial tradition," Characteristics of a "wholeness science"), Implications for society (Foster different attitudes toward nature, Science more sympathetic to "meaningful coincidences," Stimulate research in the entire spectrum of states of consciousness, Foster a worldview supportive of the highest values of all societies). |
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Harman, Willis W. Toward an Adequate Science of Consciousness. Noetic Sciences Review. Autumn, 1993; 27: 07 7-078, 2 pages (BF 309). |
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Essential features of a dramatic shift in worldview among more people: 1) Increased emphasis on interconnectedness, 2) A shift in the locus of authority from external to internal and 3) A shift in the perception of cause from external to internal. The potential extension of western science, Implications of a new epistemology. |
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Heinberg, Richard. The Hidden History of Creativity. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. (8): 018-027, 10 pages (BF 309). |
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Many of the greatest achievements of our civilization came from intuition, dreams, and visions, but you'd never know it by reading the history books. This is illustrated in the lives of Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Stevenson, Kipling, Mozart, Beethoven, Wagner, Descartes, Newton, Howe, von Stradonitz, Edison, Poincare, Telsa, Einstein, and Ramanujan. When we trace the great innovations, we discover at nearly every juncture the pivotal importance of "the world in a grain of sand, eternity in an hour." |
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Heinberg, Richard. Memoirs of a Psychic Spy. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. October 1996; (13): 018-025, 055, 9 pages (BF 309). |
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For more than twenty years, the U.S. Government funded and operated a top secret psychic espionage program. David Morehouse was one of a handful of trained psychics who were part of that program. The article topics are The recruitment process, The assigned witness program, Sun streak, Going public, The CIA washes its hands, How does remote viewing work? Viewing a healthy society. |
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Heinberg, Richard. Profile: Larry Dossey, M.D. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. 1 (3): 008-012, 5 pages (BF 309). |
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Dossey is seeking to reconcile prayer, the soul, and modern medicine. Cultures that have never developed a materialist worldview regard synchronicities, precognition, and telepathy as perfectly normal. If prayer works, and there is overwhelming evidence that it does, then clearly there is something about the psyche that isn't confined to the physical body. |
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Heinberg, Richard. Visions of the Millennium: Prophecies for the Year 2000. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. June 1997; (16): 018-025, 046, 9 pages (BF 309). |
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Seeing into the future; Dreams, visions, and preliving the future; The roots of prophecy; Tracking the millennium; A raincheck on the apocalypse; Internet, apocalypse, and the second genesis; Que sera, sera; Resources. There are millions of people on the planet what are uprooted and in transit creating ideal circumstances for the flourishing of end time mentalities. |
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Hogarth, Robin M., and Einhorn, Hillel J. Order Effects in Belief Updating: The Belief - Adjustment Model. Cognitive Psychology. 1992; 24: 001-055, 55 pages (BF 309). |
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Presents a theory of belief updating that explicitly accounts for order effect phenomena as arising from the interaction of information processing strategies and task characteristics. This has two forms depending on whether information is processed in a step by step or end of sequence manner. The theory and experimental results are discussed with respect to the importance of developing a procedural theory of judgment. |
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Institute of Noetic Sciences. How Do We Know What We Think We know? Toward an Epistemology of Consciousness. Noetic Sciences Review. Autumn, 1993; 27: 072-076, 5 pages (BF 309). |
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How does it happen that our powerful methods of scientific inquiry appear so ill suited to the study of consciousness? If an understanding of our own consciousness is so central to understanding anything else, will we not have to take this question more seriously than has been the case so far? Objectivity in consciousness research, The unconscious mind in science, A broader scope of inquiry, A more careful definition, An epistemology of consciousness, Which world view? - A critical question. |
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Juster, Iver A. What Does Intuition Have to Offer Modern Medicine. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. 1 (2): 012-014, 026-027, 5 pages (BF 309). |
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There is something dissatisfying about the typical medical encounter, and the effective use of intuition can help. The medical profession is just starting to understand the role of intuition in diagnosis and treatment. Forces are shaping a new direction for healing in which healers will have a much more intimate experience with the inner, intuitive worlds of healing. |
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Keepin, William. David Bohm: A Life of Dialogue Between Science and Spirit. Noetic Sciences Review. Summer, 1994; 30: 010-014, 5 pages (BF 309). |
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Thoughts about thinking, Wholeness and holomovement, The implicate order, Visualizing the implicate order, Dialogues with Krishnamurti, Bohm's legacy: physics and beyond, Science and spirit. David Bohm was a rare scientist. He matched profound contributions to quantum physics with a persistent investigation of their philosophical implications, supported by deep spiritual insight. Perhaps his greatness is due to his ability to carry his burning questions well beyond the boundaries of science. |
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Kramer, Penelope. In the Flow: A Conversation with Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. August 1996; (12): 026-029, 047-048, 050, 052-053, 9 pages (BF 309). |
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This best selling author and psychologist believes that peak performance is the best route to happiness. The experience of flow that Csikszentmihalyi has studied is characterized by picking the right activity, raising the bar, making sure the activity has clear goals and immediate feedback, screening out internal and external distractions, and focusing total attention on the activity. The same qualities can be cultivated to nurture the intuitive state of being. |
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Kramer, Penelope. Politics from the Heart: An Intuitive Approach to Government. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. (7): 030-035, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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In the good ol' boy atmosphere of Washington, the punishment for appearing soft, flaky, or in any way "feminine" has been political death by ridicule. A creative new breed of politician is bringing government back to its highest purpose: achieving the greatest good for the greatest number. Also a new feminine form of leadership is beginning to emerge, one that is inclusive, nurturing, and intuitive. These qualities are needed to balance the more masculine qualities of purpose, dynamism, and action. |
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Kramer, Penelope. Second Sight. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. December 1996; (14): 034-039, 041, 7 pages (BF 309). |
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Judith Orloff a clairvoyant psychiatrist comes out of the closet to tell her extraordinary story. Drawing on both medical and intuitive knowledge, she can stay one step ahead of a patient, keeping tabs on thoughts and feelings before they become irreversible actions. The main themes are From skeptics to believers, Intuitive psychiatry, Power to the patient, New cures for old problems, Meditation is a must, God's cruel joke. |
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Kramer, Penelope. Teach Your Children Well. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. February 1996; (9): 040-044, 051-053, 8 pages (BF 309). |
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Experts agree that you can begin nurturing your child's intuition from the moment of birth. The best thing that a parent can do to strengthen intuition is to listen to them and avoid telling them what to do. Instead parents should watch and wait for the child to unfold. The topics are From the first breath; Intuitive problem solving; Instinct, intuition, and imagination; Intuitive toddlers; Window of opportunity. |
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Levine, Frederick G. Intuition Online: A Conversation with Jeffrey Mishlove. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. April 1996; (10): 028-033, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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The Intuition Network, founded in 1986, has as its stated goal "creating a world in which people feel encouraged to rely on their inner resources in their work and in their personal lives." For information about the organization, send an e-mail message to info@intuition.org. Computers and cyberspace are opening up whole new dimensions of consciousness - the implications of which we are just beginning to appreciate. |
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Leviton, Richard. Unraveling the Biography in your Biology: Medical Intuition Training with Caroline Myss and C. Norman Shealy. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. 1 (4): 026-031, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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Medical intuition is the ability to discern hidden psychological and emotional factors that compromise good health. Its about interpreting electromagnetic information and translating it into meaningful diagnoses, insights, and lifestyle recommendations. This work is helping reintroduce the efficacy of consciousness into orthodox medical thinking. |
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Leviton, Richard. Why do These Kids Love School? Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. (6): 014-018, 021-022, 033-035, 10 pages (BF 309). |
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One of the prime responsibilities of an educator is not to ruin a child's intuition, but to enhance it, to allow children themselves to trust and affirm it. There are at least two approaches that rely on whole theories of child development: Montessori and Waldorf. In the Montessori system, adults are trained to observe the children and allow them to reveal themselves, rather than telling them what to do. |
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Lundstrum, Meg. Synchronicity: A Wink from the Cosmos. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. June 1996; (11): 034-039, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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The more we engage in a dance of energy and input from all sides, the less it matters what we call the experience. Just when you think you're at an impasse - voila! A door. Then the universe provides a key. We're not sure where the information comes from, it just comes. Synchronicity seems to happen when you're intensely caught up in something that's very deep - for instance, falling in love makes it pop up all over the place. Readers can take part in a research project by completing a survey included with the article. |
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Mauro, Colleen. Intuition and Psychotherapy: An Interview with Frances Vaughan, PhD. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. 1 (2): 006-009, 028, 5 pages (BF 309). |
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Intuitive psychotherapists are sensitive to what is implicit as well as explicit in any communication. When we demystify intuition, we become more at ease with it. The more we talk about it, the more ordinary it becomes. In successful psychotherapy, people learn to trust their intuition; and in learning to trust their intuition, they learn to trust themselves. |
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McKenzie, Craig R. M. The Accuracy of Intuitive Judgement Strategies: Covariation Assessment and Bayesian Inference. Cognitive Psychology. 1994; (26): 206-239, 34 pages (BF 309). |
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Through Monte Carlo simulation, the respective normative and intuitive strategies for two tasks were compared over many different situations. Because they are simpler than normative strategies and are already part of people's repertoire, using intuitive strategies may be the most efficient means of ensuring highly accurate judgment in some tasks. |
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McLeod, Beth Witrogen. Divining Intervention. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. June 1997; 16 030-033, 051-054, 8 pages (BF 309). |
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The dowser is in a globally expanded brain wave state, different from transcendental meditation of Zen meditation and certainly different from dreaming states of mind. There are simultaneous high power levels of beta, alpha, and theta waves, with all the neurons on both sides of the brain firing in synchrony. The practice of dowsing appears to be a true, unique, and creative human altered state of consciousness. |
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Miller, D. Patrick. Another Way of Knowing: An Interview with Helen Palmer. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. (7): 036-041, 052-053, 8 pages (BF 309). |
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Intuition is a true non dual, spiritual state. The personality disappears, you let go of ego, and become totally aware of "other," however briefly. We can learn through meditative techniques, how to shift our focus at will and enter other dimensions of perception. Palmer's use of intuition has always been from the perspective of spiritual advancement. She began as a meditator trying to understand her clarivoyant tendencies. |
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Mishlove, Jeffrey. Intuition: The Source of True Knowing. Noetic Sciences Review. Spring, 1994; 29: 031-036, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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The philosopher's stone, Sorokin: a guide for our age, The 'Eureka' moment, Sorokin's theory of integral truth, Behind the mystery of numbers, Intuition, creativity and invention, The gift of the mystic, Understanding 'intuition.' Intuition has been clouded with ambiguity and controversy for over a hundred years. For some, it is a mere product of unconscious processes, For others, it signifies a harbinger of deep truth. For yet others, it suggests a link between the processes of creativity and various forms of extrasensory perception. |
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Myss, Caroline. Anatomy of the Spirit. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. October 1996; (13): 030-037, 054, 9 pages (BF 309). |
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A medical intuitive looks at the emotional and spiritual causes of physical illness. We are all living history books. Our bodies contain our histories - every chapter, line, and verse of every event and every relationship in our lives. The topics are Body and spirit, Symbolic sight, Learning symbolic sight, Energy medicine (The first principle: Biography becomes biology, The second principle: Power is necessary for health, The third principle: You alone can help yourself heal. |
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Needleman, Jacob. Questions of the Heart: Inner Empiricism as a Way to a Science of Consciousness. Noetic Sciences Review. Summer 1993; 26: 004-009, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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There is a growing number of younger philosophers who are interested in what we mean by 'reality' and the central role of experience. What draws them is the quest for meaning. The mind by itself cannot complete the quest. The mind can ask questions that the mind alone cannot answer. It is where the intellect hits its limits that the important questions of philosophy start to come alive . |
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Rubik, Beverly. Natural Light From Organisms. Noetic Sciences Review. Summer 1993; 26: 010-015, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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Virtually all organisms give off light. Is this light merely a waste product? Or is it what ancient philosophies called 'vital force' - an organizing energy field which communicates within whole organisms. Increased recognition and respect of this subtle energy, variously called 'life force,' 'prana,' or 'qi,' is a common thread among the practices called energy medicine. |
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Schultz, Barbara L. Intuition in Business. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. (4): 014-021, 038-041, 12 pages (BF 309). |
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A foot in both worlds, The multisensory advantage, Building support, Intuition allowed, Intuition and authentic leadership, Defining intuition, Using intuition strategically, Tapping into creativity, Collaborative intuition and team building, Developing intuitive clarity, Our unfolding potential. In the future intuitive leadership will not be a luxury or a passing fad; it will be the heart of business. |
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Schwartz, Tony. Seeing the Big Picture. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. June 1996; (11): 028-033, 052-053, 8 pages (BF 309). |
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The author studied art with Betty Edwards who wrote "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain." While Edwards has never studied Eastern mysticism, her description of the ideal drawing state is remarkably parallel to the mystical experience of unity consciousness. The process of drawing freed me from the relentless chatter of my own thinking. The effect seemed to carry over after class. I felt less preoccupied and more focused in the present. |
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Thomson, Bill. Lewis Mehl: Intuitive Medicine, Cherokee Style. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. 1 (2): 015-019, 030-032, 8 pages (BF 309). |
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A physician's first job is to help a patient go inside. That's where the truth lies. An intuitive approach to healing opens broader pathways to physical and spiritual health. The more intuitive a healthcare provider can be to a client's needs, the better the alliance the two can form. |
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Venn, Sara. David Whyte: Bringing the Soul to Work. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. (7): 042-047, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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While the personality is going to work every day and thinks it is going there to pay the mortgage and buy the car, the soul is trying to make a break for freedom in whatever way it can. If we only give it the short length of our desk to do it, it will choose that place. Until midlife, both men and women often condemn the "feminine" power of intuition. But as we approach 50, we become ready to embrace our feminine powers in a fuller way. |
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Weber, Linda. Dean Radin: Notes from the Scientific Frontier. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. June 1997; (16): 026-029, 043-045, 7 pages (BF 309). |
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Radin is director of the consciousness Research Lab at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas. The interviewer raises the question, can Radin's scientific methods for evaluating Psi phenomena convince the skeptics? Psychic phenomena are reminders that our theories and models of the way the world works are not completely correct. In contagious magic, the patient's hair or clothing can help the healer connect. |
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Wise, Anna. The High Performance Mind. Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. April 1996; (10): 034-039, 6 pages (BF 309). |
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Our brainwave patterns have a lot to do with how we experience and interact with the outside world. So harnessing our brainwaves can be an effective way to increase you intuitive ability: Beta - from normal thought to panic, Alpha - I get lost in my dreams, Theta - It came to me out of the blue, and Delta - I read people's minds, Reducing the chatter of beta brainwaves (One minute meditations, Relaxing your tongue), Kick starting your alpha waves. |
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Yudkin, Marcia. Women's Intuition: Is It Just an Old Wives' Tale? Intuition: A Magazine for the Higher Potential of the Mind. 1 (3): 020-023, 4 pages (BF 309). |
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Studies show that women do have an intuitive edge. Is it biology or just gender conditioning? Investigators have established that the corpus callosum, the bundle of nerve fibers that connect the left and right hemispheres of the brain, is larger in women. Many of the culturally approved activities for women require receptivity, a state of mind in which intuition flourishes. |
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