Monday, May 18, 2026

Silence of the Mind: The Quest for Inner Stillness in the Christian Tradition by Daniele Gunetti, Ph.D. thesis

 «A sound of sheer silence»: Interior silence as listening, openness, and communion

 While maintaining a great respect for Eastern non-Christian thought and technique, he does not utilize these sources in the writings we researched for this chapter. Cf. Martin Laird, Into the Silent Land: A Guide to the Christian Practice of Contemplation (New York: Oxford University Press, USA, 2006),

 Silence of the Mind: The Quest for Inner Stillness in the Christian Tradition
Daniele Gunetti, PhD, MATP
Torino, Italy
ABSTRACT: Most spiritual traditions have developed practices to still the mind and foster silence
within, often considered a fundamental step along the spiritual journey. These practices are commonly
associated with Eastern traditions, but the search for inner silence is also an important aspect of the
Christian contemplative mysticism known as the apophatic or negative way, according to which
silence of the mind is a fundamental condition to make room for the coming of God within. The
objective of this article is to review some of the most representative pathways of the apophatic
tradition of the past: Evagrius Ponticus and the subsequent development of Hesychast monasticism in
the Orthodox Church from the 4th century onward; Meister Eckhart and The Cloud of Unknowing in
the 14th century; and the popular movements of Recollection (which greatly influenced St. Teresa of
Avila) and Quietism in the 16th and 17th century. Sadly, as a consequence of the condemnation of
Quietism for heresy, contemplation, as it was understood and practiced for centuries, became
marginalized in favor of a spirituality hinged on vocal prayer and discursive meditation. Nevertheless,
the whole potential of contemplative prayer deserves to be rediscovered and reacknowledged as a
fundamental practice of spiritual growth.
Keywords: Christian tradition, apophatic way, inner silence, recollection, contemplation
In 2005 a strange movie debuted in European and American theaters. Although
not a silent film, it had no soundtrack and almost no speech, and the only sounds
in the film were those of the daily life of Carthusian monks of a monastery high
in the French Alps. The movie was very well received by critics, and the
following year it won several awards, including the Special Jury Prize at the
Sundance Film Festival. The film was titled Into Great Silence and had the merit
of bringing to the attention of the general public an issue with which many feel
uncomfortable: silence. Not just the silence of speech or as an escape from the
uproar of modern life—these are often preconditions for something much more
important and profound: inner silence.
In most spiritual traditions, silence within plays a fundamental role, and for hundreds,
if not thousands, of years meditative techniques designed to limit or suspend inner
chatter and quiet the mind have been developed and refined. Some of these
techniques, originating from Eastern spiritual traditions, are still today widely taught
and practiced all over the world, within and without religious contexts. Concentrative
meditation, such as Buddhist samatha and the practice of dharan: a in Patanjali’s Yoga-
Sutras
, is explicitly devised to quiet the mind. In advanced stages, even possible
objects of meditation are removed, leaving the mind in a condition of contentless
stillness. Mantras rarefy thoughts, so much so that the mantra itself falls apart and the
mind can rest unmodified and still. The quest for inner silence does not need much
explanation. It is a means to escape from “the trance of ordinary life” (Deikman, 1983,
p. 119), where the mind is often, if not always, lost in a habitual ruminative thought
process populated by a cloud of fragmented perceptions, attentions, fantasies,

 dialogical self, inner speech, language, Christianity, Daoism, Meister Eckhart, wu-wei

 S9.1.3 - Active while in Contemplation: the Integration of Contemplative and Active
Life in the Christian Tradition
Daniele Gunetti 1
1 University of Turin
Summary
The integration of the contemplative and the active life is an important goal in the Christian mystical
tradition. Arguably, this notion reached its highest expression in 16th-century Spain, and was based on a
spiritual practice known as “recollection”. This work aims to highlight the remarkable similarities
between mindfulness-based meditative practices and the original teaching of recollection.
Details
BACKGROUND:
A fundamental tenet of Buddhism is that the state of presence and un-distraction cultivated during
meditation should be gradually integrated into ordinary life. Albeit less known, a similar principle has
been formulated within the Christian tradition at least since Meister Eckhart and, very likely, it reached
its highest expression in the Spain of XVI century, when Ignatius of Loyola coined the expression "active
while in contemplation". The main contemplative practice leading to this state was known as
“recollection”, a term that, today, has unfortunately lost most of its original meaning.
Recollection was extensively practiced both by lay and ordained people, including mystics of the rank of
Teresa of Avila and John of the Cross, and it inspired some of the greatest masterpieces of the mystical

 literature of the time. Recollection was understood as a practice for stabilizing consciousness, and to
prevent it from being at the mercy of inner and external events. In the most important and widespread
manual on recollection, written in 1527 by Franciscan friar Francisco de Osuna, the author teaches that
“the opposite of recollection is distraction, or wandering thoughts”, and that we can be recollected even
while engaged in daily chores, no less than when we kneel in solitude.
AIMS AND CONCLUSIONS:
“Soft perennialism” claims that differences between mystical experiences occur more at the level of
interpretation and conceptualization than in phenomenology. This standpoint is strongly supported by
recognizing similar practices within different traditions. If we want to foster cross-cultural understanding,
and contrast any sectarian and divisive view of the contemplative path, it is fundamental to rediscover
and underline what spiritual traditions have in common, beyond their socio-cultural and doctrinal
differences. Therefore, this presentation aims to highlight the remarkable similarities between
mindfulness-based meditative practices and the original teaching of recollection.

 The inner dialogues that accompany almost every moment of our waking life, often referred to as “inner speech,” have received increasing attention from philosophers, psychologists, and neuroscientists since the end of the 19th century. In particular, within American Pragmatism, the idea of “dialogical self,” the sense of identity that arises from our inner conversations, has been explored in depth. However, since ancient times, these silent conversations have been the target of psycho-spiritual regimens developed within most religious traditions in order to restrain, silence, and overcome the discursive, and often wandering, mind. The goal of this article is threefold. First, I will review the relevant literature on the notion of the dialogical self. Second, I will provide an explanation for the peculiar tendency of inner speech to continue ceaselessly and be difficult to stop. Finally, I will show that in the literature of two spiritual …

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Yeshua name for Jesus is an anachronism

 The Hebrew name of Jesus was probably pronounced Yeshuaʿ, although this is uncertain

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeshua 

That's a HUGE uncertainty since the oldest written Gospel is in Greek!  

Papyrus P52 is written in Greek (specifically, Koine Greek).
Also known as the Rylands Library Papyrus (housed at the John Rylands University Library in Manchester, UK), the fragment preserves parts of the Gospel of John, written in its original language

 Yes, the letters of Paul were originally written in Koine Greek, the common dialect of Greek used throughout the Roman Empire.

 Yes, exactly! 1st Clement (also known as the First Epistle of Clement) was indeed originally written in Koine (common) Greek

 The time period for the writing of the gospels is guess work and debated....

So to claim Jesus had an Aramaic name is a hypothesis...

 Yeshua in Hebrew is a verbal derivative from "to rescue", "to deliver".[10] Among the Jews of the Second Temple period, the Biblical Aramaic/Hebrew name יֵשׁוּעַ, Yēšūaʿ was common: the Hebrew Bible mentions several individuals with this name – while also using their full name Joshua.

  Yeshua (pronounced ye-SHOO-ah) was very common, and shared fifth place with El’azar (Lazarus) in popularity as a name for Jewish men.

 https://www.oneforisrael.org/how-yeshua-became-jesus-the-journey-of-language/

 Yeshua was the Aramaic version of the Hebrew name Yehoshua (Joshua), and means “Yahweh saves.”

By the time of Nehemiah, Joshua was known as Yeshua, the son of Nun (see Nehemiah 8:17, KJV).

 Unpopular view. : there is no evidence that anyone called Jesus “yeshua” to his face.

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-Z3ubAVIU4

 

 

Friday, May 15, 2026

Gilded Age on Acid: 3 white males (Mush/Bezo/Zucker) have more wealth than 50% of the US (over 170 million people)

 As of early 2026, reports indicate the top three U.S. billionaires (often cited as Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Mark Zuckerberg) hold a combined wealth of over ($945) billion, exceeding the combined wealth of the bottom 50% of U.S. households,..........

 

Thursday, May 14, 2026

The wickerman film 1973 uses the phrase "generative force" from the 1970 book Taoist Yoga: alchemy and immortality

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WdFxyBBCaZs

 https://www.theotherfolk.blog/dissections/wicker-man

  • Wickerman/Body Structure: In these practices, the body is seen as a "cauldron" or "stove," where the lower Dantian acts as a furnace to refine the generative force, and the "Wickerman" reference may relate to the internal cultivation and transformation of this essence through intense focus and breathwork.
  • The Goal: The aim is to turn the generative force (Jing) into Qi (vitality), which then rises to the brain (Ni Wan) to nurture the spirit, cultivating health and potentially immortality. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
The "Wickerman" may be a reference to a particular, intense, or symbolic visualization of this internal alchemical process of transforming the body’s innate energy.

  the start for the folks of Summerisle, who get into public orgies at night, dance naked around fires, and teach kids to venerate “the penis … as symbolizing the generative force in nature.”

 https://yeoldewitchcraftshoppe.co.uk/2020/03/21/how-the-golden-bough-inspired-the-wicker-man/

 Frazer then goes on to give examples of the primitive fire rituals performed by those all over the world. Customs such as leading a bride to or around a hearth in hopes of making her fruitful through the generative virtue ascribed to the fire. The story of Tullius “expresses in daily life the same idea…[that] virgin mothers conceived through contact with a spark or tongue of fire.”

Frazer’s explanation for the procreative virtues attributed to fire is that the very ritual of creating fire, that is rubbing sticks together, is the sexual union that creates the child, flame. “This of itself suffices to impress on the mind of a savage the idea that a capacity for reproduction is innate in the fire, and consequently that a woman may conceive by contact with it.”

 ............

Further on in this chapter Frazer decides to change his view on the motives behind the may pole tradition “However in these and similar European customs it seems that the influence of the tree, bush or bough is really protective rather than generative; it does not so much fill the udders of the cows as prevent them from being drained dry by witches, who ride on broomsticks or pitchforks through the air on the Eve of May Day (the famous Walpurgis Night) and make great efforts to steal the milk from the cattle.”

It is clear that in the case of the Wicker Man, the power of the May Pole is indeed a generative one,..........

  The teacher says “Thats right, the pole represents the phallus, or penis which is the generative force in nature.”

 

While the most famous description of the Wicker Man comes from Julius Caesar, it is widely believed by scholars that Caesar—and later the geographer Strabo—based their accounts on the earlier, now-lost, writings of the Greek philosopher and historian Posidonius of Rhodes (c. 135–51 BC), who traveled through Gaul. [1, 2]
Posidonius's original works do not survive, so a direct, word-for-word quote is unavailable. However, his account is believed to be the source for the following descriptions of Celtic sacrificial practices: [1, 2]
  • The Colossus of Straw/Wood: Strabo, in his Geographica, notes that the Gauls "devised a colossus of straw and wood" to burn as a sacrifice.
  • The Method: Posidonius is likely the source for reports that Celtic tribes would fill large, woven effigies with livestock, wild animals, and human beings, and then consume them in a large sacrificial fire.
  • Context: These sacrifices were typically made to the gods (especially Taranis) for a "bountiful crop," sometimes using criminals or innocent victims. [1, 2]

Key Takeaways on the "Wicker Man" Source
  • Caesar's Account: Julius Caesar wrote in his Commentary on the Gallic War (Book VI, Chapter 16) that Gauls built "figures of vast size, the limbs of which formed of osiers they fill with living men, which being set on fire, the men perish enveloped in the flames".
  • Posidonius's Influence: Caesar was a contemporary of Posidonius and drew heavily on his accounts of Gaulish customs.

 

Daoyin healing exercises

 https://journeytothewestresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Chinese-Healing-Exercises-The-Tradition-of-Daoyin-2008.pdf

Whales proven to have a tonal language with vowels

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hm9ADZ28Wgo

 

  • The AI model identified 156 distinct codas, each with internal structures involving shifts in tempo and rhythm.
  • Vowel-like Structures: The clicks have been found to have vowel-like properties similar to human speech, with whales adjusting the pitch, tempo, and ornamentation of their clicks to change meaning, similar to tonal languages like Mandarin.
  •  https://royalsocietypublishing.org/rspb/article/293/2069/20252994/481340/The-phonology-of-sperm-whale-coda-vowels

     

     

    Tuesday, May 12, 2026

    The best depiction of Spacetime as not a rubber sheet: Jim Kelley

    For speed of light to be invariant in all reference frames spacial curvature and time curvature must always play equal roles. In his 1911 paper, "On the Influence of Gravitation on the Propagation of Light," Einstein deduced that the speed of light is variable in a gravitational field, suggesting a refractive index proportional to gravitational potential. This implies that vacuum behaves like a dense medium, bending light toward regions of higher gravitational potential. Given that the mass density and gravitational potential of the early universe was as much as 5 or 6 orders of magnitudes greater than local mass density,...And as matter congealed into discreet pockets, the space between these discreet pockets expanded. But it expanded not so much by force, but rather as a relaxation of force. The decreased gravitational force effectively allows space to expand as a result of the expansion of mass. As the shape of the gravitational field lines changes so does the shape of spacetime. This effective change in shape may have had profound affects on our observations and on our interpretation of them in the evolution of the universe. Jim Kelley, Electronics Engineer, UCI Physics and Astronomy,