Good morning! It is a pleasure to help you with your column, SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY. The video you shared from metaRising (hosted by Ben Joffe) is a profound exploration of how the "Hard Problem of Consciousness" might actually be the key to the ...
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"SURiMOUNT" - 5 new articles

  1. SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY: CONSCIOUSNESS BEDROCK OF REALITY?
  2. TOPIC OF THE DAY: PAINFUL SQUEEZE OF GLOBAL ECONOMY
  3. SCIENCE WATCH: WHEN ATOMS FEEL THE SPARK. (UNDERSTANDING STARK EFFECT)
  4. LOOKING BACK AT HISTORY. : PERSIA TO IRAN
  5. BEAUTIFUL THOUGHTS
  6. More Recent Articles

SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY: CONSCIOUSNESS BEDROCK OF REALITY?


SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY:  CONSCIOUSNESS BEDROCK OF REALITY?

Good morning! It is a pleasure to help you with your column, SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY. The video you shared from metaRising (hosted by Ben Joffe) is a profound exploration of how the "Hard Problem of Consciousness" might actually be the key to the "Mystery of Existence."
​Here is a draft for your blog post, designed to be both intellectually stimulating and spiritually resonant.

​The Self-Excited Circuit: Is Consciousness the Bedrock of Reality?

​For centuries, we have treated the universe like a grand machine—a vast, silent clockwork of matter and energy that just happened to "wake up" once biological life evolved. But what if we have it backwards? What if consciousness isn’t the result of the universe, but the very reason the universe exists at all?

​In a recent deep dive into the "Mystery of Existence," we explore a radical convergence between modern quantum physics and ancient philosophical idealism. The core question is simple yet staggering: Why is there something rather than nothing?

​The Problem of the "Infinite Regress"

​Science usually explains things by looking at what came before. The Big Bang was triggered by a quantum fluctuation, which followed the laws of quantum mechanics. But why do those laws exist?. Every time we find a new "starting state," we just add one more thing that needs explaining. This is what philosophers call the infinite regress.

​However, consciousness has a unique property: it is self-grounding. As the philosopher Johann Fichte argued, the conscious self is "self-producing"—it exists only in and to itself. Like a "magical Russian nesting doll" that contains itself, consciousness might be the only thing in the universe that can provide its own explanation.

​Quantum Physics and the Participatory Universe

​The link between the mind and the cosmos isn’t just "woo-woo" spirituality; it’s rooted in the strangest findings of the laboratory.

​The Observer Effect:

 In quantum experiments, the state of a system is defined by the information available to an observer. Without observation, reality remains a "superposition" of endless possibilities.

​The Self-Excited Circuit: 

Physicist John Wheeler famously proposed that the universe is a "self-excited circuit". He suggested that by observing the universe today, we might actually be "reaching back" in time to give the Big Bang the reality it needed to begin.

​Retrocausality: 

It sounds like science fiction, but quantum physics shows that future events can affect the past [14:33]. Wheeler remarked, "We decide what the photon shall have done after it has already done it" 

​Existence as an Expression of Value

​If consciousness is fundamental, it changes how we view "Value." In a purely materialist world, "goodness" or "meaning" are just chemical accidents in our brains. But if the universe is mind-like, then Value might be the animating force of reality.

​Philosopher Philip Goff and others suggest that the universe is "finely tuned" for life not by accident, but because a universe of "great value" is a metaphysical necessity [19:24]. As Alfred North Whitehead beautifully put it: "Existence itself is the upholding of value intensity" [21:21].

​The Science and Spirituality Synthesis

​In our column, we often look for the bridge between the "how" of science and the "why" of spirituality. This perspective suggests they are two sides of the same coin:

​Science describes the external, behavioral account of reality.

​Spirituality/Consciousness represents the intrinsic nature—what reality is in itself 

​Perhaps we are not just passive observers of a cold, indifferent cosmos. Perhaps we are the universe finally waking up, looking in the mirror, and—through that very act of recognition—bringing the whole story into existence.

​What do you think? Is the universe "saturated by mind"? Let’s discuss in the comments below.

Grateful thanks to GOOGLE GEMINI for its great help and support in creating this blogpost!🙏
   

TOPIC OF THE DAY: PAINFUL SQUEEZE OF GLOBAL ECONOMY


Good morning!

 It sounds like the "pinch" of the global economy is becoming a painful squeeze.

​Based on the current events of March 2026, where the escalating conflict in the Middle East has disrupted the Strait of Hormuz (a chokepoint for 20% of the world's oil), here is a detailed blog post for our column. It connects the dots between those long queues at the petrol bunk and the shrinking menus at our favorite local bistro.

​TOPIC OF THE DAY: When the "Pinch" Becomes a Squeeze

​We’ve all felt it. That subtle tightening of the belt that starts as a minor inconvenience and grows into a daily struggle. But lately, it’s not just a pinch anymore. Whether you’re staring at a rising fuel gauge or a falling stock ticker, the reality is clear: the global "engine" is stuttering.
​Here is why the world is feeling the pressure right now, and how these seemingly separate issues are all tied to the same string.

​1. The "Menu Trim": Why Your Favorite Dish is Gone

​Have you noticed your local cafe crossing items off the menu? Or perhaps the price of a simple salad has jumped 20%?

​The Fertilizer Factor: The Middle East produces nearly 35% of the world’s Urea (fertilizer). With shipping lanes in the Strait of Hormuz effectively blocked, fertilizer isn't moving. No fertilizer means lower crop yields, which means higher prices at the farm gate.  

​The Logistics Tax: It costs more to keep the kitchen lights on and much more to transport ingredients from the farm to the chef. To survive, restaurants are "trimming the fat"—cutting complex dishes to save on energy and high-cost imports.

​2. The Petrol Bunk: A Test of Patience

​The long queues at the petrol pumps aren't just about high prices; they are a symptom of supply anxiety.  

​The $119 Barrel: Following the strikes in early March, crude oil spiked toward $120 a barrel.  
​Refinery Stress: With several regional refineries damaged and tankers rerouting around Africa, the "just-in-time" delivery system of fuel has broken. We aren't just paying more; we are waiting longer for a resource that used to be a given.

​3. The LPG Delay: The Cold Kitchen

​If your cooking gas cylinder is a week late, you aren't alone. In India and parts of SE Asia, restaurants are being warned of shutdowns as governments prioritize households for limited gas supplies. The "Blue Flame" is becoming a luxury as LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas) shipments face the same maritime bottlenecks as crude oil.  

​4. Share Markets: The "Risk-Off" Reflex

​Red is the color of the month on Wall Street, Dalal Street, and the Nikkei.

​Panic Selling: When oil spikes, investors panic. High energy costs act like a "hidden tax" on every company.

​The Flight to Safety: Money is moving out of stocks and into "safe havens" like Gold and US Treasuries. The crash isn't just about the war; it’s about the fear that Stagflation—high inflation combined with zero growth—is finally here.  

​The Bottom Line

​What we are experiencing is a "Perfect Storm." A physical conflict in a narrow strip of water (the Strait of Hormuz) has sent a shockwave through the digital and physical systems we rely on.

​When the world "pinches" you, it’s a reminder of how interconnected we truly are. The petrol in your tank, the gas in your stove, and the stocks in your portfolio are all threaded together.
​Stay resilient, plan your commutes, and perhaps... learn a few more "one-pot" recipes while the gas lasts.
Grateful thanks to GOOGLE GEMINI for its great help and support in creating this blogpost!🙏
   

SCIENCE WATCH: WHEN ATOMS FEEL THE SPARK. (UNDERSTANDING STARK EFFECT)


SCIENCE WATCH:
WHEN ATOMS FEEL THE SPARK

UNDERSTANDING STARK EFFECT 


​Imagine an atom as a quiet, orderly neighborhood. The electrons move in predictable patterns, and the energy levels are neatly stacked like floors in an apartment building. But what happens when you turn on a massive, invisible "electric wind"?

​The neighborhood gets shaken up. This is the essence of the Stark Effect, a phenomenon that proved atoms aren't just rigid marbles, but dynamic systems that react intensely to their environment.

​The Discovery: Johannes Stark’s "Electric" Breakthrough

​In 1913, German physicist Johannes Stark (pictured above with that classic 20th-century mustache) discovered that when he applied a strong external electric field to glowing hydrogen gas, the spectral lines—the "fingerprints" of the atom—didn't just stay put. They split apart into multiple lines.

​This wasn't just a neat trick; it was a fundamental revelation about the nature of matter. It proved that electric fields could reach inside an atom and shift its internal energy.

​How It Works: The Tug-of-War

​At its core, the Stark Effect is about dipoles. An atom has a positive nucleus and negative electrons. In a normal state, these charges are often balanced. However, when an external electric field (E) is applied, it creates a "tug" on these charges, inducing or interacting with an electric dipole moment (p).


Why Should We Care?

​You might think this is just "lab talk," but the Stark Effect is a vital tool in modern science:
​Stellar Fingerprints: Astronomers use the Stark Effect to measure the electric fields in the atmospheres of distant stars. By looking at how "blurred" or "split" the light is, they can calculate the density of the plasma in a star.

​Quantum Computing: Controlling energy levels with electric fields is a key component in manipulating "qubits"—the building blocks of future supercomputers.
​Chemical Identification: It helps scientists understand how molecules polarize, which is essential for developing new materials and medicines.

​The Bottom Line

​The Stark Effect reminds us that nothing in the universe exists in a vacuum. Even the smallest atom is constantly dancing and shifting in response to the invisible forces surrounding it. Johannes Stark’s discovery turned the "static" atom into a "dynamic" one, opening the door to the quantum world we are still exploring today.

Stark Effect: Fast Facts

​Discovery Year: 1913 (The same year Niels Bohr published his famous model of the atom!).
​The "Mirror" Effect: The Stark Effect is the electrical version of the Zeeman Effect, which involves splitting spectral lines using magnetic fields instead of electric ones.
​Nobel Worthy: Johannes Stark won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1919 specifically for this discovery.

​Linear vs. Quadratic: In strong fields (like with Hydrogen), the shift is often linear (proportional to E). In most other atoms, it’s quadratic (proportional to E^2), meaning the effect grows much faster as the field strengthens.

​📖 The SCIENCE WATCH Glossary

​To help you navigate the quantum woods, here are the key terms from today’s column:
​Spectral Lines: The specific wavelengths of light emitted or absorbed by an atom. Think of these as a "barcode" unique to every element.

​Degenerate Energy Levels: A fancy way of saying two or more different states of an atom have the exact same energy. The Stark Effect "lifts" this degeneracy by forcing them into different energy states.

​Electric Dipole Moment (p): A measure of the separation of positive and negative electrical charges within a system.

​Quantum Number (n, m): The "coordinates" of an electron. n represents the main energy shell, while m (magnetic quantum number) describes its orientation in space.

​💡 Pro-Tip for Readers

​If you ever see a photo of a star's light spectrum and the lines look "fat" or "smeared," you’re likely witnessing the Stark Broadening. It’s the result of billions of atoms all feeling the electric fields of their neighbors at once!


Grateful thanks to GOOGLE GEMINI for its great help and support in creating this blogpost!🙏
   

LOOKING BACK AT HISTORY. : PERSIA TO IRAN


LOOKING BACK AT HISTORY: PERSIA TO IRAN

A JOURNEY THROUGH 2500 YEARS OF HISTORY 

Introduction

History sometimes compresses centuries into a few moments. Watching the history of Iran unfold is like seeing a great epic — full of glory, conquest, poetry, revolutions, and profound cultural achievements.

The land we today call Iran was once known to the world as Persia, one of the cradles of civilization. For over 2500 years, powerful empires rose and fell here, shaping not only the Middle East but the wider world.

Let us take a brief journey through this fascinating story.


A Brief Timeline of Iranian (Persian) History

Ancient Persia

c. 700–550 BCE — Rise of the Persians
Small Persian tribes settle in the Iranian plateau.

550 BCE — Empire of Cyrus the Great
The first great Persian empire is founded.

522–486 BCE — Reign of Darius I
Administrative reforms, royal roads, and construction of the imperial capital.

518 BCE — Construction of Persepolis begins
Built as the ceremonial capital of the Persian Empire.

330 BCE — Conquest by Alexander the Great
Persian Empire collapses after Alexander invades.

Classical Persian Dynasties

247 BCE – 224 CE — Parthian Empire
Persia regains independence and becomes Rome’s rival.

224 – 651 CE — Sasanian Empire
A powerful Persian empire competing with Byzantium.
Islamic Era

651 CE — Arab conquest of Persia
Islam spreads across Persia.

9th–13th centuries — Persian cultural renaissance
Persian literature, science, and philosophy flourish.

Early Modern Persia

1501 — Rise of the Safavid dynasty
Iran becomes a unified state and adopts Shi'a Islam as the state religion.

1736 — Nader Shah establishes Afsharid rule

Modern Iran

1796–1925 — Qajar dynasty
1925 — Reza Shah Pahlavi modernizes Iran
1979 — Iranian Revolution

The monarchy is replaced by the Islamic Republic.

Map of the Persian Empire 

Map: The Persian Empire at Its Greatest Extent (c. 500 BCE)

At its peak around 500 BCE, the Persian Empire stretched:

West: to the Balkans and parts of Greece
South: to Egypt and the Nile Valley
East: to the Indus River region
North: to Central Asia and the Caucasus

It was one of the largest empires in the ancient world, linking Africa, Asia, and Europe in a vast network of administration, trade, and communication.

IRAN MAP
Author فهام
Licensing
w:en:Creative Commons
attribution share alike
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.


Main historical narrative

The Birth of the Persian Empire

The story truly begins around 550 BCE, when a remarkable ruler appeared: Cyrus the Great.
He founded the Achaemenid Empire, which soon stretched from the Indus Valley to the Mediterranean Sea. It became one of the largest empires the world had ever seen. 

Unlike many conquerors, Cyrus earned a reputation for tolerance and enlightened governance. Different religions and cultures were allowed to flourish within the empire.

Later rulers such as Darius I built roads, administrative systems, and canals that held the vast empire together.

But in 330 BCE, the empire met its match when Alexander the Great invaded and defeated Persia.

Persian Revival: Parthians and Sasanians

Persia did not disappear.

After a period of Greek influence, new Iranian dynasties restored Persian power:

Parthian Empire
Sasanian Empire

The Sasanian Empire became Rome’s great rival for centuries. Persian art, architecture, administration, and literature flourished.

However, in the 7th century, a dramatic transformation occurred. Arab armies carrying the banner of Islam defeated the Sasanian rulers. Persia gradually became part of the Islamic world.

Yet Persian culture proved resilient. It deeply influenced Islamic civilization in language, literature, and governance.

The Safavid Turning Point

After centuries of fragmented rule, a powerful Persian state re-emerged in 1501 under the Safavid dynasty.

The Safavids unified the country and made Shi'a Islam the state religion, a decision that permanently shaped Iran’s identity and distinguished it from many neighboring Sunni states. 

Their capital cities—especially Isfahan—became centers of art, architecture, and culture.

The Age of Conquerors and Dynasties

Following the Safavids, several dynasties ruled Iran:
Afsharid dynasty, founded by the brilliant military leader Nader Shah, who briefly rebuilt a vast empire. 

Qajar dynasty, whose rule coincided with European imperial expansion and political struggles. 

During the Qajar period, Iranians demanded reforms and constitutional government, leading to the Persian Constitutional Revolution, which introduced a parliament and constitution. 

Modernization and Monarchy

In 1925, Reza Shah Pahlavi established the Pahlavi dynasty.
His goal was to modernize Iran through:

infrastructure
education
industry
centralized government

His son, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, continued modernization but faced increasing political opposition.

The 1979 Revolution

A dramatic turning point came in 1979.

A mass uprising led by Ruhollah Khomeini overthrew the monarchy and established the Islamic Republic of Iran.

The revolution reshaped Iranian politics and had far-reaching effects across the Middle East.

RUINS 

Persepolis — the ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Empire, founded by Darius I in 518 BCE. The ruins today remain one of the most impressive archaeological sites of ancient Persia. 
UNESCO World Heritage Centre
Image: Persepolis ruins, Iran
Source: Wikimedia Commons / UNESCO World Heritage
License: Creative Commons

A Civilization That Endures

Despite wars, revolutions, and political changes, the deeper story of Iran is one of continuity.

For millennia, this land has produced:

great poets like Rumi
scientific scholars
magnificent architecture
rich philosophical traditions

Persian culture has influenced regions from India to Central Asia and the Middle East.

Empires may fall, rulers may change, but civilizations endure.

And Iran — ancient Persia — remains one of the oldest continuous cultural traditions on Earth.

A Thought to Reflect On

When we look back at history, we often see wars and rulers.
But the real legacy of a civilization lies elsewhere —
in its ideas, poetry, spirituality, and cultural memory.

Persia reminds us that a civilization can survive conquest, religion, revolution, and politics — yet still retain its soul.

To be continued in Part 2

Grateful thanks to ChatGPT for its great help and support in creating this blogpost!🙏

   

BEAUTIFUL THOUGHTS


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