These dilemmas have been
part of the human experience since the dawn of creation.
Not exact matches
Projection
of our own body
parts into inanimate tools and devices is an essential
human experience of feedback,
since our senses always strive to be transparent.
Jane, Buddhism is one
of the great religions
of the world, in panthrotheism it is one
of all religions that God had willed to serve
humans who believes on its doctrine.But
since we are all
humans, we have to
experience all the trials
of life so that in the future when His Will shall be implemented by us, the wisdom
of experience of all religions will be the basis
of our decisions.Thats why genocides, wars,, pestilence, natural calamities, and all what we percieve as injustices, such as tyranny, persecutions and all the negative events in history is
part of His will, because in panthrotheism, there is no devil or satan.everything has a reason.and we have to accept it, Remember that He is not faith selective but performance appreciative, it is the good things you do that He wills.
If
human experience is genuinely a
part of nature, and if there be only one type
of actual entity within nature (an idea whose truth - value must finally be verified heuristically), then,
since it is that
part of nature one knows most intimately, it provides the best starting point for finding principles that can be generalized to all actual entities.
Since these nature sounds are not just
part of the
human experience, but also the
experience of all animals, playing the right sounds will likely cause your cat to relax more than ever before.
Thanks to
humans, the earth was (
since the 1990s) already
experiencing atmospheric carbon dioxide levels in a realm not
experienced on the planet
since the Pliocene epoch, which was the period 2.6 to 5.3 million years ago that saw atmospheric carbon dioxide levels between 350 and 405
parts per million and average global temperatures that ranged between 2 and 3 degrees Celsius warmer than the climate
of the 1880s.
While the front
part of a dog's nose is almost entirely committed to respiration, the rest is committed to olfaction — the sense
of smell — and
since there are hundreds
of millions more olfactory receptors in a dog's nose compared to a
human's nose, a dog is able to smell more and detect a scent in much smaller quantities: «This means two things: A dog definitely
experiences smells, odors — volatile molecules — that we don't,» Alexandra Horowitz, assistant professor at Barnard College and author
of Inside
of a Dog, told Modern Farmer.