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Dr. Harmander Singh
30 Days to a Happier Heart: Introduction

Gratitude comes not from circumstances, but from within. It's a
decision and a choice. I have chosen one quotation that is
relative to gratitude for each day of the month and a spiritual
exercise for you to practice.

Remember: "Practice makes permanent."

For the next 30 days, I will share with you quotes and exercises for
you to practice so that you can begin to receive all the blessings
that have been stored for you for so long.

A spiritual exercise promotes movement of the inner consciousness
and is simply to open a channel between yourself and Divine spirit.
Journaling is an exercise. You may want to keep a daily journal
to write your feelings about the daily quote.

Then, contemplate on them throughout your and become consciously aware
of what happens for you and how you can bring happiness to what
you'll be doing.

When you begin practicing the exercises, Divine Spirit enters and
you become more independent, thoughtful, self-motivated. It will
allow you, if you allow IT, to move toward taking that first step
toward discipline and self-mastery.

Blessings,

Brenda
http://www.BeeBlessedDaily.com
Dr. Harmander Singh
Classical American Philosophy

Although Wright was regarded as the leader of the Metaphysical Club, Peirce and then James proved to be its most significant members. Charles Peirce seemed destined for intellectual achievement from an early age, and he began publishing papers on logic and semiotics in the 1860s. 'Some Consequences of Four Incapacities' (1868) contains the first published statement of his view that all thought is in signs, and 'On a New List of Categories' (1867) a first statement of his categorial scheme. Peirce presented what came to be called 'the pragmatic maxim' to the Metaphysical Club in an 1872 version of his paper 'How to Make Our Ideas Clear'(1878: 132): 'Consider what effects, which might conceivably have practical bearing, we conceive the object of our conception to have. Then our conception of these effects is the whole of our conception of the object.' In 'The Fixation of Belief' (1877) Peirce considers four ways in which we come to form beliefs: by authority, tenacity (holding on to the beliefs one already has), rationality, or science. Only science, Peirce argues, has the integrity that comes from allowing itself to be determined by 'some external permanency; by something upon which our thinking has no effect.' (Peirce, 1877: 120). Peirce worked at the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey in the 60s and 70s, and was appointed to a lectureship in logic in the new Graduate School at Johns Hopkins in 1879; but he was dismissed in 1884, and, despite occasional lectures at Harvard arranged by William James, never taught regularly again. In a series of papers in The Monist in the early nineties, he developed a system of metaphysics according to which absolute chance operates in the universe, but so does 'evolutionary love'; and matter is 'effete mind.' Central to Peirce's many writings was the idea of three categories, Firstness, Secondness, and Thirdness. He held that all signs are 'thirds': besides a purely linguistic element and an object of reference, they contain an irreducible element of interpretation.

James studied chemistry in the Lawrence Scientific School at Harvard in the 1860s, and biology with Louis Agassiz (including 15 months in Brazil), receiving his degree in medicine in 1869. He began teaching anatomy and physiology in 1872, and became an assistant professor of psychology in 1875, when he established the first psychological laboratory in America. James's earliest publications did not report research in physiology or the new psychophysics however, but were a series of critiques of books on science, philosophy, and culture. He argues in 'The Sentiment of Rationality' (1879), for example, that reason is a passion, and in 'Remarks on Spencer's Definition of Mind as Correspondence' (1878) he anticipates the voluntaristic pragmatism of his later works: 'the knower is not simply a mirror floating with no foot-hold anywhere, and passively reflecting an order that he comes upon and finds simply existing. The knower is an actor, and co-efficient of the truth on one side, whilst on the other he registers the truth which he helps to create.' (James, 1978: 21)

James's masterpiece, The Principles of Psychology (1890) gathers and integrates his writings of the seventies and eighties in a thousand page work of physiology, psychology, and philosophy. The book became a standard text in newly established psychology programs (especially in its shortened form), and influenced philosophers as diverse as Edmund Husserl (by its phenomenological description) and Bertrand Russell (by its distinction between knowledge by acquaintance and by description.) James introduces the ideas of the stream of thought and the 'vague' or 'fringe' areas of consciousness, in opposition to the discrete atomic sensations of traditional British empiricism. He stresses the importance of attention and habit in our mental life, and offers a theory of the emotions as responses to, rather than causes of, emotional behavior. James's moral outlook appears throughout the Principles and indeed throughout his philosophy, but is particularly explicit and prominent in the collections of papers, some from as early as the 1870s, that he published as The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy (1896). Although he credited Peirce with originating pragmatism, a lecture James gave at Berkeley in 1898, 'Philosophical Conceptions and Practical Results,' contains the first published use of the term. Pragmatism, for James, is the view that 'the effective meaning of any philosophic proposition can always be brought down to some particular consequence, in our future practical experience, whether active or passive...' (James, 1975: 259). He credits 'English-speaking philosophers' such as Locke and Berkeley with introducing the pragmatic 'custom of interpreting the meaning of conceptions by asking what difference they make for life,' as Berkeley did when he found the 'cash-value' of matter to lie solely in our sensations. (James, 1975: 268).

Josiah Royce (1855-1916) was raised in the California goldrush town of Grass Mountain, studied English at the University of California at Berkeley and philosophy in Germany. At Johns Hopkins from 1876-8, he studied with George Sylvester Morris, a scholar of German philosophy and a proponent T. H. Green. Receiving his Ph. D. in 1878, Royce taught English at Berkeley, then philosophy at Harvard, where he became a mainstay of the department. Royce introduced formal logic into the curriculum, and was a respected idealist opponent of James's more naturalistic, open-ended pragmatism. Royce's early philosophical writing is in accord with his lifelong interests both in the history of philosophy, and in developing his own version of metaphysical idealism. His first book,The Religious Aspect of Philosophy (1885) argues for an Absolute Mind that contains all thoughts and their objects. In The Spirit of Modern Philosophy: An Essay in the Form of Lectures (1892), Royce traces 'the rediscovery of the inner life' from Spinoza to Kant, with special emphasis on Fichte--praised for his 'beautiful waywardness,' the Romantic School, including Goethe, Novalis, and Schelling, and Hegel. Royce argues, however, that the inner life is essentially public: that we live in our coherence or relationships with other people.

The third great pragmatist to emerge in the late nineteenth century, John Dewey had neither the scientific background of Peirce and James, nor their association with Harvard. Dewey attended the University of Vermont in his home town of Burlington from 1875--9. He studied not only the Scottish school but Kant and Hegel with the university's philosophy professor, H. A. P. Torrey (1837-1902). According to his own testimony, Dewey found in Hegel's philosophy 'an immense release, a liberation' from a sense of divisions between self and world, soul and body, nature and God (Dewey, 1930:153). Enrolling in the new graduate school at Johns Hopkins in 1882, he studied Hegel and Green with Morris, logic with Charles Peirce, and the newly emerging experimental psychology with G. Stanlely Hall (1844-1924). He was appointed to a post at the University of Michigan in 1884, and taught there, with the exception of a year at Minnesota, till 1894, when he began teaching at the University of Chicago.

Dewey's early papers argue for a reconciliation of Darwinism, Hegelian idealism, and religion. Intelligence, Dewey asserts, is latent in evolving matter. In the nineties Dewey called his synthesis of Hegelianism and science 'experimental idealism,' but he gradually moved--as he says in the title of his autobiography--'from absolutism to experimentalism'. Dewey's paper 'The Reflex Arc Concept in Psychology' (1896), presages his future instrumentalism and pragmatism in its attacks on the prevailing stimulus-response theory, which Dewey sees as preserving a sharp metaphysical and epistemological distinction between sensory stimulation and motor response. Stimulus and response are, Dewey argues, aspects of a basic 'sensorimotor co-ordination,' a 'circuit' or 'continual reconstitution.' The sensorimotor coordination, like Dewey's later 'problem situation,' shares with Hegelian logic the idea of a progression of temporally evolving wholes. Dewey's educational philosophy also took shape in the 1890s, when he was a professor not only of philosophy, but of psychology and pedagogy. He worked with high school faculty in Michigan, and with the Laboratory School at Chicago. In 'Interest in Relation to the Training of the Will', Dewey argues that because interest is a complex of felt worth and incipient action, when we are genuinely interested in something, we don't have to will to do it. Only through such genuine interest, which 'marks the annihilation of the distance between the person and the materials and results of his action,' can the will be effectively trained (Dewey 1896: 122). In 'My Pedagogic Creed' (1897), Dewey maintains that education is 'a process of living and not a preparation for future living,' and that therefore it must seek 'forms of life that are worth living for their own sake' (Dewey 1897: 87).

With thanks from the source: http://www.unm.edu/~rgoodman/american.html
Dr. Harmander Singh
Leo Tolstoy's Novel "War and Peace" is a Lesson for Holistic Life!

We can be good in words and making impressions, but when it comes the living of the holistic life, there is an example, which one can set an example for others. It is the way Martin, the old man in Leo Tolstoy's novel, War and Peace experiences holistically. It is about the transformation, which one can realize to become a holistic and thus the civilized person in the modern world, doing what one says and says what one does.

This novel is best among all literary works for humanly transformation for peace, taking a step for ending the war of hatred, while spreading the message of love for all.

It goes well in the more words, though never enough,
http://www.shvoong.com/humanities/1656167-global-c...
Dr. Harmander Singh
I'm on a break at work Christmas Eve and I see a book called "Eat, Pray, Love." Now while I've seen this book many times before, this time something told me to pick it up. I open to a random page. Here's what I read:

"Moreover, I have boundary issues with men. Or maybe that's not fair to say. To have issues with boundaries, one must HAVE boundaries in the first place, right? But I disappear into the person I love. I am the permeable membrane. If I love you, you can have everything. You can have my time, my devotion, my ass, my money, my family, my dog, my dog's money, my dog's time - EVERYTHING."

LOL Smile

"If I love you, I will carry for you all your pain, I will assume for you all your debts (in every definition of the word), I will protect you from your own insecurity, I will project upon you all sorts of good qualities that you have never actually cultivated in yourself and I will buy Christmas presents for your entire family. I will give you the sun and the rain, and if they are not available, I will give you a sun check and a rain check. I will give you all this and more, until I get so exhausted and depleted that the only way I can recover my energy is by becoming infatuated with someone else."

Hmmmmmmm.......Remind you of someone? Anyone at all????
READ THE BOOK MICHELLE!!!! Smile

I take the book home. It's about a woman named Liz who leaves the traditional perfect marriage and goes off to live in Italy, India, and Indonesia for a year to find herself. And while she does want to be spiritual, she mentions she also doesn't want to be a monk and still wants the worldly pleasure of this world. (yeah, I get her!!!)

Now while I still want what I want, my eyes are opening to new possibilities. Maybe I don't want to get married? Maybe marriage isn't for everybody? Or maybe I'm just going backwards? Travelled, messed up first, then will get married? OR maybe, just maybe, in order to find what/who I really want....I have to find myself first (imagine that). Yes, I see. This......Elizabeth Gilbert, has something to teach me. I KNOW IT.


Now while I can't quite go to Italy, India and Indonesia at the moment to find myself ..I do choose to spend this lovely Christmas evening by MYSELF. Did I mention how beautiful I feel inside? YES, I am single. YES, I don't know what the future holds. BUT I am happy NOW. I am at peace NOW.

And does anything else matter?

Didn't think so.

Merry Christmas!!!!

Love,
Michelle

With thanks from the source: http://spiritualnetworks.com/pokergirl/blog/eat-pr...
Dr. Harmander Singh
After about 34-35 years, I went to my grandparent's village and spent about a month over there. It was such a wonderful and blissful that I have no words. God seem to live in the villages and thus in the rural as the people there are closer to nature and the natural world.

Right from my childhood, I have never been away from my home at Patiala. The only time when I went away was to study in Australia during 1989 - 1991. Then after coming back from there (Australia), I started to visit my relatives at about the age of 23-24 years. However, I had never visited my granny's land that belong to my mother and father's parents. The only time I visited was when I about 6-7 years of age. Smile

It was amazing to realize that I was never been able to visit as we have had buffaloes and cows at home that always kept our family so busy and engaged in work and studies leaving no time to leave even for single night. If my mom ever visited it was just for from morning to evening for her entire life during 1970's to around 2005.

From 1975-76 to 1995-1996, my study load has always been at least 24 points and work 50 hours per week, while working in the home based dairy form with cows and buffaloes!

I feel I am no longer a work alcoholic for online works as I decided that I would finish all of my works either by end of 2009 or at most 2010.

Now, I feel lot better and relaxed.

Thanks and I feel closer to nature and my friends both online and offline.

I wish all a wonderful ending of this wonderful year 2010 that is just going to shake hands with next year 2011. Yes, indeed we all are proud to share Happy Christmas. May it has ever ending for all of us of what begins with tears of humanly pain and ends in tears of joy as if a prayer that brings tears as if always heard, and it is so. Amen!

Thanks for your time reading it and good wishes, blessings and prayers.
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