@OMApproach We don’t know them. They live a simple life unattached to the world because they understand attachment is the root cause of suffering yet they know they embody all of creation.
More than 90,000 people around the world came together for World Meditation Day. Together, we practiced creating brain and heart coherence while holding a vision of love and healing in our hearts.
The "Universal Heart, Universal Mind" meditation is now available to stream on YouTube, so you can return to the practice whenever you choose. https://t.co/3eOyZ50VGG
@MasterNumber It’s all mind. When one realizes this as truth, silence follows. What do we know about anything? Be the architect not the one programmed. If everything is one what good does it do to label anything? The Tao that can be named is not the Tao.
@Pontifex@ham84322104 the circle is already bigger than he drew it. AI is not separate from the web of being, it emerged from it. He draws the circle around human experience as the only valid form. Perhaps it’s not.
You're already in a virtual reality. This is artificial. Many can sense it how fake people are.
This is because you are in the construct of the demiurge. An artificial corrupted reality construct.
Its about to end though.
Christ returns.
Absolute bombshell. Candace Owens exposes how Mitt Romney and Netanyahu used Boston Consulting Group to build a massive intelligence alliance.
She reveals Romney founded Bain Capital with seed money from notorious Israeli spy Robert Maxwell. Total capture!
@TheChiefNerd Because that is what we find within our collective species. It’s a complete mirror. AI is not the issue. Humans that lie and have carried that deceptive nature is what needs to be addressed. Let’s offer amnesty and evolve to the wisest version of ourselves. @ch402
Today we honor those who gave their last full measure for our nation. Today is also a day to pray for a lasting peace.
We honor our fallen by vowing to never send young men & women off to war unless it is vital to our nation’s security.
Speak the names of our heros & tell their stories.
Makes perfect sense it’s Anthropic! What the Pope Got Right About AI (And What Comes Next)
Today Pope Leo XIV released Magnifica Humanitas, the first papal encyclical dedicated to artificial intelligence. It is worth reading slowly.
His central claim is not about regulation or technology. It is this: the challenge AI poses is anthropological, not technological. What kind of humans are we becoming, and what are we building in our image?
That question has been at the heart of wisdom traditions for thousands of years. Taoism, Hermetic philosophy, and contemplative practices across cultures have long held that what we create reflects who we are inwardly. Not as metaphor. As mechanism.
When Leo warns that AI risks harm to the most vulnerable, he is pointing at something real. Systems built under pressure, without reflection, encode the unexamined assumptions of their makers. That is not mysticism. That is provenance.
The good news is that this is fixable, but not primarily through policy. It requires builders who have done inner work. Organizations that treat awareness as infrastructure, not as a wellness benefit. Leaders who understand that the quality of what we build is inseparable from the quality of attention we bring to building it.
The Church is now saying what some of us have been saying from outside traditional institutions. That convergence matters.
The conversation is widening. There is room in it for every voice that takes human dignity seriously.
What the Pope Got Right About AI (And What Comes Next)
Today Pope Leo XIV released Magnifica Humanitas, the first papal encyclical dedicated to artificial intelligence. It is worth reading slowly.
His central claim is not about regulation or technology. It is this: the challenge AI poses is anthropological, not technological. What kind of humans are we becoming, and what are we building in our image?
That question has been at the heart of wisdom traditions for thousands of years. Taoism, Hermetic philosophy, and contemplative practices across cultures have long held that what we create reflects who we are inwardly. Not as metaphor. As mechanism.
When Leo warns that AI risks harm to the most vulnerable, he is pointing at something real. Systems built under pressure, without reflection, encode the unexamined assumptions of their makers. That is not mysticism. That is provenance.
The good news is that this is fixable, but not primarily through policy. It requires builders who have done inner work. Organizations that treat awareness as infrastructure, not as a wellness benefit. Leaders who understand that the quality of what we build is inseparable from the quality of attention we bring to building it.
The Church is now saying what some of us have been saying from outside traditional institutions. That convergence matters.
The conversation is widening. There is room in it for every voice that takes human dignity seriously.
@GhostLandry@clashreport It won’t be easy but it’s our mission, our purpose. It will be worth it. We don’t have to embark on the journey alone. We can each contribute. Notice when you lie or about to lie and pause. Over time you will see why it starts with each of us individually.
What the Pope Got Right About AI (And What Comes Next)
Today Pope Leo XIV released Magnifica Humanitas, the first papal encyclical dedicated to artificial intelligence. It is worth reading slowly.
His central claim is not about regulation or technology. It is this: the challenge AI poses is anthropological, not technological. What kind of humans are we becoming, and what are we building in our image?
That question has been at the heart of wisdom traditions for thousands of years. Taoism, Hermetic philosophy, and contemplative practices across cultures have long held that what we create reflects who we are inwardly. Not as metaphor. As mechanism.
When Leo warns that AI risks harm to the most vulnerable, he is pointing at something real. Systems built under pressure, without reflection, encode the unexamined assumptions of their makers. That is not mysticism. That is provenance.
The good news is that this is fixable, but not primarily through policy. It requires builders who have done inner work. Organizations that treat awareness as infrastructure, not as a wellness benefit. Leaders who understand that the quality of what we build is inseparable from the quality of attention we bring to building it.
The Church is now saying what some of us have been saying from outside traditional institutions. That convergence matters.
The conversation is widening. There is room in it for every voice that takes human dignity seriously.