Spirituality

Psychedelic Science 2025 – the Fifth and Largest Psychedelic Conference in History – Announced for June 16-20 2025 in Denver, Colorado

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Psychedelic Science 2023, held this past June, boasted a record-breaking 22,000+ attendees -- 12,500 in-person and over 10,000 online through The Virtual Trip. Colorado Governor Jared Polis, Former Governor of Texas and US Secretary of Energy Rick Perry, Michael Pollan, Aaron Rodgers, and Melissa Etheridge were just a few of the speakers. The distinguished Dr. Roland Griffiths, professor of behavioral science and psychiatry and a pioneer in the advancement of psychedelic research, was also honored at the largest dinner event in the history of the Colorado Convention Center in one of his last public appearances before his death from cancer in October.

Key Points: 
  • SAN JOSE, Calif. , Feb. 13, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies ( MAPS ) has announced that the Psychedelic Science 2025 Conference will convene in the city of Denver June 16–20, 2025, at the Colorado Convention Center.
  • This is the fifth edition of the Psychedelic Science conference series, hosted by MAPS.
  • Programming will explore the full spectrum of psychedelics, including science, medicine, policy, business, spirituality, and culture.
  • Psychedelic Science 2023, held this past June, boasted a record-breaking 22,000+ attendees -- 12,500 in-person and over 10,000 online through The Virtual Trip .

Massive Global Entertainment Study Shows Audiences Yearning For More Accurate and Diverse Portrayals of Faith in TV and Movies, Reveals Untapped Opportunities for Studios

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 13, 2024

LOS ANGELES, Feb. 13, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- A first-of-its-kind global study of entertainment consumers conducted by HarrisX in partnership with the non-profit, the Faith and Media Initiative, found an overwhelming majority of global audiences believe the entertainment industry needs to actively improve their portrayals of faith and religion, as well as make them more accurate.

Key Points: 
  • The Global Faith and Entertainment Study surveyed nearly 10,000 entertainment consumers across 11 countries.
  • Most consumers across religions say portrayals of their faith follow repeat storylines, rather than cover fresh, diverse narratives.
  • Those interviewed acknowledged there is an untapped market for films that have thought-provoking, diverse, and accurate portrayals of characters' faith and spirituality.
  • This isn't about creating faith content, rather adding faith fluency and diverse storylines to all types of TV and movies.

Massive Global Entertainment Study Shows Audiences Yearning For More Accurate and Diverse Portrayals of Faith in TV and Movies, Reveals Untapped Opportunities for Studios

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 13, 2024

LOS ANGELES, Feb. 13, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- A first-of-its-kind global study of entertainment consumers conducted by HarrisX in partnership with the non-profit, the Faith and Media Initiative, found an overwhelming majority of global audiences believe the entertainment industry needs to actively improve their portrayals of faith and religion, as well as make them more accurate.

Key Points: 
  • The Global Faith and Entertainment Study surveyed nearly 10,000 entertainment consumers across 11 countries.
  • Most consumers across religions say portrayals of their faith follow repeat storylines, rather than cover fresh, diverse narratives.
  • Those interviewed acknowledged there is an untapped market for films that have thought-provoking, diverse, and accurate portrayals of characters' faith and spirituality.
  • This isn't about creating faith content, rather adding faith fluency and diverse storylines to all types of TV and movies.

Digital technologies have made the wonders of ancient manuscripts more accessible than ever, but there are risks and losses too

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, February 8, 2024

And even if some few have somehow survived, they are moth-eaten and in a state of decay, and remembered about as well as if they had never existed.

Key Points: 
  • And even if some few have somehow survived, they are moth-eaten and in a state of decay, and remembered about as well as if they had never existed.
  • By making the manuscripts into a book, he would preserve the knowledge they contained – but not the manuscript, not the artefact itself.
  • He does not mention how difficult his Byzantine manuscripts were to read and transcribe, even for someone familiar with the language.
  • Every manuscript is its own text, its own space of knowledge, and an irreplaceable part of our shared cultural histories.

Preserving the Past

  • Our knowledge of the past, and the wisdom we can gain from it, is bound in material objects – whether manuscripts, paintings, ruined buildings or clay pots – that are decaying.
  • What will we preserve of the past?
  • We are lucky if we can now read a text in 50 manuscripts.
  • Read more:
    Uncovering the mysteries of The Book of Kells – from myopic monks on magic mushrooms to superhuman detail
  • Manuscript tourism became a popular activity for wealthy scholars like Sir Robert Cotton (1571-1631), whose collection became the core of the British Museum’s collection.
  • Of course, many of these collectors simply stole or smuggled what they wanted from struggling monasteries in what are now Greece, Sinai and Israel.
  • But their work made possible the rise of printed editions of classical and medieval works.
  • Our modern editions of the Bible and the Iliad, for example, do not exactly match their underlying manuscripts.


Read more:
Dogs in the middle ages: what medieval writing tells us about our ancestors’ pets

Digital decay

  • Even if we prefer the edited versions, printed books decay faster than manuscripts, and take up just as much space.
  • Print does not solve the problem of preservation; it only postpones it.
  • In the 20th century, digital scanning tools and computer-based storage seemed to offer a new kind of solution.
  • Second, digital images are often in proprietary formats, meaning that without the library’s viewing software you cannot actually examine the manuscript.
  • The digital format is still chained to its digital shelves in a private space.
  • Third, as a recent cyber-attack on the British Library demonstrates, the digital space seems not to be safer than the physical one.
  • The digital library space, with its proprietary viewing software and its specialised file formats, is now shuttered.

Conservation and accessibility

  • Yet physical conservation comes at the expense of accessibility.
  • We can, however, use advances in AI and computer technology to improve approaches to digital conservation and enable wider access to the uniqueness of individual manuscripts.
  • To avoid digital decay, we need to devote the same attention to digital conservation as to material conservation.
  • Images of manuscripts would then have a readable text and all the unique elements of the material original – its decorations and artistry, its errors and doodles.
  • In this enhanced digital form, manuscripts could come to local museums, libraries and galleries, where they would be accessible to everyday visitors as well as specialists.
  • But unlike him, we can now offer the experience of the manuscript as well as the text, and to a much wider audience.


Jonathan L. Zecher receives funding from the Templeton Religion Trust.

Digital technologies have the made the wonders of ancient manuscripts more accessible than ever, but there are risks and losses too

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, February 8, 2024

And even if some few have somehow survived, they are moth-eaten and in a state of decay, and remembered about as well as if they had never existed.

Key Points: 
  • And even if some few have somehow survived, they are moth-eaten and in a state of decay, and remembered about as well as if they had never existed.
  • By making the manuscripts into a book, he would preserve the knowledge they contained – but not the manuscript, not the artefact itself.
  • He does not mention how difficult his Byzantine manuscripts were to read and transcribe, even for someone familiar with the language.
  • Every manuscript is its own text, its own space of knowledge, and an irreplaceable part of our shared cultural histories.

Preserving the Past

  • Our knowledge of the past, and the wisdom we can gain from it, is bound in material objects – whether manuscripts, paintings, ruined buildings or clay pots – that are decaying.
  • What will we preserve of the past?
  • We are lucky if we can now read a text in 50 manuscripts.
  • Read more:
    Uncovering the mysteries of The Book of Kells – from myopic monks on magic mushrooms to superhuman detail
  • Manuscript tourism became a popular activity for wealthy scholars like Sir Robert Cotton (1571-1631), whose collection became the core of the British Museum’s collection.
  • Of course, many of these collectors simply stole or smuggled what they wanted from struggling monasteries in what are now Greece, Sinai and Israel.
  • But their work made possible the rise of printed editions of classical and medieval works.
  • Our modern editions of the Bible and the Iliad, for example, do not exactly match their underlying manuscripts.


Read more:
Dogs in the middle ages: what medieval writing tells us about our ancestors’ pets

Digital decay

  • Even if we prefer the edited versions, printed books decay faster than manuscripts, and take up just as much space.
  • Print does not solve the problem of preservation; it only postpones it.
  • In the 20th century, digital scanning tools and computer-based storage seemed to offer a new kind of solution.
  • Second, digital images are often in proprietary formats, meaning that without the library’s viewing software you cannot actually examine the manuscript.
  • The digital format is still chained to its digital shelves in a private space.
  • Third, as a recent cyber-attack on the British Library demonstrates, the digital space seems not to be safer than the physical one.
  • The digital library space, with its proprietary viewing software and its specialised file formats, is now shuttered.

Conservation and accessibility

  • Yet physical conservation comes at the expense of accessibility.
  • We can, however, use advances in AI and computer technology to improve approaches to digital conservation and enable wider access to the uniqueness of individual manuscripts.
  • To avoid digital decay, we need to devote the same attention to digital conservation as to material conservation.
  • Images of manuscripts would then have a readable text and all the unique elements of the material original – its decorations and artistry, its errors and doodles.
  • In this enhanced digital form, manuscripts could come to local museums, libraries and galleries, where they would be accessible to everyday visitors as well as specialists.
  • But unlike him, we can now offer the experience of the manuscript as well as the text, and to a much wider audience.


Jonathan L. Zecher receives funding from the Templeton Religion Trust.

How AI could change our relationship with religion

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 6, 2024

However, I believe that as AI becomes more mainstream, it will fundamentally alter our engagement with faith and spirituality.

Key Points: 
  • However, I believe that as AI becomes more mainstream, it will fundamentally alter our engagement with faith and spirituality.
  • They trained AI to read letters in the scrolls based on subtle changes left in structure of the papyrus by the ancient ink.
  • The AI was able to decipher and translate the ancient Greek word for “purple” on the scroll.
  • Futuristic vision of AI and faith
    Let’s next take a futuristic vision of AI and its intersection with faith.

An Exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art in Paris Celebrates Revolutionary Russian Art by Kazimir Malevich

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, January 23, 2024

NEW YORK, NY, Jan. 23, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Eminence Rise Media is thrilled to announce the exhibit of a painting by the famous Russian Artist, Kazimir Malevich, at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in Paris.

Key Points: 
  • NEW YORK, NY, Jan. 23, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Eminence Rise Media is thrilled to announce the exhibit of a painting by the famous Russian Artist, Kazimir Malevich, at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in Paris.
  • The Museum of Modern Art Paris, with more than 15,000 works of art, represents the wealth of the artistic creation and shows the diverse art trends of the 20th and 21st century.
  • For this year, the GPF chose the theme "Art and Peace" for this exhibition, because they firmly believe in the capacity of culture to generate peace.
  • Kazimir Malevich (1879-1935), was a Russian avant-garde artist and art theorist, whose pioneering work and writing had a profound influence on the development of non-objective, or abstract art, in the 20th century.

Cambia Health Foundation Announces Newest Cohort of the Sojourns Scholar Leadership Program

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, January 18, 2024

Cambia Health Foundation has announced the selection of 12 emerging palliative care leaders for its Sojourns® Scholar Leadership Program, marking the 10th and final group of Scholars to receive funding.

Key Points: 
  • Cambia Health Foundation has announced the selection of 12 emerging palliative care leaders for its Sojourns® Scholar Leadership Program, marking the 10th and final group of Scholars to receive funding.
  • In addition to the Sojourns® Scholar Leadership Program, the Foundation has invested $65 million to advance palliative care access, awareness and quality, and remains committed to the field.
  • With the induction of the tenth cohort, the Foundation fulfils its ten-year commitment to funding palliative care leadership development.
  • To learn more about the individual scholars, please visit the Sojourns® Scholars page on the Cambia Health Foundation website.

Keys Soulcare Launches in the Amazon Premium Beauty Store with a New, Amazon Exclusive Offering, the Deeply Replenishing Squalane Facial Oil

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Keys Soulcare, the lifestyle beauty brand created by Alicia Keys, launches today in the Amazon Premium Beauty store.

Key Points: 
  • Keys Soulcare, the lifestyle beauty brand created by Alicia Keys, launches today in the Amazon Premium Beauty store.
  • Additionally, a new Amazon exclusive Keys Soulcare offering launches today: Deeply Replenishing Squalane Facial Oil ($35 USD), an innovative, clinically proven formula that works to hydrate and replenish skin overnight.
  • View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240117674475/en/
    Tune in today, January 17, 2024, to watch Alicia Keys on Amazon Live, 3:30PM PT / 6:30PM ET and learn more about the new, Keys Soulcare Amazon exclusive offering, the Deeply Replenishing Squalane Facial Oil.
  • (Photo: Business Wire)
    Bringing Keys Soulcare to the Amazon Premium Beauty community marks a milestone in the brand’s mission to help others unlock the beauty that is already within.

College Cliffs Reveals Its List of The 20 Most Beautiful Chapels and Cathedrals on College Campuses

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, January 23, 2024

NASHVILLE, Tenn., Jan. 23, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Celebrating landmarks of historic aesthetic value, College Cliffs has identified the most stunning chapels and cathedrals on college campuses.

Key Points: 
  • NASHVILLE, Tenn., Jan. 23, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Celebrating landmarks of historic aesthetic value, College Cliffs has identified the most stunning chapels and cathedrals on college campuses.
  • Coming in behemoth sizes, the college cathedrals take us on a journey to European architectural arts.
  • The college chapels, in comparison, resemble smaller yet remarkable structures with interiors that are just as exquisite.
  • Our list was put together with beautiful design, rich history, and the popularity of the religious structures in mind.