Lunar 3097
Download Lunar 3097 PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Lunar 3097 book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.
Lunar 3097
In the near future, mankind has made amazing advances in technology and science. The human race has always had an insatiable appetite for knowledge and an inherent need to explore space. In an attempt to justify mans existence, we search for extraterrestrial life, and out of pure need, we search for new forms of energy. Earth is running out of natural resources, such as fuels and arable land to grow food to support the ever growing population. A population that with the strides made in medicine, now has a life expectancy of over 100 years. The sheer amount of time it takes to reach deep space traveling at only half the speed of light, made it necessary to build robotic machines to send on one way trips, some of which could take ten years to reach their destination. Eventually, the simple robotic units evolved into humanoid forms. It was noted that feet and hands could reach places that a wheeled vehicle couldn't. When artificial intelligence became advanced enough and introduced to the robots, they eventually became self-aware. People then began questioning the ethics and morality of sending, what some now considered sentient beings, on one way trips. Facing such a dilemma, Abbey Skyler decides to take matters into her own hands, her actions create a whirlwind of problems that quickly spin out of control. Now the question is; Can Abbey with the help of her team, regain control of the AIs and complete what started out as a routine mission. A mission that has become crucial to humanities very existence.
Sounds of Innate Freedom
Author: Karl Brunnhölzl
language: en
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Release Date: 2024-06-04
"A paragraph on the series: Sounds of Innate Freedom: The Indian Texts of Mahāmudrā is an historic five volume series containing many of the first English translations of the classic mahāmudrā literature. The texts and songs in these volumes are excerpted from the large compendium of texts called The Indian Texts of the Mahāmudrā of Definitive Meaning, compiled by the Seventh Karmapa, Chötra Gyatso (1456-1539). In its modern Tibetan edition, this collection consists of five volumes containing seven kinds of texts: the Anāvilatantra (as a tantric source of Mahāmudrā attributed to the Buddha himself) and its commentary, songs of realization (dohā, caryāgīti, and vajragīti), commentaries on songs of realization and other texts, independent tantric treatises, nontantric treatises, edifying stories, and doxographies (presenting hierarchies of different Buddhist and non-Buddhist philosophical systems). The collection offers a brilliant window into the richness of this vast ocean of Indian Mahāmudrā texts in the Kagyü tradition, as well as a clear view of the sources of one of the world's great contemplative traditions. It is for meant for anyone who appreciates Buddhist literature and Buddhist tantric practice. Reading these songs and texts that express the inexpressible and contemplating their meaning in meditation will open doors to experience, and possibly even awakening, just as they did for practitioners in the past. Description of volume 5: Volume 5 most closely follows Luminous Melodies and contains the most versified songs of realization, consisting of dohās (couplets), vajragītis (vajra songs), and caryāgītis (conduct songs), all luminously expressing the inexpressible, as well as commentary. The dohā lineage in tantric Buddhism began when Saraha (known as "the Great Brahmin") started singing songs of realization to his disciples: the royal family and the people of the kingdom. Since then, the great Mahāmudrā siddhas have continued to express their realization and instructions to their disciples in pithy songs composed and sung spontaneously. These songs display a vast range of styles, themes, and metaphors-providing readers a feast offering of profound pith instructions of great power that were uttered by numerous male and female mahasiddhas, siddhas, yogīs, and ḍākinīs, often in the context of gaṇacakras and initially kept in their secret treasury. This volume can stand on its own, at the same time as it provides a taste of the entire collection, offering a window into the richness of this vast ocean of Indian Mahāmudrā texts in the Kagyü tradition. The majority of songs and their commentaries are translated for the first time into English by Karl Brunnhölzl, brilliantly capturing the wordplay, mystical wonder, bliss, and ecstatic sense of freedom expressed by awakened Mahāmudra masters of India such as Saraha, Lūhipa, Kṛṣṇa (alias Kāṇhapa), Jaganmitrānanda (alias Mitrayogī), Virūpa, Tilopa, Nāropa, Maitrīpa, Nāgārjuna, the female mahāsiddhas princess Lakṣmīṃkarā, and Ḍombiyoginī, as well as many otherwise unknown figures of this rich Buddhist tradition. Karl Brunnhölzl's learned and lucid introduction situates the songs in their social, religious, and literary context. Mahāmudrā refers to perfect buddhahood in a single instant, the omnipresent essence of all phenomena that is nondual and devoid of all obscurations. Reading these songs that express the inexpressible and contemplating their meaning in meditation will open doors to experience, and possibly even awakening, just as they did for practitioners in the past. For besides the officially recognized mahāsiddhas, there were many other varieties of practitioners, and many lived and taught outside of the framework of institutionalized Buddhism in their time-evidence that the teachings and the path of mahāmudrā are accessible to and can be practiced by anyone from any walk of life, whether a king, a servant in a brothel, or a housewife, often without having to renounce their day jobs"--