To make our essays stand out, we can refer to authors and book takeaways on the given subject. It helps to add some intellectual heft to our content. Hence I am sharing such things with you all here. This book can be useful in any essay pertaining environment or ecology.
Eg. Forests precede civilizations deserts follow it. 2024
Eg. Forests precede civilizations deserts follow it. 2024
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"The first gulp from the glass of natural sciences will turn you into an atheist, but at the bottom of the glass God is waiting for you" Werner Heisenberg, a Nobel Prize-winning German physicist and pioneer of quantum mechanics. (Quote for religion, science, spirituality debates)
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At least compare Prithvi Shaw with Shubman Gill for a fresh perspective.
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James Mcgregor Burns gave the idea of transformational leadership that can be useful in many essays and Ethics paper. It is defined as a process in which leaders and followers raise one another to higher levels of morality, motivation, and purpose. Unlike transactional leadership, which is based on exchanges or rewards for compliance, transformational leadership inspires and transforms people by appealing to their values and sense of meaning.
It is based on - mutual elevation, based on morality, change oriented and driven by a vision.
Key ideas -
1. Leader acts as a role model, earning respect and trust by demonstrating strong values and ethics.
2. Leader communicates a clear, compelling vision that energizes and unites followers.
3. Encourages creativity, critical thinking, and problem-solving among followers.
4. Treats each follower as unique, mentoring and supporting their personal development.
It is based on - mutual elevation, based on morality, change oriented and driven by a vision.
Key ideas -
1. Leader acts as a role model, earning respect and trust by demonstrating strong values and ethics.
2. Leader communicates a clear, compelling vision that energizes and unites followers.
3. Encourages creativity, critical thinking, and problem-solving among followers.
4. Treats each follower as unique, mentoring and supporting their personal development.
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Examples of blend of science and religion -
I. Indian
• Traditional examples -
○ Charaka saw health as a balance of body, mind, and spirit, aligning closely with Vedic metaphysics.
○ Sushrutha's Sushruta Samhita invokes the Goddess Dhanvantari.
○ Nagarjuna was a Buddhist monk and expert in Chemistry and material transformation.
○ Kanada -the Founder of Vaisheshika or atomist school in India. Saw anu i.e. atoms as created and guided by God.
○ Ayurveda - Blends both.
• Modern examples -
○ Prafulla Chandra Ray - Swadeshi science rooted in both modern rationality and Indian spirituality.
○ Ramanujan was a devout Hindu. He even attributed his mathematical insights to the Hindu goddess Namagiri. For him an equation "had no meaning unless it revealed the mind of god".
○ Dr. Kalam too believed in God. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam viewed religion as a path to spiritualism and unity, emphasizing that great individuals use religion to foster connections while smaller minds use it for division.
○ Isro Chief S Somanath recently stated - "Process of science and spirituality are the same. They both start at 'I do not know(something)'. The difference is that the former is external and the latter is internal."
II. Western
• Traditional
○ Mendel was a monk & his famous pea plant experiments were conducted in a monastery garden.
○ Galileo was in fact a devout catholic.
○ Kepler was a devout Christian and once said on his discoveries - "I was thinking God's thoughts after him."
○ Michael Faraday is a pioneer in Electromagnetism. Refused to work on weapons research due to Christian beliefs.
• Modern
○ Einstein believed in a cosmic religion and was awe inspired by the universe’s harmony.
○ Max Planck, the father of Quantum Physics - “Both religion and science require a belief in God.”
Francis Collins, the former director of the Human Genome Project, is a devout Christian and author of The Language of God.
I. Indian
• Traditional examples -
○ Charaka saw health as a balance of body, mind, and spirit, aligning closely with Vedic metaphysics.
○ Sushrutha's Sushruta Samhita invokes the Goddess Dhanvantari.
○ Nagarjuna was a Buddhist monk and expert in Chemistry and material transformation.
○ Kanada -the Founder of Vaisheshika or atomist school in India. Saw anu i.e. atoms as created and guided by God.
○ Ayurveda - Blends both.
• Modern examples -
○ Prafulla Chandra Ray - Swadeshi science rooted in both modern rationality and Indian spirituality.
○ Ramanujan was a devout Hindu. He even attributed his mathematical insights to the Hindu goddess Namagiri. For him an equation "had no meaning unless it revealed the mind of god".
○ Dr. Kalam too believed in God. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam viewed religion as a path to spiritualism and unity, emphasizing that great individuals use religion to foster connections while smaller minds use it for division.
○ Isro Chief S Somanath recently stated - "Process of science and spirituality are the same. They both start at 'I do not know(something)'. The difference is that the former is external and the latter is internal."
II. Western
• Traditional
○ Mendel was a monk & his famous pea plant experiments were conducted in a monastery garden.
○ Galileo was in fact a devout catholic.
○ Kepler was a devout Christian and once said on his discoveries - "I was thinking God's thoughts after him."
○ Michael Faraday is a pioneer in Electromagnetism. Refused to work on weapons research due to Christian beliefs.
• Modern
○ Einstein believed in a cosmic religion and was awe inspired by the universe’s harmony.
○ Max Planck, the father of Quantum Physics - “Both religion and science require a belief in God.”
Francis Collins, the former director of the Human Genome Project, is a devout Christian and author of The Language of God.
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E.O. Wilson's "Half Earth" concept, popularized in his 2016 book Half-Earth: Our Planet's Fight for Life, is a conservation proposal that advocates for dedicating at least half of the Earth's surface as a human-free natural reserve to preserve biodiversity and avoid mass extinction.
This plan aims to set aside enough land and sea to save the living environment and allow the biosphere to stabilize for human survival, with the concept being promoted by the Half-Earth Project.
By doing so, he believed that 80% of the Earth's species could be saved and the planet could be placed in a "safe zone".
The Half-Earth Project - This initiative, founded by the E.O. Wilson Biodiversity Foundation, works to bring this concept to reality.
Useful for essays on climate and environment.
https://t.me/CivilsCatalyst
This plan aims to set aside enough land and sea to save the living environment and allow the biosphere to stabilize for human survival, with the concept being promoted by the Half-Earth Project.
By doing so, he believed that 80% of the Earth's species could be saved and the planet could be placed in a "safe zone".
The Half-Earth Project - This initiative, founded by the E.O. Wilson Biodiversity Foundation, works to bring this concept to reality.
Useful for essays on climate and environment.
https://t.me/CivilsCatalyst
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Civils Catalyst by Jawwad Kazi
Jawwad Kazi is a senior faculty with a wealth of experience spanning years in guiding aspiring Civil Servants to success. This channel is dedicated for facilitating your prep through regular notes, updates and other quality resources.
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The biophilia hypothesis is the theory, popularized by E. O. Wilson in his book Biophilia, that humans have an innate, biologically-based tendency to seek connections with nature and other forms of life. This concept suggests an evolutionary basis for humans' attraction to the natural world, including an innate desire to interact with living organisms and a greater positive response to natural environments, which can influence well-being.
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Timnit Gebru
Timnit Gebru is a computer scientist and one of the leading voices in AI ethics. She’s known for her work on algorithmic bias, especially in facial recognition and language models. After being fired from Google for speaking out about ethical concerns, she founded the Distributed AI Research Institute (DARE).
Rethinking AI
Gebru challenges the idea that all AI is necessary. She believes we should question whether certain technologies should exist at all, not just how to make them better.
Fired from Google
Gebru co-wrote a paper called “Stochastic Parrots” with Emily Bender. It warned about the dangers of large language models like GPT-3, including:
Bias and harmful content
Environmental impact
Too much control by big tech companies
Lack of transparency in how these systems are developed
Google asked her to retract the paper or remove Google authors. When she refused, she was fired. This case highlighted how ethics often clash with profit in tech.
Bias in Facial Recognition
Earlier, Gebru worked with Joy Buolamwini to show that facial recognition tools are less accurate for darker-skinned women. Their findings predicted real-world problems, like wrongful arrests. Gebru argues that such technologies often worsen inequality.
Issues in Tech and Academia
She points out that both tech companies and universities reward fast progress and profits, not caution or ethical reflection. People who question the core goals of AI often get pushed out.
Founding of DARE
Gebru started DARE to create a space free from the pressures of big tech or academic politics. The institute focuses on real-world impact and works with people from marginalized communities. Its approach asks what we actually need to build, rather than assuming AI is always the answer.
Timnit Gebru is a computer scientist and one of the leading voices in AI ethics. She’s known for her work on algorithmic bias, especially in facial recognition and language models. After being fired from Google for speaking out about ethical concerns, she founded the Distributed AI Research Institute (DARE).
Rethinking AI
Gebru challenges the idea that all AI is necessary. She believes we should question whether certain technologies should exist at all, not just how to make them better.
Fired from Google
Gebru co-wrote a paper called “Stochastic Parrots” with Emily Bender. It warned about the dangers of large language models like GPT-3, including:
Bias and harmful content
Environmental impact
Too much control by big tech companies
Lack of transparency in how these systems are developed
Google asked her to retract the paper or remove Google authors. When she refused, she was fired. This case highlighted how ethics often clash with profit in tech.
Bias in Facial Recognition
Earlier, Gebru worked with Joy Buolamwini to show that facial recognition tools are less accurate for darker-skinned women. Their findings predicted real-world problems, like wrongful arrests. Gebru argues that such technologies often worsen inequality.
Issues in Tech and Academia
She points out that both tech companies and universities reward fast progress and profits, not caution or ethical reflection. People who question the core goals of AI often get pushed out.
Founding of DARE
Gebru started DARE to create a space free from the pressures of big tech or academic politics. The institute focuses on real-world impact and works with people from marginalized communities. Its approach asks what we actually need to build, rather than assuming AI is always the answer.
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Often students write essays without sharp recent examples. It is my endeavour to share some good curated examples, case studies, data, reports etc that can be thematically relevant in essays and across other papers too.
2 Companies with business models that are environment friendly -
1. Patagonia addresses climate change by eliminating virgin petroleum-based materials in its products by 2025, increasing the use of recycled and regenerative organic materials, and aiming for net-zero emissions by 2040. They also operate the Worn Wear program to extend product lifespans, fund environmental work through 1% for the Planet, and committed all company ownership to a trust for climate action.
2. IKEA's circular economy steps include designing for circularity from the outset, using renewable and recycled materials, offering recommerce services like furniture buy-back and resale marketplaces, expanding spare parts and repair services, and investing in sustainable forestry and renewable energy. The goal is to shift from a linear "take, make, waste" model to one where products are built to last longer and can be reused, refurbished, remanufactured, or recycled, ultimately aiming to be a fully circular business by 2030.
2 Companies with business models that are environment friendly -
1. Patagonia addresses climate change by eliminating virgin petroleum-based materials in its products by 2025, increasing the use of recycled and regenerative organic materials, and aiming for net-zero emissions by 2040. They also operate the Worn Wear program to extend product lifespans, fund environmental work through 1% for the Planet, and committed all company ownership to a trust for climate action.
2. IKEA's circular economy steps include designing for circularity from the outset, using renewable and recycled materials, offering recommerce services like furniture buy-back and resale marketplaces, expanding spare parts and repair services, and investing in sustainable forestry and renewable energy. The goal is to shift from a linear "take, make, waste" model to one where products are built to last longer and can be reused, refurbished, remanufactured, or recycled, ultimately aiming to be a fully circular business by 2030.
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For the first time ever, UPSC Chairman Dr. Ajay Kumar will go LIVE to connect with aspirants across India!
📅 Date: 1 Oct 2025
⏰ Time: 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM IST
Get exclusive insights, updates on reforms, and have your questions answered directly by the Chairman.
📅 Date: 1 Oct 2025
⏰ Time: 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM IST
Get exclusive insights, updates on reforms, and have your questions answered directly by the Chairman.
https://www.mid-day.com/mumbai/mumbai-news/article/maharashtra-pune-zilla-parishad-school-wins-global-community-choice-award-23596773
A great case study on what community efforts can achieve.
A great case study on what community efforts can achieve.
Mid-day
Maharashtra Pune s Jalindarnagar School wins world s best school honour
The Jalindarnagar Zilla Parishad School in Khed taluka of Pune district has bagged the Community Choice Award in the prestigious World’s Best School Prizes 2025
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Elated to receive this good news of Utpal's selection from the reserve list. He is currently working as officer with the Gujarat government and this was his last attempt at UPSC CSE. He had enhanced his essay score by 42 marks, a very handsome jump indeed.
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