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Space Travel Damages Brain Cells

Last year, researchers examined the brains of five Russian cosmonauts who spent five and a half months (around 169 days) on the International Space Station (ISS). Their findings confirm that long-term space travel can cause significant harm to the human mind and body.

Scientists already know that space travel has adverse effects on the body, such as worsened vision and weakened muscles and bones. However, the impact of being in space on the brain has not been extensively studied. The research, published in JAMA Neurology on October 11, 2021, finds solid evidence that spending time in orbit also damages brain cells. https://www.intelligentliving.co/space-travel-damages-brain-cells/
Excerpt from early pages of The Naked Bible: Interviews of Mauro Biglino by Giorgio Cattaneo
"He is an Italian, who has just turned seventy and carries his age very well.
His 'discoveries', however, are something he simply stumbled upon.
For work, he turned words from one language to another. And he gradually realized that the classical translations were inaccurate.
Winged angels?
Omniscient and omnipotent deities?
Traces of metaphysical thought? Soul, spirit, immortality?
Not at all.
All absent words, non-existent concepts and imaginative interpretations.
The scholar pointed out these errors and listed them. In the end, they filled a whole box. And when he emptied the box, 14 books came out of it.
It all happened in the space of just ten years. He has become a publishing sensation, a veritable phenomenon.
Hundreds of thousands of copies sold in Italy alone. And then, in just a few months, his brand new YouTube channel reached millions of views.
A strange fate, for a shy, reserved, somber man and a lover of the silences of his mountains. A man from the Piedmont in love with the Alps. Passionate about nature, flowers, mushrooms, birds, insects. And suffering from a strange disease: an insatiable thirst for learning and research.
He was already in love with the ancient languages of Greek and Latin while he was still in high school. Over the years, book after book, without end: sub-atomic physics, the mysteries of the universe, Indian mythologies, archaeology, geophysics, genetics, the conquests of astrophysics, the illuminating achievements of anthropology.
Only one certainty: an unshakable faith in doubt. The Socratic awareness of those who know perfectly well that they will never know enough: that is the reason for such never-ending studying.
Beware, though: he does not sell truths. He limits himself, so to speak, to suggesting hypotheses. And one above all: what if it were all true, all that is recounted in that famous book?
It’s a rather fine mess.
Because if it were so – if what can be read in the original language of that most famous book in history – then the world would never be the same again.
It would be missing one essential element, the most important one: God.
Or rather, his official address.
Doesn't He live there? Is the Divine not to be found in those pages?
'I have never encountered Him, amid those verses I studied.'
The translator has looked for Him everywhere, but He just isn't there. There is no trace of Him.
Are you certain?
'Absolutely.'
But let's be clear here: a premise is needed. Does God exist?
Who knows? The translator is very careful not to talk about it. But neither does he have the unshakable certainties of atheists. He has the utmost respect for believers and keeps himself far from any judgment. What he does know, however, is that the God celebrated by monotheisms does not, unfortunately, dwell at all among those ancient scrolls. He simply never passed by there, not even by accident.
A colossal misunderstanding?
'Let’s call it that.'
Does the translator realize the enormity of his assertion?
He certainly does. And that is why we are here to talk about it.
'Let me clarify: I only pronounce myself on what I know. I tell what seems to me to be written, verbatim, in the Bible, that’s all.'
That’s all, he says.
As if he didn't know that millions of people have literally have revolutionized their way of thinking over the last few years. And they have done so thanks to him, Mauro Biglino."
https://t.me/JewishAncestor/1005, https://t.me/JewishAncestor/1006
Excerpt from early pages of The Naked Bible: Interviews of Mauro Biglino by Giorgio Cattaneo
"From his windows in the Susa Valley not far from Turin you can see the shining peaks that separate Italy from France.
A border region of historical significance: didn’t Hannibal descend from those very mountain passes with his legendary elephants?
What we know for certain is that a thousand years later, Charlemagne passed through there to defeat the Lombards. The Battle of the Chiuse echoes in the Adelchi, among the verses of Manzoni. It was the year 773: the Franks bypassed the Lombard defenses by descending from the woods surrounding the Pirchiriano, the rocky spur where the Sacra di San Michele stands.
A millenary, gargantuan abbey. A masterpiece of Romanesque-Gothic architecture. Not only that: it is also the central element of the so-called 'Saint Michael’s Line', formed by seven large shrines dedicated to Archangel Michael, stretching over the four thousand kilometers that separate Mount Carmel in Israel from the islet of Skellig Michael off the coast of Ireland.
Skellig Michael even made it into the Hollywood saga of Star Wars. The director, Jeffrey Jacob Abrams, chose it as the setting for the final scene of the film The Force Awakens. 'And we all know full well that science fiction movies are nothing less than anticipations of pre-science, regarding notions that we will all come to know later on.'
These are the thoughts that accompany Mauro Biglino very often, every time he leaves the car and puts his boots on to climb along the mule track that leads up to that very same Sacra of San Michele."
https://t.me/JewishAncestor/1005, https://t.me/JewishAncestor/1006, https://t.me/EuphonicIntuitive/1031