Nature’s Power is a powerful call for change in our approach to achieving meaningful and sustainable wellbeing. Combining Terry Wall’s personal journey of discovery with up-to-date research by respected scientists, it reveals uncomfortable facts about our current state of health and the disease based business model that drives it. It has the potential to refocus the health and nutrition industries and in doing so, bring immense benefit to millions of people. It should be read by anyone seeking to improve their personal health and wellbeing, and that of their children.
Nature's Power is a powerful call for change in our approach to achieving meaningful and sustainable wellbeing. Combining Terry Wall's personal journey of discovery with up-to-date research by respected scientists, it reveals uncomfortable facts about our current state of health and the disease based business model that drives it. It has the potential to refocus the health and nutrition industries and in doing so, bring immense benefit to millions of people. It should be read by anyone seeking to improve their personal health and wellbeing, and that of their children.
When Nature Power was first published twelve years ago, the practice of herbal medicine in Nigeria and in most parts of Africa was identified with witchcraft, sorcery, ritualism, and all sorts of fetish practices. Because herbal medicine was associated with paganism, African Christians secretly patronize traditional healers, and the educated elite and religious figures did not want to be associated in any way with traditional African medicine. Nature Power, like a lonely voice in a wilderness, was written to correct the misconception that African herbal medicine is synonymous with paganism, ritualism, and fetishism. Since its publication, Nature Power has been reprinted more than eight times. It has contributed immensely in changing the attitudes of both the government and Christians toward the practice of herbal medicine. Nature Power has also helped show that health is more than an absence of disease. Health is wholeness of mind, soul, and body. Much of the information in this book is age-old secrets, which herbalists keep close to their chests. I have made them available here so that humanity may profit from them.
This captivating book explains some of the most fascinating ideas of mathematics to nonspecialists, focusing on non-Euclidean geometry, number theory, and fractals. Numerous illustrations. 1993 edition.
Our spirit knows what it needs. By allowing it free reign to travel naturally in our daily life, it leads us to the places we need to go, the people we need to meet, and the personal and universal truths we must understand to evolve and grow. Natural Urges is about listening to our spirit's voice, about finding and following our internal compass, about the natural energy processes underlying daily life that our spirit is aware of but our logical minds may never be able to explain. It's about aligning ourselves with the natural energy systems of our planet and the universe to transform our lives and our world.
A systematic and thorough treatment of what causes sin to dwell and stay within the lives of believers. While most Christians would prefer not to come to the realities that Owen reveals, it is a fact that most believes struggle with sin due to their own desires to dwell in it. Owen offers a way to deal with said sin and to live in the love and freedom through the lord and saviour Jesus Christ.
Built around three sacred springs, the Jin Shrines complex (Jinci), near Taiyuan in Shanxi province, contains a wealth of ancient art and architecture dating back to the Northern Song dynasty (960-1127). The complex's 1,500-year-long textual record allows us to compare physical and written evidence to understand how the built environment was manipulated to communicate ideas about divinity, identity, and status. Jinci's significance varied over time according to both its patrons' needs and changes in the political and physical landscape. The impact of these changes can be read in the physical development of the site. Using an interdisciplinary approach drawing on the research of archaeologists, anthropologists, and religious, social, and art historians, this book seeks to recover the motivations behind the creation of religious art, including temple buildings, sculpture, and wall paintings. Through an examination of building style and site organization, the author illuminates the multiplicity of meanings projected by buildings within a sacred landscape and the ability of competing patronage groups to modify those meanings with text and context, thereby affecting the identity of the deities housed within them. This study of the art and architecture of Jinci is thus about divine creations and their power to create divinity.