Saturday, September 5, 2009

Close to Nature

So grey the cloud
covered the vast sky
the nimbus ‘bout to shower
to earth it seemed so lower,

The buzzing of bees
the chirping of birds
dry the lakes ‘re once
dazzled today by chance

The peacocks are dancing         
with pride and grace
the gale so violent
yet nature so benevolent       

The trees so old ‘nd vast
drooping to cast their shadows
so cool are the boughs
that shelter sheep ‘nd cows

The newly wed bride
peeps from her palanquin
with shy on her face
uplifts her beaded lace

The rainbow so eternal
curves a shadow of serenity
spreading its bright hue
in colors of indigo ‘nd blue

The happy innocent urchins
larking in the mystic downpour
with a merry ‘nd buoyant soul
I revered God, His majestic role.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Everything Juxtaposed: Blame it on the Genes

Metaphorically, our genes may chuckle at how we humans unwittingly define our morality to serve the interests of our genes, even above our own. Sounds weird, but cliched and true. Humans have been genetically designed to get pleasure from doing things that tend to perpetuate our genes. Indeed, our genes have been very successful at getting themselves perpetually copied into new generations of babies by causing our ancestors to feel pleasure during sex.

Our bodies are no more than "protection vehicles" in which our genes ride around, pursuing their perpetuation interests, not ours. The critical point: While we each seem to willfully pursue different methods for getting the things we want, the fundamental things we want are not determined by our wills, but rather, by our genes.

In the simple model of mind, memes are the currency of human thought.The mocking memes and the laughing memes can be manifested by the simple evolutionary principle: the pattern of replication, a recombinant style of mutation and selection through simulation. So once again our desires and activity of laughing and mocking are ruled by our genes.

These are few examples on the behavioral patterns of human beings but the real activity is controlled by genes and not by our wills. Many middle-class Indians so 'healthee' , euphemism for fat? Is it because of our fondness for fried foods, our sedentary lifestyles, our aversion to physical exercise? Perhaps. But according to a team of British scientists the real villain of the piece is a 'fatness' gene. Researchers at Imperial College, London, have identified a gene, MC4R, which is associated with appetite regulation and energy expenditure. Indians tend to have variants which affect the activity of this gene, resulting in obesity, and its associated health problems like diabetes and cardiovascular disease. So the fault lies not in us but in our genes that we are fatties.Obesity is only one of the conditions that humankind at large can avoid responsibility for and lay the blame on genes. For example, heroin addiction is caused by a particular gene, AGS3. A cocaine addict, however, has developed the habit thanks to a different gene, DAT1.
 

According to genetic science, there is a gene for everything, from baldness to criminality, homosexuality to hyperamnesia. A criminal could argue that he had been driven to commit his crime because of a gene, D4DR, which geneticists claim leads to high-risk, dangerous behaviour. Me? Rob a bank? Certainly not. It was my D4DR which did it. Put my gene into jail, not me.But the law doesn't understand the genetic principle ...
 

The gene genie is well and truly out of the bottle, and nothing is going to get it back in. As more and more of our actions and behavioural traits are ascribed not to our volition but to our genes, we increasingly resemble programmed robots. So what happens to old-fashioned ideas like free will and individual responsibility? 

Well, neuroscience discredited those fuddy-duddy concepts when it proved in laboratory tests that a subconscious part of the brain initiates an action (such as writing this article) several seconds before we consciously decide to do something( reading this article)....
 

In other words, 'we' are not the authors of our actions, not responsible for what we do, it is a chemical reaction in our brains which compels us to do what we do.Minds consist of brain and brain is the biological machine. The neural architecture provides a basis for the evolutionary process of thinking.The self organizing , bidirectional , nested hierarchical structure of brain upward from the sensory neuron to the lower cortical nodes forms the vehicle which controls all our voluntary and in voluntary actions.The overall process is dominated by genes.
 

However, you can still feel free to believe in free will. So long as you realise that you're being made to do so by your 'free will' gene. Thus, BLAME IT ON THE GENE.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

The snow capped mountains

 



A moonlit night




Sailing smoothly



...the ship sailing smoothly through the sea and the water reflecting the rays of the setting sun...

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Smooch passionately


Yo Baby Time to Kiss!

I thought your eyes as deep as the sea,
And I wonder, where would I be,
Your presence made me wish.
I hold you in my arms, in my passion, locked in a kiss..



Monday, June 22, 2009

Oil painting on canvas



According to St. Augustine, "the very perfection of a man is to find out his own imperfection".
Yes, perfection is a slow process and it requires the hand of time. Perfection in everything is almost unattainable but what's the harm to aim at it, rather being lazy and despondent?

I think whatever we do, no matter big or small, we must try to do it perfectly. No matter where our interest lies, be it writing, reading, dancing , singing, playing or painting we should do it wholeheartedly, sincerely and with utmost dedication in order to be perfect at it. A great deal of joy in life consists in doing things perfectly or, at least to the best of one's ability. There is a sense of satisfaction, a pride in doing such a work which is rounded, full, exact and complete in all parts. Thus, even a small thing well done becomes artistic...

Indian women





Saturday, June 20, 2009

Seasons of Life

The seasons of our life transform from good to bad and vice versa. Good season includes both inner satisfaction and outer success while a bad season is of anxiety, with failure and disappointment. A 'good' season is not always paradisal and a 'bad' season is either not too hellish. The transition period between good and bad determines our ability to cope up with circumstances.