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The Biology Of Belief: Unleashing The Power Of Consciousness, Matter And Miracles (Hardcover) (Hardcover)
by Bruce H. Lipton
Category:
Spirutuality, Biology, Belief |
Market price: ¥ 268.00
MSL price:
¥ 248.00
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Stock:
Pre-order item, lead time 3-7 weeks upon payment [ COD term does not apply to pre-order items ] |
MSL rating:
Good for Gifts
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MSL Pointer Review:
It's a must read for anyone wanting to understand how one's belief systems directly affect cellular growth, death, division and the consequent quality and longevity of life itself.
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Author: Bruce H. Lipton
Publisher: Mountain of Love
Pub. in: March, 2005
ISBN: 0975991477
Pages: 224
Measurements: 9.1 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BA00914
Other information: Language: English ISBN-13: 978-0975991473
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- MSL Picks -
Why do spontaneous remissions occur? Why do you feel terrible when depressed? What is actually controlling your health? Why do you feel so good when "in love" or when you feel loved?
In this groundbreaking lecture Bruce H. Lipton, Ph.D. explores the reason why our beliefs influence our health. Can changing your mind change the way your body responds to illness? He also explores epigenetics, the gap between quantum mechanics and biology, the chemistry of stress, the healing force of love, the immune system and a variety of emotional states.
If you watched "What the `Bleep' do We Know" and you had more questions, Dr. Bruce H. Lipton provides a deeper understanding of the fascinating connection between how we think and the state of our health. On this three CD set he explores:
The Central Dogma of Biology The Human Genome Project Proteins and the Nature of Life The 3 Sources of Biological Dysfunction The Function of the Cell Membrane How the Cell Controls Behavior How Perception Influences Behavior Love and Fear Perception and the Immune System Conscious and Subconscious behaviors The Importance of Fetal Environment Childhood Brain Development Changing your Subconscious Programming Freeing Yourself from the Past
It only takes a few observations in your own life to convince you that love heals and fear and hate destroy. Look at how you feel when experiencing a variety of emotions, take notes or write a journal. Soon, you will start to desire much more peace, love and emotional connection as you realize you can literally destroy yourself "physically" with negative thoughts. We need the right foods, nutrients and supplements too, but learning to think positively helps to balance out all your efforts.
"The Biology of Belief" is one of the next steps in human understanding where we take full charge of our health by learning how to think in ways that encourage health. This empowering 3-CD set captures a variety of spiritual and medical ideas and condenses them into a workable theory for advanced health and well-being.
Highly Recommended!
Target readers:
General readers.
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Bruce Lipton, Ph.D. of San Francisco, California, is an internationally recognized cellular biologist whose breakthrough research on the cell membrane in 1977 made him a pioneer in the new science of epigenetics. He is author of The Biology of Belief (Mountain of Love, 2005), a sought-after keynote speaker and workshop presenter, and has appeared on radio and television.
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The Biology of Belief is a groundbreaking work in the field of New Biology. Author Dr. Bruce Lipton is a former medical school professor and research scientist. His experiments, and those of other leading-edge scientists, have examined in great detail the processes by which cells receive information. The implications of this research radically change our understanding of life. It shows that genes and DNA do not control our biology; that instead DNA is controlled by signals from outside the cell, including the energetic messages emanating from our positive and negative thoughts. Dr. Lipton's profoundly hopeful synthesis of the latest and best research in cell biology and quantum physics is being hailed as a major breakthrough showing that our bodies can be changed as we retrain our thinking.
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View all 8 comments |
Jo Ana Starr (MSL quote), USA
<2007-10-24 00:00>
Bruce Lipton has written a happy, engaging book on biology of all things, and I should add, a heaping portion of quantum physics and miracles.
Bruce has softened hard science and makes it available to all of us. You can almost feel his glee as he discovers the truth behind the truth and yes, there are diagrams, charts, and very scientific information, but there's a lot of heart in this book, which continued to recapture my attention. Nodding off here is not likely.
His conclusions are entirely logical, and your will find this book full of valuable information for those of us who suspected that traditional medicine's approach to dis-ease was flawed. The author goes way beyond medicine in his exploration of the miracles in the structure of life, how it affects all of us and how we can choose to be affected. Bruce instructs us how to apply this wisdom to our lives, and how to powerfully and positively impact group consciousness.
This is a totally engaging book, and well worth your investment of time and money. You will get a lot of answers that will make a difference in your life. I'm sure your view of reality will never been the same !
Enjoy !!!
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A reader (MSL quote), USA
<2007-10-24 00:00>
Remember Lipton's argument: belief influences your body. If you don't believe in certain types of alternative healing, it probably won't work. The easy parallel case is the Placebo Effect; no one understands why it works, they only know that it happens. The "effect" is shrouded in mystery and explained off by chemicals and electric signals. Look into it further and you'll find that no one knows what it's caused by.
Other forms of "alternative medicine" such as acupuncture and chiropractics have been proven to work in several cases, though again, Western medicine (based off Newtonian physics) does not have a definite solution. CNN recently published an article saying that they recommend acupuncture as a back-up to drugs and pills, because it works though not all the time. This is due to a lack of research and understanding in the area.
I perfectly see the 3rd top reviewer's point (Anderson) and it seems only logical that the "advertisement" at the end makes the book seem like a marketing ploy. But once you study the science behind and the effects of Psych-K, you'll be stunned at what it can do and how it affects the body...it's not some fake program that does nothing. Without going into details, it's an incredible utilization of the very quantum physics + medicine that Lipton discuses.
If you're a person looking for an instant solution to your problems, I firmly believe that very few books will offer that solution. However, this is an extremely interesting read for those who wish to explore and understand medicine from an unconventional, and certainly a breakthrough, point of view. |
Stephen P. Smith (MSL quote), USA
<2007-10-24 00:00>
I found Lipton's "The Biology of Belief" very readable, and worth reading. He is brave to say what he believes.
In chapter 1, Lipton describes "smart" cells, some perhaps living in a petri dish. Their collective properties are found smart. Rather than a blind competition, what is discovered is a novel collective behavior leading to multi-celled organisms. In Lipton's (page 40) words: "to survive at such high densities, the cells created structured environments. These sophisticated communities subdivided the workload with more precision and effectiveness than the ever-changing organizational charts that are a fact of life in big corporations. It proved more efficient for the community to have individual cells assigned to specialized tasks." And Lipton finds favor in Lamarck's account of evolution. He (page 42) writes: "Not only did Lamark present his theory fifty years before Darwin, he offered a much less harsh theory of the mechanisms of evolution. Lamarck's theory suggested that evolution was based on an `instructive,' cooperative interaction among organisms and their environment that enables life forms to survive and evolve in a dynamic world."
In chapter 2, Lipton present his ground breaking ideas on epigenetics, a body of study that looks at the impact the environment has on controlling our genes. Lipton observes that DNA is not self activating, a direct contradiction of the Central Dogma where information flows out of DNA but not back into DNA. Proteins are found necessary for activating DNA, but they are affected by the environment. Lipton (page 67) writes: "epigenetic research has established that DNA blueprints passed down through genes are not set in concrete at birth. Genes are not destiny! Environmental influences, including nutrition, stress and emotions, can modify those genes, without changing their basic blueprint. And those modifications, epigenticists have discovered, can be passed on to future generations as surely as DNA blueprints are passed on via the Double Helix."
The cell membrane, with its protein channels and switches, is described in Chapter 3. Lipton (page 86) writes: "In contract ro conventional wisdom, genes do not control their own activity. Instead it is the membrane's effector proteins, operating in response to environmental signals picked up by the membrane's receptors, which control the `reading' of genes so that worn-out proteins can be replaced, or new proteins can be created."
Lipton's chapter 4 is about quantum mechanics. Upon first reading chapter 4 I felt that Lipton's account was trendy, with his account of reality as a relational flux of change that is typical to some New Age interpretations of quantum mechanics. Nevertheless, Lipton ideas about vibrations began to sink in after some reflective oscillations. Lipton (page 117) writes "the behavior of energy waves is important for biomedicine because vibrational frequencies can alter the physical and chemical properties of an atom as surely as physical signals like histamine and estrogen." Lipton is not alone in these speculations involving quantum mechanics. I have myself used a threeness property in my book, "Trinity", to help resolve energy as a felt vibrations in the context offered by quantum mechanics; threeness permits a return to something less relational, less trendy
Chapter 5 relates directly of the impact of belief on biology. This includes a treatment of emotions, as feeling the language of cells (the subconscious). Lipton (page 133) writes, "the actions of the subconscious mind are reflexive in nature and are not governed by reason or thinking." Lipton looks deeper into the placebo effect, and how it relates to his theory.
Chapter 6 treats growth and protection behaviors. Stress is said inhibit growth mechanisms, impacting our vitality. To much fear can be soul-sapping.
Lipton stresses the importance of conscious parenting in his last chapter. Lipton (page 178) gives this bit of advice: " You are personally responsible for everything in your life, once you become aware that you are personally responsible for everything in your life. One cannot be `guilty'of being a poor parent unless one is already aware of the above-described information and disregards it. Once you become aware of this information, you can begin to apply it to reprogram your behavior. " I won't force personal responsibility on my readers by telling you what the "above-described information" is all about, as it remains your free personal choice to read Lipton's fine book.
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Paul Stemp (MSL quote) , Australia
<2007-10-24 00:00>
Not having studied Biology at school, or since, I was fascinated by the clarity of explanation of cellular function. Bill Bryson's book 'A short history of nearly everything' touched on the area also.
The explanation of the process of 'environmental' awareness, apparently increasingly so in multicellular organisms, leads to thoughts on how 'thoughts' themselves are created. In addition, what senses do we have apart from the standard ones, e.g. hearing, taste? Or are so called 'wacky senses' like 'telepathy' real but just unused in most of us (until our scientific fraternity find a means to accurately and repeatably create/measure them).
Thoroughly enjoyable read, well presented.
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