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Three Tidbit Stories

Medieval.

3 random tidbit stories in about 3 minutes.

1.

Medieval FAQ.

Yes. Secular spirituality sits in a long tradition: Laozi found reverence with alignment in the way of nature, the Buddha in disciplined experience focused on this realm, the Stoics refined strict alignment with reality, Spinoza found spirituality in nature itself, James and Dewey in lived human transformation and being, and Einstein and Sagan in cosmic awe grounded in scientific observations.

In ancient thought, secular spirituality shows up again and again. Laozi pointed toward the Dao, the deep way of nature that words can never fully capture. The Buddha focused on suffering, impermanence, and disciplined inner practice. The Stoics taught people to live according to nature, accept what they cannot control, and shape what they can. These are not lab sciences, but they are deeply rooted in the observation of life, mind, and nature.

In modern thought, the same thread continues. Spinoza found sacredness in nature itself rather than in a supernatural ruler outside it. William James studied spiritual experience as lived human experience. John Dewey separated religious institutions from the deeper “religious” quality of devotion, purpose, and moral seriousness. Einstein and Sagan talked openly about how science-first spirituality deepens awe.

So yes, secular spirituality is supported across history. Many serious thinkers chose not to ignore human experience, nature, mystery, or our limits. Science-first spirituality does not mock belief or drain life of wonder. It simply lets reality push back. It honors awe without pretending to know what it does not know.

 


That Medieval FAQ, 

was first published on TST 1 week ago.

2.

Medieval Story.

800,000 BCE
800,000 to 200,000 BCE

Genus Homo: Rapid brain growth in our human ancestors started about 800,000 BCE. Now, by rapid brain growth we mean about 600,000 years! Larger complex brains helped early humans to survive. They interacted with each other and their surroundings in new and different ways.

 


That Medieval Story, 

was first published on TST 5 years ago.

3.

Medieval Story.

Your sub-culture and choices.

30 Phil, Chapter 7, Heraclitus, Touchstone 17: Worldview.

A worldview is your current knowledge, perspectives, beliefs, and values, which evolves with experience and influences your interpretation of reality and self. Your worldview is comprised of all the frameworks you’ve embraced, and a good place to start your exploration is with the three major ones: language, religion, and philosophy. They give it structure, and your schemas thread through them, acting as filters for how you perceive reality.

 


That Medieval Story, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.

The end. Refresh for another set.

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