Sunday, April 4, 2010

Western Fig: Bullying?, Added New 'Plant Evolution' Subject to World Univ, "Biology of Plants" Text: 6th Edition-in Print, 7th Edition-Online, Bliss

Friend:
My Grandmother just kindly asked that I, as a Sociologist, fix the problem of bullying on the internet. I told her I'd work on it.


Scott:
Is this a 'Pan troglodytes' - common chimp-thing - 6 million years later? It doesn't seem very Bonobo to me :). {... Pan troglodytes and Pan paniscus being two primatological narratives to explain human behavior, along with the 2 species of gorillas, and 2 species of orangutans (solitary in the forest) as narratives, - with divergence in homo-orangutan lines coming around 17 million years ago, perhaps:}

That humans can learn makes me happy :) (e.g. http://worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/World_University)


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... added new "Plant Evolution" subject to worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/Plant_Evolution#Select_Textbooks with these texts: Raven, Biology of Plants where the 6th Edition is in Print, and the 7th Edition is Online.


The world of plants is wild. I've read that there are between 3 and 100 million species, total. Plants make up a significant portion of these. :)


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To a Finnish friend:
Flying isn't yet taught or learned at (upcoming Finnish one) open, free, wiki World University and School - worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/World_University, - but flying is possible in Second Life ... and teaching and learning in virtual worlds is part of the vision of WUaS :)


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'Eliciting Loving Bliss' subject, naturally, at 'edit this page,' wiki worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/Subjects is growing - Teach, Add, Learn and the relaxationresponse.org/steps is regenerative - 'how' is at this URL - what's the ecstasy response, naturally, vis-a-vis MDMA. worlduniversity.wikia.com


Here's a beginning place for this conversation, and exploration :) worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/Loving_Bliss_%28eliciting_this_neurophysiology%29













(http://scott-macleod.blogspot.com/2010/04/western-fig-bullying-added-new-plant.html - April 4, 2010)

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