--- In [email protected], "llundrub" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I don't give a shit about all the objective stuff. I am not interested in > Movement yagyas because ostensibly since the Veda is expressed in Shakas > therefore the Movement cannot own those families. I am just curious how > yagyas work.
"technology of the reverberations" for what it's worth is how it works , you need an expert on the field to answer your question. "technology of the reverberations of the Unified Field of Natural Law ... " that's mmy definition, i don't like the word "technology" here, i think this is where the marketing part of it starts. my 0.2 I feel the effects from the ones I sponsor. I have no need for > objective confirmation. > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "TurquoiseB" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: <[email protected]> > Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2007 11:38 AM > Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Mechanics of Yagyas > > > > --- In [email protected], "llundrub" <llundrub@> wrote: > >> > >> So I know yagyas are the way of heyam dukam anagatam etc, > >> but what are the mechanics exactly? I mean, do the devas > >> just dig it so much that we do ceremonies that they shower > >> blessings? So they are not altruistic? They will only help > >> those who sacrifice? What are the mechanics? Are they moral? > >> If you only sacrificed exactly so much do you only get > >> exactly so much back? Or is the quality of the priest > >> important? If you have a huge and expensive yagya with a > >> shitty pundit is it not as good as a poor yagya with a great > >> pundit? And so on... Is it not only karma really? The amount > >> of energy put into the aspect of creation through ritual? > > > > Me, I suspect that yagyas work now the way they > > always have -- they're a revenue generator for the > > people and organizations that offer them, and any > > benefits occur through the mechanism of the placebo > > effect. > > > > But there is a simple, scientific way to find out > > if there is anything else going on with them. Offer > > to perform a study tracking the effects of various > > yagyas, as long as the pundits perform the yagyas > > for free. We'll tell them that's a testing protocol, > > so that the test subjects for whom the yagyas are > > performed have no more invested in the outcome > > than the control group does. But the real reason > > is to see if any of them will do it for free. If > > they won't, that'll pretty much clear up once and > > for all what yagyas are all about, right? :-) > > > > > > > > > > > > To subscribe, send a message to: > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > > Or go to: > > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/ > > and click 'Join This Group!' > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > > > > >
