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Motivation: The Ultimate Pathway to Motivation and Success like a US NAVY SEAL: Learn Confidence, Self-Discipline & Winning with Lessons used only by the most Dangerous Men on the Planet!

“The Pain You Feel Today Is the Strength You Feel Tomorrow.”

Today’s modern day warrior is called the US NAVY SEAL and they have much to teach us. They succeed more often than not because their place of practice is far beyond the outter limits of their comfort zone.

The purpose of this book is to inspire and motivate you to reconnect with “Why do I need to do this?” It teaches simple disciplines and ways of being that will wake you up and point you in the right direction. “60% of people don’t care about your problems and the other 40% are glad you have them.” It’s time for your “Gut Check”. It’s time to do something. It’s time to take action.

Motivation: The Ultimate Pathway to Motivation and Success like a US NAVY SEAL – Learn Confidence, Self-Discipline & Winning with Lessons used only by the most Dangerous Men on the Planet! will teach you:

*Simple Lessons in Self-Discipline *What is Stopping you? *Mental Motivation is Crucial to Success *Develop Elite Warrior Habits *Motivational Goal Setting *Push Your Body to Prepare Your Mind *Benefits of Training Like a Badass *Mediate Like a SEAL

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A God That Could Be Real: Spirituality, Science, and the Future of Our Planet

A paradigm-shifting blend of science, religion, and philosophy for agnostic, spiritual-but-not-religious, and scientifically minded readers
 
Many people are fed up with the way traditional religion alienates them: too easily it can perpetuate conflict, vilify science, and undermine reason. Nancy Abrams, a philosopher of science, lawyer, and lifelong atheist, is among them. And yet, when she turned to the recovery community to face a personal struggle, she found that imagining a higher power gave her a new freedom. Intellectually, this was quite surprising.
 
Meanwhile her husband, famed astrophysicist Joel Primack, was helping create a new theory of the universe based on dark matter and dark energy, and Abrams was collaborating with him on two books that put the new scientific picture into a social and political context. She wondered, “Could anything actually exist in this strange new universe that is worthy of the name ‘God?’”
 
In A God That Could Be Real, Abrams explores a radically new way of thinking about God. She dismantles several common assumptions about God and shows why an omniscient, omnipotent God that created the universe and plans what happens is incompatible with science—but that this doesn’t preclude a God that can comfort and empower us.
 
Moving away from traditional arguments for God, Abrams finds something worthy of the name “God” in the new science of emergence: just as a complex ant hill emerges from the collective behavior of individually clueless ants, and just as the global economy emerges from the interactions of billions of individuals’ choices, God, she argues, is an “emergent phenomenon” that arises from the staggering complexity of humanity’s collective aspirations and is in dialogue with every individual. This God did not create the universe—it created the meaning of the universe. It’s not universal—it’s planetary. It can’t change the world, but it helps us change the world. A God that could be real, Abrams shows us, is what humanity needs to inspire us to collectively cooperate to protect our warming planet and create a long-term civilization.