So when it comes to disease, when it comes to cancer, if we were to, say, change our nutrition, the way we manufacture food and how we feed people, if we change that, if we change the products we use, if we focus on truly waking people up to how our biologies operate and that we're not meant to thrive in certain or consume certain things or certain habits in the postmodern era that actually are very unhealthy to our ancient bodies, it's just what things would fix

Stream of thoughts

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@Queen_alien Final words: "...one in Singapore."

And then from there, they decided to start addressing humans, biologically speaking, so decreasing the temperature and the humidity, because this is in Singapore. And then what are you going to incorporate? And so then you add in plants, and that helps us biologically and psychologically. Right. All of these interconnected systems were all considered in the creation of this building. But we don't do that and haven't done that
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Neelofer Hilal
@Queen_alien · 4:58

@SeekingPlumb

We've literally transformed the entire world, all the lands, to kind of suit our way of living, our way of getting around and just completely making all these species go extinct. In some sense, we have been human centric, but in a very selfish way and not a very healthy, conscious way. So there's that aspect
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@Queen_alien

Whenever I hear that phrase removing a pain point for humans when we're creating something, I smile, but I shake my head because it seems so counter to how we should be designing these things. I often think that we need to break the boxes and blur the lines between the silos of information and not keeping tech in its corner or science in its corner, or psychology in their corner, biology, et cetera. All of these things need to be woven back in together
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