Traditionally, philosophers and spiritual leaders have believed that you must be religious to have a mystical experience. Is it true?
Our bodies tell us what we need. But so do our souls. There is a hunger in each of us that food cannot satisfy.
We’re all drawn to transcendence – to worshipping someone or something bigger than ourselves. Here are three recent examples.
Most pastors are good-hearted, humble and authentic. But what keeps them like that? What guides them in staying true to their moral compass?
Maslow once thought our highest need was to fulfil our individual potential; he later revised this, realising we have spiritual needs too.
Research has shown that procrastinators can produce results of lower quality and suffer more stress and illness. Why put off what you can do now?
The arts are one of those things in life that makes us feel truly alive in the midst of a busy life, writes Aaron Johnstone.
Levi Lusko has written about many subjects over the years but in his new book, he looks at humanity’s obsession with the celestial.
Vinyl has captured a new generation who want something that lasts longer than a week. It reveals a longing for something stable, older than ourselves.
Modern psychology affirms the importance of ‘looking up’, or having a spirituality of one form or another, to find our identity, writes Akos Balogh.