The Fountain Magazine

Feeding the Body and the Spirit: Rediscovering Ancient Wisdom Through Modern Biology (Issue 169)

9 min · 3 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Feeding the Body and the Spirit: Rediscovering Ancient Wisdom Through Modern Biology (Issue 169)

Descripción

Rediscovering Ancient Wisdom Through Modern Biology A reading of the original article by Jong Joshua Shin | The Fountain Magazine, Issue 169 (Jan–Feb 2026) Deep inside every one of our cells lives a tiny molecular sensor called mTORC1 — a biological manager that decides when our bodies build and when they repair. When it's always switched on, waste builds up, and the slow decline of modern metabolic disease sets in. When given the chance to quiet down, something remarkable happens: our cells begin to clean themselves, restore balance, and renew. What's striking is that this cellular wisdom was already encoded in the guidance of faith traditions long before science could name it. "Eat and drink, but do not be excessive." In this episode, we read Jong Joshua Shin's thoughtful essay from The Fountain Magazine, which draws a compelling connection between the science of autophagy, intermittent fasting, and the timeless spiritual call to moderation — showing that ancient wisdom and modern biology may, at last, be confirming the same truth. This episode includes AI-generated content.

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episode The Counterfeit Nightingale and the Real Song (Issue 170) artwork

The Counterfeit Nightingale and the Real Song (Issue 170)

When a bird-identification app revealed the names behind every chirp in her backyard, the author felt like she'd unlocked a hidden world. But the more she relied on instant answers, the less she actually heard. This reflective essay follows her journey from algorithmic shortcut to patient, hard-won listening — and the moment a White-throated Sparrow's song finally rose, unprompted, from her own memory. A meditation on attention, authenticity, and why AI can hand us the map but never the territory, it asks what we lose when we let machines explain every song before we've learned to hear it ourselves. In an age of "counterfeit nightingales," the struggle to know something for ourselves may be the most genuinely human thing left.

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