nutrition

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Liturgies of the Self: How Wellness Routines Mirror Ancient Worship

At dawn, some rise not to bells but to phone alarms, their first action not prayer but hydration. A glass of water, a handful of supplements, and a five-minute meditation session on a glowing screen. The day begins with ritual. And though its symbols are stripped of incense and hymnal, its logic is uncannily familiar. Our modern pursuit of wellness often reproduces the cadence of devotion: a set of acts repeated with reverence, promising purification, transformation, even salvation.

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The Ethics of Predictive Health: How Early is Too Early to Act?

When Sofia’s genetic test results arrived, they contained a number that would change her life: an 87% likelihood of developing early-onset Alzheimer’s within the next twenty years. She was 38, a mother of two, and — at that moment — entirely healthy.

Her neurologist offered no treatment plan, because there was no disease to treat. What he offered instead was a choice: join a prevention study, change lifestyle factors, begin frequent scans. The science was certain enough to warn her, but not certain enough to cure her.

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