The Human Mind First. Imagine that you go to a library, a public library, and you ask a person behind a desk, 'Could you please tell me where to find books about truth and love?' Okay, you might get a smile, at first, but if you're sincere, you may be directed to several departments of the library. Take a slightly more concrete example, 'Could you please tell me where to find information about the origins of humankind?' Now what answer will you get? Be sure that any library WITH RESPECT FOR ITSELF will not give you fixed answers to any such question. Try now to search on any one of the search engines that calls themselves 'smart' on such things: you will simply get a print-out of the worldview of the board of directors of that search engine. Let us agree: we do NOT want search engines, which LOOKS like objective searches on standard accumulated knowledge and enquiries and religion of humanity, to be indoctrination -- by ANYONE!!! The Yoga6d.org search engine, begun in 2010 with a few glimpses of it begun as an applet in 2008 (cfr Yoga4d.org front page, where it is found still), and programmed as one of the many programs -- all ENTIRELY new and ENTIRELY written from scratch -- in our own programming language, G15 Yoga6dorg with its PMN high level -- takes as starting-point that we want to put The Human Mind First. We also give MANY OTHER results than those which are called for EXACTLY as in a library, or in a shop, or when meeting strangers at a party having interesting conversations, because we want to stimulate to a broadening of mind, not a narrowing of the human mind into alleys and pathways which are calcified by habit and secterianism. For this reason, those who use the yoga6d.org/look.htm approach regularly may expect to have healthier minds than those who log in to such trashy -- however effective, in a narrow sense -- approaches as those owned by advertisement agency conglomerates. However, we also LINK to (some of these) conglomerates, so you can with a hand's reach connect to these if our own search engine doesn't provide a certain definite answer speedily enough. However, do not always go for speed. There are MANY benefits of letting computers be a bit sluggish, and color-use more monochrome (ie, bright-green to black, rather than black-white in order to encourage a sense of liveliness and relaxation for the mind). One of them is that we don't contribute to a culture in humankind where internet addiction must be cured alongside drug addiction, in strict clinics. The Human Mind First. This net search engine exists at yoga6d.org/look.htm and the related sites, and which we have programmed by simple and beautifully chosen mechanical principles in order to provide a calm, dispassionate set of entrypoints into every sort of subject on the planet (but with an obvious bias towards English-spoken sites, with some components of other languages especially German, Norwegian and to some extent also Russian and such), has a rough business mode and an include-all 'wild porn mode'. These two modes are mechanically implemented. The former is simply a subset of the latter. This subset is created by means of entirely simplistic word matches in the beginning of the site. That means that many business sites may be only found in the porn area, and many porn sites are also found in the business area. And any intelligent, quick, smart, enthusiastic user of the net will find this to be just the right thing, in our opinion. Some call 'porn' NSFW, -- though NSFW isn' exactly precise because in many contexts it IS suitable for work, while the 'N' in front means 'not' suitable for work -- we should perhaps say that NSFW is rather short for Not as Suitable For Work as the other mode. Depending on the state of our software and hardware updates, we put the search on several other search engine 'entry points' as well, such as at norskesites.org/look.htm and yoga4d.org/look.htm. Sometimes such points as the latter simply redirects the browser to yoga6d.org each time the lookup takes place, at other times they handle it themselves. The Yoga6dOrg search updates happens several times pr season, at other times it may be slower. But after each update, some pet words you have been using much to search on may give completely other results than expected, or no results at all, while entirely new words suddenly prove highly effective. The reason for this -- which isn't done by means of deciding what words are going to have what effects, but rather is in some creative sense coincidental -- is connected to the liveliness and deliberate free-wheeling creative sense of exploration of meaning of the whole world wide net that the Yoga6dOrg search engine is all about. {You will find the concrete technical reasons and ways in which these changes take place if you take time to study programming in G15 Yoga6dorg in general, and the FDB utilities in particular. These speak of 'hashing' -- ie, the conversion of a word to a number -- and of 'ambiguity' -- which in this context means that the same number can be referred to by several words. This numbering approach varies naturally by each update of the database underlaying the search engine.} One more thing: the world wide web mustn't be replaced by a catalogue over it. It must remain always beyond that which anyone has any exact map over. It must remain a field of creative consciousness. It can only do so by us willingly and deliberatingly leaving some things out and let other things be more complicated to get at in a way that isn't exactly decided by which fluctuates. In that way, the terreign is more than the map. So we must EMBRACE INCOMPLETENESS as part of any approach to good computing -- more about this in essays by Aristo Tacoma. Part of this incompleteness is the use of ambiguous hashing numbers, or what we call 'implicate keys'. There is a lot of ambiguity with each search keyword -- at least it is so for most of them. In some cases you want a more exact search because of speed reasons and then we link to other sites providing that, but we suggest that the intelligent choice is to think about it each time, rather than by default going to such as Google each time. Because knowledge mustn't be owned by a private company, and especially not any company with a bit megalomaniac passions tied up to their illusory hopes connected to how "AI" can serve them. By sticking to mechanical noncontextual search, you are also mentally feeling the significant fact that you're the one doing the searching in such cases contribute to a sense that you have the upper hand over the net and that "you aren't caught in the net". Another thing which contributes to the training of your mind when you search with this program is that it doesn't try to dechiper natural language in any way whatsoever. In other words, when you bind words together in a phrase, it searches on EACH word INDEPENDENTLY because that's what digital computers are most perfect at. YOU WANT INFO ON A THEME AND WHEN YOU TYPE IN THE MOST OBVIOUS WORD FOR IT NOTHING IN PARTICULAR OF USE COMES UP: WHAT DO YOU DO THEN, TO WRESTLE IT OUT OF THE SEARCH ENGINE EVEN SO? Answer: what word-group does the theme belong to? That may suggest keywords. What other words often goes together with this word? That may also suggest keywords. What other spellings -- add an -s or whatever -- or misschpellings -- are possible? Yet more suggestions come from this. What general category does the theme exist within? What types of websites most often deal with that general category? Try what you feel like, and remember that new results may come by repeating the search with the same keywords when you use a smart solution like Yoga6dOrg search. If you type only one word, you may find that the CTR-F find-in-document function will help the process because you can then look for bits of ANOTHER word in the name of the website which always comes up when anything comes up. MANY LINKS ARE TO SITES NO LONGER IN EXISTENCE: WHY DO WE NOT DELETE THESE AT ONCE? Because we wish to employ a definite amount of energy to this, where we are inclusive rather than exclusive, and aware that some sites come around after having been closed for a while, and that some pages are viewable only in some countries, and so on. Once in a while we do a large cleaning-up. But it is also so that, say, a news site may have deleted a relevant article and YET have relevant articles if you go by means of its home page, its top level, and do a search-within-their-page there. So for this reason, the Yoga6dOrg also typically lists the top level page on the left side of the screen, so that it comes up easily, or with just a simple fix on the website prefix (e.g., a link like http://library.our-good-news.com should perhaps be fixed to http://www.our-good-news.com and this you can do manually). The search engine doesn't store anywhere what you type or what you search on. Also remember that encyclopedias -- dictionaries -- quite often are the main input to other search engines, due to the often very good series of 'external links' that you may find when they have a solid entry about a keyword. A way to avoid the commercial megalomaniac search engines is then to use a noncommercial encyclopedia and through it find links to the rest of the web. GOOD LUCK ALWAYS!!!!!! The Human Mind First.