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!#$@ Logophiles*

18 Jul

If you’re a logophile, I have a word for you: grawlix.

*And, yes, the title of this post is entirely facetious.

Inglehart-Welzel Cultural Map of the World

5 Jul

While we’re on values, this map and the attached article are fairly fascinating.  Reducing all our values to only two axes is a unique idea, and it’s interesting how closely different areas of the world group together.

If You Need a Smile…

28 Jun

There are certain things which are pretty much guaranteed to make me smile.  For instance, the “Who’s on First?” routine by Abbott and Costello invariably makes me laugh, though every time I go into it thinking, “it can’t possibly be that funny this time.”  My newest discovery in this category comes from a group of Canadians and is entitled “The Ninjas.”

What is it?  It is the second song on the Barenaked Ladies’ new album Snacktime.  It hasn’t failed yet to make me smile, even if I’m in a rather melancholy mood.  How can it, with lyrics like these:

I woke up this morning
And everything was different
Something was strange in the air
I woke up this morning
And everything was different
I knew that the ninjas had been there

and

The ninjas are deadly and silent
They’re also unspeakably violent
They speak Japanese
They do whatever they please
And if you tear of their mask,
They’ll be smiling

So if you need a laugh, I heartily recommend “The Ninjas” to you.  In fact, I recommend the whole album.  Other gems on it include “7 8 9″, “Pollywog In a Bog”, “Popcorn” (never thought you’d hear someone make music sound like popcorn popping, did you?), and “Crazy ABC’s”.  To  give you a taste of that last one:

A is for aisle
B is for bdellium
C is for czar
And if you see him, would you mind telling him-

It’s a children’s music album but has plety of jokes for us older children in it too.  You can get it at Amazon, eMusic, or iTunes.

And if you don’t believe me yet, you can listen to the NPR All Things Considered story that made me buy it.  Enjoy!

Update (7/5/08): One further reflection.  I think that the following may be some of the most inspired lyrics I have ever heard (from “Raisins”):

Raisins come from grapes
People come from apes
I come from Canada

A Few Links

17 Jun

The problem with working as an “Information Technology Program Officer” is that after a full day of staring at a computer screen at work one does not particularly care to look at another one at home.  This poses difficulties when doing things such as updating a blog.  (On the other hand, being in IT does give me the pleasure of working with Joomla!, which I heartily recommend to anyone attempting to build a website.)

Still, I have a sneaking suspicion that writing develops my mind and thus should not be lightly abandoned.  Consequently I’ve got several ideas coming down the pipe that will, hopefully, see the light of day soon.  (And yes, remkade, my thoughts on panentheism are among them; they’re just taking an extra long time to develop.  Or I’m lazy.)

For today, however, we’ll settle for a few interesting links:

Listen to a Lawyer on C-SPAN

17 May

The other day I happened across C-SPAN Radio while searching for an NPR station.  (In fact, I thought it was NPR and was starting to wonder why they were covering so many Senate hearings.)  Though I later found the actual NPR station, I’ve kept listening to C-SPAN on and off.

This evening that paid off when the station played a fascinating speech given by Thomas Goldstein.  You can find it online here; it starts at 27 minutes and 45 seconds into the program.  (You’ll need Real Player installed to watch it.)

Goldstein spoke about his circuitous path to becoming a Supreme Court Lawyer and the need to find a niche in the field.  While I have no desire to become a lawyer, what he says is applicable to just about any profession.  He’s a very entertaining speaker and the story is well worth listening to.  Enjoy!

A Correction to Dawkin’s Letter

23 Apr

Richard Dawkins recently posted an open letter on his blog in response to a Jew who was upset after seeing the film Expelled.  Most of the letter is very good; Dawkins exposes some of the foolish connections made by the film between Darwinism and Nazism.  It also recognizes the problems created by Expelled when the film tricks people into believing untruths by using inflammatory rhetoric and examples.

There is one point where Dawkins goes wrong, however. When disproving the link between Darwinism and Nazism, Dawkins brings up the connection between Nazism and Christianity. Here he makes the same mistake that “Mr J” made: condemning a belief because radical people or ideas drew upon that belief.  He even makes this mistake using the same radicals as “Mr J,” the Nazis.  Dawkins should know better than to do this.

Specifically he says:

Hitler had a lot of support in Germany. His horrible bidding was done by millions of ordinary German footsoldiers, and the great majority of them were Christians. Many were Lutheran, and many (like Hitler himself) were Roman Catholic. Very few were atheists, and whatever else Hitler was he most certainly was not an atheist. It is sometimes said that Hitler only pretended to be Catholic, in order to win the Church’s support for his regime. In this he was very largely successful. So, whether or not Hitler was himself a true Catholic (as he often claimed) the Church bears a heavy responsibility for what happened. And Hitler himself used religion to justify his anti-Semitism.

Here Dawkins is playing with the facts, but not presenting the whole picture.  We can look at any religion or culture in this world—Christianity, Islam or Buddhism; American, Japanese, or German; religious or atheist—and find people who have done horrible things.  That does not mean the core of the system they self-identify with is the cause of their atrocities.

Second, the argument that very few were atheists means nothing for two reasons.  First, it says nothing about the percentage of atheists in the general population.  Second, and related, is the fact that Germany was a historically Christian country.  Therefore many people who self-identified as Christians may not have held firmly to the tradition.

Dawkins then states that “the Church bears a heavy responsibility for what happened.”  This is very true in one sense.  Both the Catholic Church and the Protestant Church often stood by and allowed anti-Semitism to continue unchecked.  In so doing they implicated themselves with the regime.  This does not mean, however, that their beliefs caused the regime’s actions.

Finally, Dawkins ignores the strong responses of many Christians during the Nazi era.  One very prominent example is, of course, Dietrich Bonhoeffer and the Confessing Church.  When it comes to defining the core of Christianity, examples such as Bonhoeffer must hold as much weight as the fact that Hitler nominally identified himself as Catholic.

Dawkins then continues by expanding to Christianity as a whole:

Anti-Semitism has been rife in Europe for many many centuries, positively encouraged by most Christian churches, including especially the two that dominate Germany. The Roman Catholic Church has notoriously persecuted Jews as “Christ-killers”. While, as for the Lutherans, Martin Luther himself wrote a book called On the Jews and their Lies from which Hitler quoted. And Luther publicly said that “All Jews should be driven from Germany.”

Again Dawkins is providing several true facts outside of their proper context.  He ignores the entire socio-cultural context surrounding European anti-Judaism. Note the distinction between anti-Judaism, which was a cultural prejudice prevalent during the ninteenth century and anti-Semitism, a racial prejudice which arose around the time of the Nazis.  Dawkins makes no mention of any such distinction.

On the whole, Dawkins’ open letter is a great response to “Mr J.”  Dawkins should not, however, have taken this chance to put in a jibe at Christianity.  By doing so he both propogated false information and weakened his own argument by falling prey to the same error as “Mr J.”

Scientific American on Expelled

17 Apr

A few weeks ago I mentioned the movie Expelled and commented on the problems created by trying to mix science and religion incorrectly.  Today I saw an article concerning the miovie on Scientific American which illustrates my comments very well.  The entire article is interesting, but points five and six are especially pertinent.

Christianity and Creation

3 Apr

Over at the Geekery, Kyle has been doing more thinking on the meaning of the creation myth and how Christianity does not inherently deny science or evolutionary theory.  Instead of writing up my own thoughts, which are fairly similar, I’ll just point you over to his:

  1. The Creation: Mythology
  2. The Creation: History
  3. The Creation: Evolutionary Theology
  4. The Creation: Creation vs. Evolution

Time Magazine on Obama’s Speech

22 Mar

Time has a very insightful article on Barack Obama’s speech on race last week, recognizing both why Obama took the route he did and why it is a very dangerous move.  From the conclusion:

By asking voters to understand the context of Wright’s anger, though, Obama is counting on voters to accept nuance in an arena that almost always rewards simplicity over complexity. Politicians tend to offer deliberately banal choices: Either we move forward or we fall backward, either we let the economy falter or we help it grow, either we succumb to our enemies or we defeat them — the choice is up to you, America! Obama’s formulation was different. Explicitly asking Americans to grapple with racial divisions and then transcend them — that’s a bolder, riskier request.

As for me, I believe Obama did exactly what he needed to do, both for the campaign and for his conscience.  The result was one of the most inspiring speeches I have ever heard.

He Nailed It

15 Mar

We use Linux because it’s fun.  I’ve tried telling people this before; they don’t seem to understand.

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