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- From: crb7q@kelvin.seas.Virginia.EDU (Cameron Randale Bass)
- Subject: Re: Religion & Physics Don't Mix
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.220839.3851@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU>
- Sender: usenet@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU
- Organization: University of Virginia
- References: <1992Nov17.002157.9642@reks.uia.ac.be> <1992Nov17.032437.2544@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> <1ebiveINNt95@chnews.intel.com>
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 22:08:39 GMT
- Lines: 77
-
- In article <1ebiveINNt95@chnews.intel.com> bhoughto@sedona.intel.com (Blair P. Houghton) writes:
- >In article <1992Nov17.032437.2544@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> crb7q@kelvin.seas.Virginia.EDU (Cameron Randale Bass) writes:
- >> Madness is also in the eye of the beholder.
- >
- >A disingenuous and logically bereft statement, at best.
-
- Apparently you believe it is true since you do not seem to
- have taken my bet that the majority of the first ten psychaiatrists
- I asked would not share your definition of psychosis.
-
- >>One civilization spent
- >> at least 40 years piling huge blocks atop one another in the largest
- >> manmade rockpile on the planet simply to produce a place to bury a
- >> king.
- >
- >20 years, 2 million blocks, and it was a public-works
- >project that provided a damping of economic variation
- >during the periodic lulls in the continuous rotation of
- >the dozens of crops grown in the Nile floodplains.
- >
- >Imhotep invented workfare.
-
- Hogwash. Show me documentary evidence that a) it took 20 years
- b) it was a 'public works' project of the nature of 'workfare'.
- I'd even be satisfied with good numbers on the number of
- people required to construct it. You have them cutting, moving and
- placing nearly 300 blocks a day, every day for 20 years.
- That there hole is quite a ways from that there rock pile by
- foot. A
-
- Apparently you have not heard of the rather common practice of
- appropriating the work of previous rulers as one's own.
-
- By the way, by my definition, such work programs are insanty. And yet...
-
- >>A group of tribes spent untold millenia guarding a small box of
- >> religious artifacts, often at the expense of large numbers of their
- >> people, their homes and their lives. This is sheer madness, but
- >> these efforts provided cohesion in their societies. Also, if they
- >> hadn't done such stuff, how much would we know of them?
- >
- >How much do we care? They sound insane, and probably
- >were. I expect we'd infer a great deal more than the
- >truths behind the contents of their little box of relics.
-
- Madness is in the eye of the beholder. Parts of their society
- remain today while the competing societies have vanished.
-
- >> It is inappropriate to judge theology by the rules of science.
- >
- >Only to a twit.
-
- More of that vaunted logic? I'm impressed.
-
- "... I have repeatedly said that in my opinion the idea of
- a personal God is a childlike one. You may call me an agnostic,
- but I do not share the crusading spirit of the professional
- atheist whose fervor is mostly due to a painful act of liberation
- from the fetters of religious indoctrination received in youth.
- I prefer an attitude of humility corresponding to the weakness
- of our intellectual understanding of nature and our own
- being."
- Albert Einstein (1949)
-
- Apparently there are many of us twits who have the wisdom to realize
- that there are things outside of science, and that outside, we have
- only opinions.
-
- dale "Twits R' Us" bass
-
-
-
- --
- C. R. Bass crb7q@virginia.edu
- Department of Mechanical,
- Aerospace and Nuclear Engineering
- University of Virginia (804) 924-7926
-