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#211
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On Fri, 21 Nov 2003, Wdtabor wrote:
Anyone ever run into this before? What did you do? -- Well, when the Mormons or Jehovah Witnesses come to my door, I find it works well to ask them to come back at a time when my wife and my Mistress can both be present to hear them. That's nasty. I like it. Next time either mob arrives at my door, I'm going to ask for the address of their nearest meeting place, and the time of the next weekend service. I'm sure they'll smell a convert... Then I'll tell them that I'll arrive about 30 minutes after the service starts with an armful of National Geographic & New Scientist, hammer on the door until someone answers, and harangue them about evolution and the scientific method. Hey, if they can bang on my door, what goes around comes around... ![]() Brian. |
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On Fri, 21 Nov 2003, Andrew Gideon wrote:
Robert Perkins wrote: On Fri, 21 Nov 2003 06:54:32 GMT, "Lenny Toulson" wrote: Tell me again how many people have died in wars based on nothing but religion? People have died in wars based on nothing but human avarice, with religion as the dressing to break down a person's natural inclination not to kill for the first time. If what you're saying is true, then religion is obviously a harmful tool in the hands of the greedy. Let's disarm them. That's more or less what Richard Dawkins said just after Sept 11/01: http://www.ffrf.org/tm.php?tm=dawkins.html Brilliant guy. Thanks to whoever posted the FfRF URL earlier in this thread! Brian. |
#214
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in article Wwfvb.262377$Fm2.278122@attbi_s04, Jay Honeck at
wrote on 11/20/03 7:21 PM: He allowed that their kind was exceedingly rare at the casino -- an observation that made us laugh out loud. They were probably meeting William Bennett. |
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in article Wwfvb.262377$Fm2.278122@attbi_s04, Jay Honeck at
wrote on 11/20/03 7:21 PM: We realized (with a shudder) that these men were only one or two steps removed from the Islamo-Fascists we are currently fighting in the Middle East, the only difference being their hair style and their dogma. What, Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson gloating after 9-11 that we " got what we had coming " didn't tip you off? |
#216
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![]() "Montblack" wrote in message ... | | | Hey Homie .....or should I say Mormie g | | When you say *For the Homeland* ...you mean Minnesota too - not just the | Great Salt Lake basin, right? Well, since I am not from the Great Basin area I don't regard Salt Lake as any kind of 'home.' However, after the 2002 Winter Olympics and its flight restrictions I figure we got as many homeland types there as there are in DC. | | BTW. Why don't we ever get the Marie Osmond kind of Mormons coming to | the door? You know - cute!! | I will see what I can do. Or would you prefer Buffy? |
#217
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On Fri, 21 Nov 2003 22:05:52 -0800, Brian Burger
wrote: If what you're saying is true, then religion is obviously a harmful tool in the hands of the greedy. Let's disarm them. That's more or less what Richard Dawkins said just after Sept 11/01: http://www.ffrf.org/tm.php?tm=dawkins.html It's nonsense, that is, fallacy in the form of the Genuine but Insignificant Cause. If it were true, then people espousing atheist belief systems would consistently behave much better than they've proven to have behaved. In harping on "religion", he misses that point, and so I don't care what his letters and credentials are, he's demagoguing. Rob -- [You] don't make your kids P.C.-proof by keeping them ignorant, you do it by helping them learn how to educate themselves. -- Orson Scott Card |
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On Sat, 22 Nov 2003 01:46:10 GMT, "Richard Hertz"
wrote: You're kidding right? Well, first of all, you're mixing terms. "Hypothesis" is a term used in scientific method, to propose something that is observed, but isn't proven consistent. It doesn't exist in mathematics; proposals of mathematic properties are called "theorems". But I set that aside; this is casual conversation, after all. Bear with me here, everyone. I'm going to make a pretty good point or two, in my opinion. Mathematical fundaments are composed of "Postulates", such as "A point is defined as a location in space", "A line is defined as the one-dimensional measure of distance between two points", and, "The shortest distance between two points is a line". Those are "postulates", specifically of Euclidean geometry. "Theorems" arise from logical conclusions of the interactions of the postulates. The ideas that triangles have certain properties, such as the sum of their angles equalling pi radians, are "theorems". Casually, these are sometimes called "laws", as in the "Law of Cosines". Non-Euclidean geometries, necessary for doing things like traversing the surface of a sphere (and none of us have *ever* done that, oh, no!), does *not* have, as a postulate, that the shortest distance between two points is a straight line; there are *no* straight lines in spherical geometries. For natural philosophers, people like physicists and mathemeticians, the discovery (or rediscovery) of alternate but valid geometric rulesets has resulted in several very useful discoveries, one of which being Einstein's body of thought on relativity, flawed as we now know it to be (but haven't come up with an all-encompassing replacement). One other result of the re-examination of Euclidean thinking has been the formulation of Theorems which deny the principal assumption of great works like the _Principia Mathematica_, Goedel's Theorem probably the most popular among them. The upshot of Goedel's Incompleteness Theorem is mathematical proof that "any self-consistent axiomatic system powerful enough to describe integer arithmetic will allow for propositions about integers that can neither be proven nor disproven from the axioms." [from the Wikipedia article on Goedel] Euclidean geometry is more powerful than integer arithmetic. That is, logical systems powerful enough to be useful will contain unprovable axioms. So the question, "Which [axiom or theorem] in mathematics can't be proven or shown false that is the basis for all other math?" is simply an utterly unanswerable question, given a powerful enough system. Goedel proved it years ago. What *can* be said is that "some axioms are unprovable, which doesn't mean they're false or true." Mathematics itself is today in a state alongside physics and most natural science, of great uncertainty about the "Great Unknowables", therefore, while depending on mathematical fundamentals will be remarkably and consistently useful (can't compute a weight and balance and then observe performance, or watch your climb rate go down as altitude goes up, without noticing that), you just never know if your system will stand up to new stuff. Kind of like religion, that way, which works for most people. Until it doesn't. Except for mine, of course. :-) Rob -- [You] don't make your kids P.C.-proof by keeping them ignorant, you do it by helping them learn how to educate themselves. -- Orson Scott Card |
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On Sat, 22 Nov 2003 01:24:57 GMT, "mike regish"
wrote: I never got taught that in grammar. "He" is only capitalized if it's the first word of a sentence or in a title. I attribute that more to the paucity of grammar teaching in schools these days, than to what is actually correct. I was taught to capitalize the pronouns for God in 1982, in the ninth grade, in public school. For example: http://www.montanalife.com/writing/Capitalization.html "Note: Capitalize God only when it refers to the Christian God; also capitalize all nouns and personal pronouns when they refer to God." ....is consistent with what I was taught. Rob mike regish "Robert Perkins" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 22 Nov 2003 00:18:27 GMT, "mike regish" wrote: I can understand why you feel you need to capitalize the "G" on god, but why do you have to capitalize the "H" in "he?" Because the grammatical rules of Standard American English call for it, Mike. Rob -- [You] don't make your kids P.C.-proof by keeping them ignorant, you do it by helping them learn how to educate themselves. -- Orson Scott Card -- [You] don't make your kids P.C.-proof by keeping them ignorant, you do it by helping them learn how to educate themselves. -- Orson Scott Card |
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On Fri, 21 Nov 2003 20:15:29 -0800, "C J Campbell"
wrote: I personally would prefer Sagan's "The Demon-Haunted World" or anything by James Randi. Or even Hawking's book "An Illustrated History of Time." After all, us religious fanatics like to carry our scriptures around in our PDA. Hear hear! The day I moved to Pocket PC my load at church meetings dropped from bag full o books to pocket full o PDA. Now I help carry my kids. I'm still looking for good freeware W&B and E6B calculators for Pocket PC 2002. Anyone know of any? Rob -- [You] don't make your kids P.C.-proof by keeping them ignorant, you do it by helping them learn how to educate themselves. -- Orson Scott Card |
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