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tirsdag den 29. april 2014

Movies with Max

Movies with Max

"Movies with Max

The Church Steps Up and Steps Out

fredag den 25. april 2014

Charles Krauthammer: The myth of ‘settled science’ - The Washington Post

Charles Krauthammer: The myth of ‘settled science’ - The Washington Post
Charles Krauthammer
Opinion Writer

"
I repeat: I’m not a global warming believer. I’m not a global warming denier. I’ve long believed that it cannot be good for humanity to be spewing tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. I also believe that those scientists who pretend to know exactly what this will cause in 20, 30 or 50 years are white-coated propagandists.
“The debate is settled,” asserted propagandist in chief Barack Obama in his latest State of the Union address. “Climate change is a fact.” Really? There is nothing more anti-scientific than the very idea that science is settled, static, impervious to challenge. Take a non-climate example. It was long assumed that mammograms help reduce breast cancer deaths. This fact was so settled that Obamacare requires every insurance plan to offer mammograms (for free, no less) or be subject to termination.
Now we learn from a massive randomized study — 90,000 women followed for 25 years — that mammograms may have no effect on breast cancer deaths. Indeed, one out of five of those diagnosed by mammogram receives unnecessary radiation, chemo or surgery.
So much for settledness. And climate is less well understood than breast cancer. If climate science is settled, why do its predictions keep changing? And how is it that the great physicist Freeman Dyson, who did some climate research in the late 1970s, thinks today’s climate-change Cassandras are hopelessly mistaken?".................................

torsdag den 17. april 2014

Life in Enemy Occupied Territory

Life in Enemy Occupied Territory

"Life in Enemy Occupied Territory

Why We Suffer


In suburban Washington, D.C., a sniper strikes at random, killing one stranger after another, throwing their families into the grip of sudden, agonizing grief.
Pain -- human suffering -- is a part of every life. When it strikes close to home, it often causes people to question the reality of God -- His nature, His power, His very existence. Why does a good God allow this?
The problem of human suffering fascinated two of the last century's most influential thinkers: Sigmund Freud and C. S. Lewis. But as Harvard psychiatrist Armand Nicholi notes in his book The Question of God, these two men drew very different conclusions about God from their own encounters with pain.
Both Lewis and Freud experienced profound suffering. Lewis lost his mother when he was a child, endured the horrors of World War I, and watched his beloved wife, Joy, suffer an excruciating death from cancer.
Freud also lost precious family members: a daughter and a grandson. He experienced vicious anti-Semitism, endured ridicule from other scientists, and suffered physically from a painful cancer.
Human suffering led Freud to conclude that God does not exist -- that no loving God would permit people to endure such pain if He had the power to prevent it. He believed that men's fates were determined, not by a supernatural Father, but by "obscure, unfeeling, and unloving powers."
Lewis concluded otherwise -- but not without a struggle. After his wife's death, Lewis wrote...."    Read the whole article in the link above...  

http://www.amazon.com/The-Question-God-Sigmund-Meaning/dp/074324785X

The Question of God: C.S. Lewis and Sigmund Freud Debate God, Love, Sex, and the Meaning of Life


"Throughout the ages, many of the world's greatest thinkers have wrestled with the concept of -- and belief in -- God. It may seem unlikely that any new arguments or insights could be raised, but the twentieth century managed to produce two brilliant men with two diametrically opposed views about the question of God: Sigmund Freud and C. S. Lewis. They never had an actual meeting, but in The Question of God, their arguments are placed side by side for the very first time. 
For more than twenty-five years, Armand Nicholi has taught a course at Harvard that compares the philosophical arguments of both men. In The Question of God, Dr. Nicholi presents the writings and letters of Lewis and Freud, allowing them to "speak" for themselves on the subject of belief and disbelief. Both men considered the problem of pain and suffering, the nature of love and sex, and the ultimate meaning of life and death -- and each of them thought carefully about the alternatives to their positions. "....    read the rest in the link to Amazon...




Sun, sex and a baby: the unusual package holiday for Danes | World news | The Guardian

Sun, sex and a baby: the unusual package holiday for Danes | World news | The Guardian



""Can sex save Denmark?", the advert asksThe Danes may be the happiest people in the world, but it would seem that their boundless joy is not resulting in little bundles of joy. They are among the most gender-equal people on earth with one of the highest proportions of women in work which is, I think we can agree, all good. However, the country's birth rate is at a 27-year low of 10 per 1,000 people (compared with the UK's positively fecund 13)."  ....................