Category: Meaning of Life
Why we do the things we do.
Does anyone really know the answer? Ever? That’s the point of this excerpt from a short essay by novelist Harlan Ellison: . . . [My] fourth marriage just sort of happened: It seemed like a good idea at the time. In fact—and this is the core of all my wisdom about love—whenever we try to explain [...]
How many more bars of soap will I buy before I die?
Today, I find myself wondering how many more bars of soap I will buy before I die. How many more bars of soap will I buy ever? What brought this on? I recently went to Costco. I needed soap and Costco sells big packs of soap at a good price. Therefore, I bought a pack [...]
I wish all of those silly people would quit believing things that they can’t prove.
If you’ve ever had this thought that intelligent people never believe things they can’t prove, consider that some of the world’s sharpest and most skeptical minds have confessed in writing that they too believe things that they can’t prove. You can read all about it in the 2005 Annual Question at Edge.org. The question: “What [...]
Sin, Sex, Secret Societies
Last night I saw The Da Vinci Code for the first time. I had read the first chapter of the book some time ago and frankly it so did not capture my imagination that I haven’t picked it up since. Years before, I’d read Holy Blood Holy Grail, the book upon which most of Brown’s [...]
Reading about black holes might make you feel small and insignificant
I warned you, but you’re going to click on this link anyway, because you’re too damned curious. Here’s an excerpt from this NewScientist article: The most massive known black hole in the universe has been discovered, weighing in with the mass of 18 billion Suns. Observing the orbit of a smaller black hole around this [...]
Mother Nature is amoral
Best known for his attacks on Father Nature, Sam Harris is now warning us about Mother Nature: Might we be better off just leaving things to the wisdom of Nature? I once believed this. But we know that Nature has no concern for individuals or for species. Those that survive do so despite Her indifference. [...]
Won’t and Can’t
Yesterday, I saw the following quote on a t-shirt in a little souvineer shop in Hannibal, Missouri: A person who won’t read has no advantage over one who can’t read. This quote uses a formula that could work for many other verbs, too. Instead of “read,” you can substitute “think,” “vote,” “empathize,” “speak,” “listen,” or [...]
2007: Another Personal Year in Review
As all the New Year’s hoopla tries to direct folks to see a shiny New Year ripe with possibilities, the cynic in me can’t help but note that each year produces more of the same. I am generally predisposed to see coming opportunities to be missed, crises to bemoan, difficulties to slip past, and other [...]
Hope’s Glimmer Dies Again
Bhutto is dead. One tries to be understanding, patient, tries to embrace the tolerance so thoroughly rejected by those who condemn out of hand, with no chance for counterargument, the possibility of dialogue. Comes a point where one has to simply acknowledge that some people, in some places, just don’t share anything in common with [...]





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