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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/9/2009 6:20:00 PM   
UPSG


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MarsBonfire

Actually, the argument about the church interfering with science and engineering goes back much farther than the Catholics threatening Galileio and burning Bruno at the stake. If you've ever watched the PBS series Cosmos (available on Netflix, I believe) you'll hear Carl Sagan talk about the great library of Alexandria. Whose cheif librarian was named Hyapatia. The library was a repository of all sorts of information, including (we know through tangental accounts) information on astronomy that was 800 years ahead of it's time, by our history. But of course, a religious fanatic at the time had his followers attack and kill Hyapatia (using sea shell knives to flay her to the bone while still alive) and burned the library to the ground, setting the human race's knowledge back by several hundred years.
If this hadn't happened, Sagan conjectured... we might be building starships today, and have fusion power. The point is, that religious groups are very bad for knowledge.

Remember this, the next time a nutcase in your area suggests teaching "ID" or "Creationisim" in you public schools.

As far as Termy's "uneducated people iz jus as gud as you high-falutin' types" argument... Well, if ignorance is so great, then I think he should put his money where his mouth is. He should pull his kids from school, and make sure they grow up in his much admired "uneducated state."

Edison had over 100 highly educated men working for him, using the scientific method to engineer each and every idea he had. He was also known to sabatoge the work of rivals. (He's still believed to be responsible for the fire at Tesla's Colorado Springs lab.)

Henry Ford... well, it won't take much online reseach to see where his mind was at... just Google "Ford nazis history" and see the whole ugly story of anti-american sentiment and anti semitisim.

Many of the other people he lists also had a bad side to them. Sometimes engaging in criminal activity to make sure they came out ahead of their rivals.

Just sayin'...


Yeah, Eugenics and WWII just spread so much love around the earth.

The Christians of Alexandria by the way, were involved in science for a long time, Muslims actually learned from the Christians of Egypt and the Middle East. Kind of like the Nesoterian Christians formed the scholar class in the courts of the great Mongol Khans.

Did your little video teach you about that or the British scientists in Tazmania, sure of themselves they would prove White men were the most evolved of the human species, and that a British scientist made a tobacco pouch out of the last Tazmanian man? I doubt the video did. Did the video happen to speculate how many libraries were destroyed in Hiroshima and Nagasaki when two atomic bombs were dropped. Yeah, if none of that happend maybe we all would be flying around in outerspace fighting with lifesavers like in Star Wars.  Let us look at Detroit and see if it looks like the picture perfect image of bliss and Star Wars, since it resides in a secular nation within the era of Secular Nation-States.

(in reply to MarsBonfire)
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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/9/2009 8:34:32 PM   
Aylee


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Joined: 10/14/2007
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quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY


God, I just love it when another Heinlein fan goes all medieval on a false interpretation of his works.

Makes me all warm and fuzzy. 

Firm



LOL

Just do NOT get me started on Paul Verhoeven's Repugnant Bastardization of Starship Troopers.  (Fu**er did not even READ the book!  GRRRRR!)


But warm and fuzzy is good.  It is cold and rainy here. 

< Message edited by Aylee -- 3/9/2009 8:35:07 PM >


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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/9/2009 11:24:57 PM   
ThatDamnedPanda


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Hippiekinkster

Exactly. You are the Ken Kesey of Beer.


Or Kesey was the Termyn8r of LSD.


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In the forest of the night
What immortal hand or eye
Made you all black and white and roly-poly like that?


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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/9/2009 11:39:30 PM   
Termyn8or


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FR

Maybe I should just give up. At no time did I mention Nazis, Ford got a brief mention and I know all about him and the Nazis, but before we were engaged in war with them, there was nothing wrong with that. Further, the Nazis performed near miracles for Germany, which some oif the advantages are still enjoyed today. No matter how bad they were, there are still extant facts that cannot be denied. This productive hard working people are being bled to death by war reparations for WW1 WHICH HITLER DID NOT START. The world set Germany up for someone like him to rise to power, and to subsequently fall. Right or wrong, they did what they thought best for their country, which is something I haven't seen in about our last fifteen fucking Presidents here.

If I wanted to start a Nazi thread I would have. Read the title. You want to talk about Germany today, first go learn about Ernst Zundel. Bishop (yes in the Cathoklic church) Williamson. There are others.

Don't bring up the Nazis or Hitler or Germany. If I want a flame war I'll start one, but suffice it to say I would not want to live under their rule, and I am not too fond of their intolerance for people who are not "normal". Note that this intolerance is also readily seen in many societies and churches even today.

The preaching of tolerance includes tolerance for all who are not harmful, if not it is a lie. I don't lie. I have no reason to lie. Here is some truth, reverse bigotry IS bigotry, reverse discrimination IS discrimination. That is a fact founded in pure logic.

The other day in a conversation with a buddy who is also a Constitutionalist, he said the Constitution says.......... I had to correct him, the Constitution DOES NOT say that. And if you come to argue with the truth and don't want the other side to "interpret", then you don't get to do it either. Stand or fall by the words, but do not twist them, that is what got us into this mess in the first place. Fair is fair. Right is right and truth is truth.  When you tell someone not to read between the lines, to just read the lines, make sure you are doing that yourself.

For example the second amendment does not say thast you can have a nuclear bomb, or any weapon of mass destruction in city limits.  That would be absurd. It is the reading between the lines though, that gives motion to this notion. If you simply read the lines, all the lines and nothing but the lines you have the right to have weapons to protect yourself, and that also means to protect yourself from the government. It doesn't say that you have the right to take thousands of lives from your fellow Citizens, not by a stretch.

This is one of the things that bother me greatly, so many claim to preach the truth, but are not standing on truth, they stand on their interpretation of the truth. This is as wrong for one side of an argument as much as it is for the other.

It makes no sense to argue the finer points of the Nazis or the USSR or any other failed attempt at organizing a society. The fact is that we are falling just like the Roman Empire, and there isn't a damn thing we can do about it. When, not if, but when we take that fall I would like a truckload of mattresses parked outside my window. How about you ?

T

(in reply to Aylee)
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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 12:01:56 AM   
DomKen


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Aylee

quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY


God, I just love it when another Heinlein fan goes all medieval on a false interpretation of his works.

Makes me all warm and fuzzy. 

Firm



LOL

Just do NOT get me started on Paul Verhoeven's Repugnant Bastardization of Starship Troopers.  (Fu**er did not even READ the book!  GRRRRR!)


But warm and fuzzy is good.  It is cold and rainy here. 

All right maybe we should discuss the equally abhorent Puppet Masters movie?

(in reply to Aylee)
Profile   Post #: 25
RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 1:17:08 AM   
Honsoku


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Termyn8or

They used tio beieve the Earth was flat, in fact that "truth" was enforced at the tip of a sword, or the yoke of a gallows more than once from what I have read. In the wake of what happened in my thread about Man vs Woman, I have given careful cinsideration to me next assertation or dissertation, whatever you may wish to call it. To those who disagree with me, or who simply like to disagree, you are going to have a hard time finding any stones to throw in the vicinity of this one.


What?!! Sounds like a challenge to me!

quote:

People in here are frequently asked to provide "proof" or other substantiation for their statements. Now when it comes to certain issues like statistics and/or hisrical events, OK, but when it comes to science I firmly believe that we must not resort to that if we are to achieve the greatest understanding of the point possible.


Proof, to the extent that it exists, is key. Arguably, "science" is the process of proving a hypothesis. Now there is a difference between unproven assertions and ungrounded ones. To insist only on proof makes it impossible to discuss new situations except as pieces of old situations.

quote:

Many seem to want to see published articles from reknowned universities written by people with letters after their name, such as Phd. Letters like those seem to inbue a sort of infallibility on the author, and instill belief in the reader. This is where we go wrong I believe. I believe that while the source is important at times, the content should at least be judged on it's own merit. I decided to do some really quickie research on three individuals before posting this, so consider the following ;

Alexander Graham Bell. Everyone knows what he did. Well he did not have a higher formal education as far as I can find, and found that he was actually home schooled for a time.

Thomas Alva Edison, over a thousand patents and no degree. A brilliant Man, also home schooled for a time.

Ransom Eli Olds, who actually had a mass produced, low cost car in this country before Henry Ford, also had no letters after his name. I do not know if he was home schooled.

Two of these people were born in Ohio, is there something in the water or what ? The three of them, completely independently revolutionized the world, basically started the industrial age. (for good or bad I might add) Not one of them had a degree, so even though they are recognized now, back then, their ideas did not come from a classroom.


I rather disagree. We like our technological heroes, however closer examination shows that scientific progress is a continual process of small discoveries and refinements with *few* watershed moments. Edison may have all those patents to his name, but he didn't invent them all, or even most. Instead, he set up what was essentially the first research laboratory and took credit for everything that came out of it. Mass production has it's roots much farther back than Olds. The ideas behind mass production was being kicked around in the early 1800s (and probably before even that). I'm sure Bell had his precursors and contemporaries. As Newton said; "If I have seen further, it is by standing on ye shoulders of Giants".

quote:

So no, Ford did not invent the car (as we know it) Olds did. I did not delve into Ford's background but I wouldn't be surprised to find something similar there. No doubt there were similar developments in Europe at about the same time, but what of those inventors ? I can tell you this much, not one of them came out of Harvard or Yale. (and I haven't even checked, so correct me if I am wrong)


It would have been unusual for them to have come out of Harvard or Yale. The U.S. wasn't considered the educational/scientific capital that it is now, plus international travel was a lot rarer. The history of progress shows that it is not enough to just discover a new idea. The circumstances must support the development of said idea. It is more a case of the idea finding fertile ground rather than just being planted.

quote:

Farnswoth invented television while he was still in school, I don't know about Baird but he was inventing it almost simultaneously in England. That is not to say formally educated people invented nothing. Columbia Broadcasting (CBS) invented color TV, but Radio Corporation of America came up with the compatible NTSC system which is due for obsolesence this year. However for year years tween, most color TV systems around the world emulated the SSB type tramission invented HERE. I know because it is my job to know. Also most of these system were superior to NTSC, but they had a working idea and time to improve upon it. The invention of the COMB filter was necessary for VCRs to be invented, and someone at Sony did it. But then that is another country.

The COMB filter was an integral component of the PAL system used in Europe for quite some time, and when incorporated into TVs stateside, improved the resolution dramatically. But it was still our system to start with, just with a different number of scan lines and higher subcarrier frequncies. Had compatibility not been a problem we could've jacked it up here as well and had a sharper image.

But at another point of history some caveman probably named "Og" invented the wheel and had just as important an impact on human society as any of these modern doodads we take for granted.

And so many things have been reinvented. The new snazzy lockup torque convertor in you car which is necessary for overdrive to work properly, it was invented in the 1930s. Now don't screw with me here, I have a book from the 1930s describing them, and it IS old. Do I have to scan it for you ? They had electric cars in the 1910s, and I know it for a fact because the book exists and it is described in quite a bit of detail. Now of course I wonder who invented these things and what their level of education was (I know, grammar, spank me). In fact many of the features incorporated in your new cars were already on a car that almost made it, the Cord. They were made in the 1940s. Disc brakes for example. There is some controversy regarding the demise of the Cord motor company, which I will not delve into here.


Indeed.

(snipped a lot of examples)

quote:

So the only logical conclusion is that the old infromation is as important as the new. Another thing to consider is that it is actually proven that good ideas can come from anywhere. That means a guy with more letters after his name than in his name can be worng, and some guy writing from a basement in Ohio somewhere lined with beer cans can be right.

Your thoughts ?

T


I'm not sure what your conclusion is supposed to actually infer. Information is information. They are of equal importance in the grand scheme of things, however they aren't of equal value.

Yes, good ideas can come from *seemingly* anywhere. Closer examination shows that this isn't really the case. As technology progresses, you will see fewer and fewer moments of brilliance, and more and more results of education combined with painstaking amounts of work. This is because the sheer volume of knowledge needed to reach the conceptual frontier is ever increasing. As a result, sources of progress will favor the formally educated as formal education saves a lot of reinventing the wheel (when the education is correct of course). So the logical response would be to be favorably biased in your judgment towards the formally educated

(in reply to Termyn8or)
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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 2:19:54 AM   
Hippiekinkster


Posts: 5512
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quote:

ORIGINAL: ThatDamnedPanda

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hippiekinkster

Exactly. You are the Ken Kesey of Beer.


Or Kesey was the Termyn8r of LSD.

At least SOMEBODY got it.

_____________________________

"We are convinced that freedom w/o Socialism is privilege and injustice, and that Socialism w/o freedom is slavery and brutality." Bakunin

“Nothing we do, however virtuous, can be accomplished alone; therefore we are saved by love.” Reinhold Ne

(in reply to ThatDamnedPanda)
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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 6:12:44 AM   
UPSG


Posts: 331
Joined: 1/22/2009
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Termyn8or

FR

Maybe I should just give up. At no time did I mention Nazis, Ford got a brief mention and I know all about him and the Nazis, but before we were engaged in war with them, there was nothing wrong with that. Further, the Nazis performed near miracles for Germany, which some oif the advantages are still enjoyed today. No matter how bad they were, there are still extant facts that cannot be denied. This productive hard working people are being bled to death by war reparations for WW1 WHICH HITLER DID NOT START. The world set Germany up for someone like him to rise to power, and to subsequently fall. Right or wrong, they did what they thought best for their country, which is something I haven't seen in about our last fifteen fucking Presidents here.

If I wanted to start a Nazi thread I would have. Read the title. You want to talk about Germany today, first go learn about Ernst Zundel. Bishop (yes in the Cathoklic church) Williamson. There are others.

Don't bring up the Nazis or Hitler or Germany. If I want a flame war I'll start one, but suffice it to say I would not want to live under their rule, and I am not too fond of their intolerance for people who are not "normal". Note that this intolerance is also readily seen in many societies and churches even today.

The preaching of tolerance includes tolerance for all who are not harmful, if not it is a lie. I don't lie. I have no reason to lie. Here is some truth, reverse bigotry IS bigotry, reverse discrimination IS discrimination. That is a fact founded in pure logic.

The other day in a conversation with a buddy who is also a Constitutionalist, he said the Constitution says.......... I had to correct him, the Constitution DOES NOT say that. And if you come to argue with the truth and don't want the other side to "interpret", then you don't get to do it either. Stand or fall by the words, but do not twist them, that is what got us into this mess in the first place. Fair is fair. Right is right and truth is truth.  When you tell someone not to read between the lines, to just read the lines, make sure you are doing that yourself.

For example the second amendment does not say thast you can have a nuclear bomb, or any weapon of mass destruction in city limits.  That would be absurd. It is the reading between the lines though, that gives motion to this notion. If you simply read the lines, all the lines and nothing but the lines you have the right to have weapons to protect yourself, and that also means to protect yourself from the government. It doesn't say that you have the right to take thousands of lives from your fellow Citizens, not by a stretch.

This is one of the things that bother me greatly, so many claim to preach the truth, but are not standing on truth, they stand on their interpretation of the truth. This is as wrong for one side of an argument as much as it is for the other.

It makes no sense to argue the finer points of the Nazis or the USSR or any other failed attempt at organizing a society. The fact is that we are falling just like the Roman Empire, and there isn't a damn thing we can do about it. When, not if, but when we take that fall I would like a truckload of mattresses parked outside my window. How about you ?

T


I have to go to school so I don't have much time to reply, but let me say this, Eugenics - which can not be separated from the culture of both Nazi Germany and the United States during the early 20th century - is as pertinent to any discussion of "progress" in the history of man in relation to science and ethics as a library in Alexandria being destroyed (and by the way once a week I go past both Milwaukee city public library and Marquette University library).

And the Catholic Church - policy of Vatican and Church teaching - were against Nazi beliefs. That is indisputable. Yes there were Catholics aligned with the Nazi's but so were there Jews and representatives of  many categories of people (the founders of Israel were wrapped up with the Nazis). Individuals don't make up an entire category of people, and I use "category" in the sense the social science of sociology does (e.g. category = Black people, Jews, Catholics, homosexuals, Republicans etc.). For example, Cardinal Richelieu was a prince of the Church yet he led France against the Papal States and her allies the Holy Roman Empire and Spain.

Just because a Catholic does something doesn't mean all Catholics are involved or even agree. One only need look at Catholics in the United States to find some are Democrats and some are Republicans or that some fought for the Confederacy and Some for the Union.

(in reply to Termyn8or)
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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 8:11:50 AM   
Termyn8or


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FR

Sorry about my negativity earlier, if percieved. I started to see signs that this thread was headed for the dumpster, but apparently it is not so.

I too think we are in a time of diminishing returns. It's been said that at GM or Chrysler that innovation is where to put the cupholder. I will extrude that for purposes of discussion. Innovation is that new button on your cell phone. Cellphones have been around for how long ? I think at this point in history we are going tro see alot more reinvention rather than invention. The exact reason is not clear. Perhaps it is because of money, that everything is profit driven now.

While the church wielded much clout in the past, they have lost their teeth so to speak, I doubt they have much to do with the new button on the cell, or the placement of that cupholder, or even the mode of propulsion of new vehicles. They may have poked their fingers into the stem cell research issue but that's all that is apparent in modern times, at least off the top of my head.

Money might have it's share of the blame, but then what was the motivation for the true innovators of the past ? Part of it had to be "Man if we can get this thing working EVERYBODY will want to buy one". Indeed it would be hard to find a house with no lightbulbs or telephones. OK there's always the Amish, but that is an exception. Even they have had to bend a bit, if you want a dairy farm and to sell milk you need refrigeration. How the reconciled that with their beliefs is anyone's guess. I guess I could go out to "the farm" and ask one of the neighbors. However last I heard they were moving out of Ohio so I don't know if there are any left to ask.

Another thing that is going on is the forced reinvention of many things. They are talking about phasing out Edison's brainchild, the incandescent bulb in so many years in favor of a more efficient alternative. Whether this is good or bad is up for discussion, because the new alternative, those energy efficient jobs, are not very landfill friendly.

The reinvention of TV has been forced, ostensibly to conserve bandwidth, but being in the field I see alot of other possible reasons, which are not for this thread. They are going to have to reinvent the car, providing again a more efficient alternative. Phones, don't even get me started. That all started with two wires.

In each case of the original invention, money had to be on their mind ala "Everybody is going to want one", hinting of course at the possibility of getting rich. So what impelled in the past now impedes progress ?

Could the devaluation of the currency possibly have something to do with that ? I think it possible. In the 1970s and 1980s when people went to the store for the ubiquitous TV, and bought the Sanyo for $199 instead of the Zenith for $249 they spoke with the loudest voice they have, money. They told the industry that they wanted it cheaper. 

Indeed that is something on which I am fully qualified to comment. It is cheaper for them to build the snazzy digital tuner than it is to build the old type tuner (remember knobs ?). It is chewaper to control these functrions digitally than to put potentiometers in the unit (more knobs). It is also cheaper to display things on screen than to build in a seperate display. Even on your car stereo, if you have the buttons on your steering wheel even, that is cheaper than the old way. Even the new button on the cellphone, all it cost is opening up one of the unused ports on the microprocessor and a few lines of programming to make it work, whatever it does.

Now look at the difference. The original innovations lasted decades. The new button on the cellphone however, lasts how long ? Next year they will need another new button on the cellphone. Have you bought a better phone ? No it just has a new feature.

The worst part of all this modern reinnovatrion of everything is that it is shortsighted, like everything seems to be today. Years ago they "improved" flourescent lights. They pull a few less watts now, but I've found that their longevity is not what it once was. I got to the point of buying them by the case, and that is just for one basement in one private home. What about the energy used to manufacture the new bulbs ? With the thinking of today, that doesn't seem to matter as long as the quarterly profits hold up. Money again.

Every time I try to think of something that was truly invented recently I am shot down. Even those snazzy GPS units, now the public can get them, but you betcha the CIA, Mossad and other agencies have most likely had them for twenty years.

What is really new under the sun ? All I can think of is our ways, especially in regards to how we categorize success and failure.

T

(in reply to UPSG)
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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 11:03:47 AM   
Vendaval


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Brought a smile to my face too. 


quote:

ORIGINAL: Hippiekinkster

quote:

ORIGINAL: ThatDamnedPanda

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hippiekinkster

Exactly. You are the Ken Kesey of Beer.


Or Kesey was the Termyn8r of LSD.

At least SOMEBODY got it.


_____________________________

"Beware, the woods at night, beware the lunar light.
So in this gray haze we'll be meating again, and on that
great day, I will tease you all the same."
"WOLF MOON", OCTOBER RUST, TYPE O NEGATIVE


http://KinkMeet.co.uk

(in reply to Hippiekinkster)
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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 2:25:10 PM   
UPSG


Posts: 331
Joined: 1/22/2009
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Termyn8or

While the church wielded much clout in the past, they have lost their teeth so to speak, I doubt they have much to do with the new button on the cell, or the placement of that cupholder, or even the mode of propulsion of new vehicles. They may have poked their fingers into the stem cell research issue but that's all that is apparent in modern times, at least off the top of my head.


The Church is involved in the spheres of ethics applied to medicine, biotechnology et cetera... the creation of technology is not her field, no more than it is the anthropologist or lawyer. As far as the area of bioethics is concerned the Church is one of the most prominent institutions involved in this.

You are correct the hierarchy of the Church no longer have the political or military power or influence they once had. They didn't have it in the early 20th century or Adolf Hitler would have been declared a heretic and ordered deposed.

In the area of genetics and cloning, while there is much good to be wrought from that and while there exists many ethical and trustworthy scientists, there is little doubt that scientists and science today pose a greater threat to man and or all life forms on earth than religion.

A basic biology course will illuminate the dangers an ecosystem can face by introduction of new species. In fact the Great Lakes here in the Midwest is undergoing that crises now with... (the name of the aquiatic species escapes my mind now).

I would just like to add two addendum to my early points on the Church, Eugenics, and the Second Great War, only for the sake of clarity.




http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mit_brennender_Sorge  
quote:

Mit brennender Sorge (German for "With burning concern") is a Roman Catholic Church encyclical of Pope Pius XI, published on March 10, 1937 (but bearing a date of Passion Sunday, March 14). The encyclical criticized Nazism, listed breaches of an agreement signed with the Church and condemned antisemitism. Drafted by the future Pope Pius XII, who was in Munich at the time of Hitler's Beer Hall Putsch[1], it warned Catholics that the growing Nazi ideology, which exalted one race over all others, was incompatible with Christianity. Pius XI himself had elsewhere condemned anti-semitism in more explicit terms.[2]

The encyclical was written in German and not the usual Latin of official Roman Catholic Church documents. It was addressed to German bishops and was read in all parish churches of Germany. Pope Pius XI credited its creation and writing to the Cardinal Secretary of State, Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli, who later became Pope Pius XII. There was no pre-announcement of the encyclical, and its distribution was kept secret in an attempt to ensure the unhindered public reading of its contents in all the Catholic Churches of Germany.

This encyclical condemned particularly the paganism of the national-socialism ideology, the myth of race and blood, and the fallacy of their conception of God.

Some passages stated:

8. Whoever exalts race, or the people, or the State, or a particular form of State, or the depositories of power, or any other fundamental value of the human community—however necessary and honorable be their function in worldly things—whoever raises these notions above their standard value and divinizes them to an idolatrous level, distorts and perverts an order of the world planned and created by God; he is far from the true faith in God and from the concept of life which that faith upholds...

10. This God, this Sovereign Master, has issued commandments whose value is independent of time and space, country and race. As God's sun shines on every human face so His law knows neither privilege nor exception. Rulers and subjects, crowned and uncrowned, rich and poor are equally subject to His word. From the fullness of the Creators' right there naturally arises the fullness of His right to be obeyed by individuals and communities, whoever they are. This obedience permeates all branches of activity in which moral values claim harmony with the law of God, and pervades all integration of the ever-changing laws of man into the immutable laws of God.

11. None but superficial minds could stumble into concepts of a national God, of a national religion; or attempt to lock within the frontiers of a single people, within the narrow limits of a single race, God, the Creator of the universe, King and Legislator of all nations before whose immensity they are "as a drop of a bucket" (Isaiah xl, 15).
 

(in reply to Termyn8or)
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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 2:28:54 PM   
UPSG


Posts: 331
Joined: 1/22/2009
Status: offline
2.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugenics  
quote:

Eugenics is a scientific field involving the controlled breeding of humans in order to achieve desirable traits in future generations.[2] Eugenics was at its height in the early decades of the 20th century and was largely abandoned with the end of World War II.[3] At its zenith, the movement often pursued pseudoscientific notions of racial supremacy and purity.[4]

Eugenics was not confined to any one country or culture, but was practised around the world and was promoted by governments, and influential individuals and institutions. Its advocates regarded it as a social philosophy for the improvement of human hereditary traits through the promotion of higher reproduction of certain people and traits, and the reduction of reproduction of certain people and traits.[5] Today it is widely regarded as a brutal movement which inflicted massive human rights violations on millions of people.[6] The "interventions" advocated and practised by eugenicists involved prominently the identification and classification of individuals and their families, including the poor, mentally ill, blind, 'promiscuous women', homosexuals and entire "racial" groups——such as the Roma and Jews——as "degenerate" or "unfit"; the segregation or institutionalisation of such individuals and groups, their sterilization, their "euthanasia", and in the worst case of Nazi Germany, their mass extermination.[7]


< Message edited by UPSG -- 3/10/2009 2:29:58 PM >

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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 2:48:57 PM   
UPSG


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T,

As with new species being introduced into an ecosystem (I was thinking of the Sea Lamprey in the Great Lakes), applied technologies need to be questioned for their impact on the environment as well. The 19th century and early 20th century were less aware of the the damage industrial technologies (industries) had and would have on the environment of the earth. Towards the end of the 20th century we became more aware of the impact industrial technologies could have on the future of the world - on a sustainable world that is.

I'm not sure if anyone has ever seen the movie Gattaca but I found it to be entertaining and well written and acted.


http://www.epa.gov/glnpo/invasive/ 

quote:

Invasive Species During the past two centuries, invasive species have significantly changed the Great Lakes ecosystem. In turn, the changes have had broad economic and social effects on people that rely on the system for food, water, and recreation. An "invasive species" is a plant or animal that is non-native (or alien) to an ecosystem, and whose introduction is likely to cause economic, human health, or environmental damage in that ecosystem. Once established, it is extremely difficult to control their spread.

Invasive Animal Species

At least 25 non-native species of fish have entered the Great Lakes since the 1800s, including round goby, sea lamprey, Eurasian ruffe, alewife and others.
   

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gattaca 

quote:

Gattaca is a 1997 science fiction drama film written and directed by Andrew Niccol, starring Ethan Hawke, Uma Thurman and Jude Law with supporting roles played by Loren Dean, Gore Vidal and Alan Arkin.[1] The film was a 1997 nominee for the Academy Award for Best Art Direction — Set Decoration.

The film presents a biopunk vision of a society driven by liberal eugenics.[2][3] Children of the middle and upper classes are selected through preimplantation genetic diagnosis to ensure they possess the best hereditary traits of their parents. A genetic registry database uses biometrics to instantly identify and classify those so created as valids while those conceived by traditional means are derisively known as faith births, god children and in-valids. While genetic discrimination is forbidden by law, in practice it is easy to profile one's genotype resulting in the Valids qualifying for professional employment while the In-Valids who are susceptible to disease are relegated to menial jobs.


< Message edited by UPSG -- 3/10/2009 2:51:18 PM >

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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 3:55:03 PM   
Vendaval


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Gattaca is fine film and provides much to consider in how we go about shaping our future.

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So in this gray haze we'll be meating again, and on that
great day, I will tease you all the same."
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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 7:15:10 PM   
MadAxeman


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Actually, the invention of the wheel by the caveman Og was of limited benefit to humankind.
It was his neighbour Ig who invented the second wheel, axle and cup holder that threw society headlong into technical advancement.



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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 8:30:42 PM   
UPSG


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Vendaval

Gattaca is fine film and provides much to consider in how we go about shaping our future.


Some rather moving clips from the movie.

1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWw9tboDtrg&feature=related  

2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=waH5xu9BlKQ&feature=related  

3. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=znmHMPkXPbo&feature=related

< Message edited by UPSG -- 3/10/2009 8:31:08 PM >

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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 9:03:54 PM   
StrangerThan


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Given the state of the world, I'm beginning to firmly believe that the more letters and pronouncements one carries after their name in terms of academic achievements, the more that person should be digging ditches or something equally menial - mostly for our own protection. 

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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 10:07:22 PM   
Termyn8or


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FR

I thought the problem in the great lakes was zebra mussels. Could be wrong though.

Stranger, I did not say those letters have a negative connotation, but I refuse to offhandedly assume otherwise. Of course Harvard and Yale are just big boyz clubs. Get any of those boyz to graduate anything cum laude from UWM and I'll kiss your ass on public square and even give you a half an hour to draw a crowd.
______

A good education can still be had if one pays attention. I know someone, I have known them all their life. They graduated from St Ignatius not only with honors but with a free ride through college via scholarships (not grants or loans). His Parents would never be able to afford the tuition. He's like 23 now and got out of UWM in really good form, and had jobs waiting for him. In the beginning he took a double major but did not realize how tough it is. But one thing, Ignatius' counsellors told him to apply to like ten colleges because you don't necessarily get accepted by all of them. I am not sure he set a precedent, but he is rare in the fact that he got accepted by ALL of them, and all with tough academic requirements. He was told that his 3.8 or whatever GPA from Ignatius was worth about a 4.2.

But we had taught him to educate himself. That makes a world of difference. Some of the best teachers I have known claim that there is no such thing as teachers, only learners. I'm not taking that to the bank but it sounds pretty valid. It works both ways.

Whoever goes to school, I mean as an adult voluntarily, what is your goal ? Knowledge or the piece of paper that will possibly render you a bigger paycheck ? There is no moral judgement on that issue because bettering one's self is always a good thing, no matter what the ultimate goal. But it is a fundamental difference in people. Which is it ? And does that issue have any bearing on this subject ?

I know this much about myself. When I was a sponge for knowledge, I had no thoughts of a paycheck or my future or anything else. Perhaps passion of the purest form.

T

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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/10/2009 11:02:27 PM   
blacksword404


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Vendaval

Term,
 
If I understand your point, it is that genius does not take place only in academic settings.
 


College is great at filling students heads full of facts. But it can't teach them how to think. That is an innate ability. Thats how you get the term "college educated idiot". Some are as smart as the newest of textbooks and just as dumb.

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RE: Cites and quotes - 3/11/2009 1:56:29 AM   
Vendaval


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But who was the first to use bacon grease to lube the axles and honey to keep the cup holder in place?


quote:

ORIGINAL: MadAxeman
Actually, the invention of the wheel by the caveman Og was of limited benefit to humankind.

It was his neighbour Ig who invented the second wheel, axle and cup holder that threw society headlong into technical advancement.



_____________________________

"Beware, the woods at night, beware the lunar light.
So in this gray haze we'll be meating again, and on that
great day, I will tease you all the same."
"WOLF MOON", OCTOBER RUST, TYPE O NEGATIVE


http://KinkMeet.co.uk

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