Termyn8or
Posts: 18681
Joined: 11/12/2005 Status: offline
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FR cory, agreed about the Jesuits, I have heard about them quite a bit having a family friend who went to a Jesuit school. They are generally brilliant. Either that or they wash out I guess. As far as how much religion, or more specifically the church has held us back is bound to be a point for discussion. In the old days the church held alot of political power and did have quite a bit of influence, but did it really hold back the invention of the TV, the car, the rocket ship ? We really can't say not having experienced an alternate timeline. I know this much, religion is a huge distraction for many, even without any sort of enforced dogma. Personally I think money has done more to hold us back than any other influence. Let me give you a prime example right here in Cleveland. A guy known to me only as "Chuck" is one of these geeky type engineers and has built what appears to be a perpetual motion machine. I posted about this and discussions in real life have almost cost me a friendship or two, but it is NOT a perpetual motion machine. Via further research I found how it is done and it is not magic, not in the least, but it is very interesting. The motor or generatore uses permanent magnets to literally amplify power, so the power is coming from somewhere and I suspect that eventually the permanent magnets will lose their charge and it will no longer work. However when it does work for the five years or so it can actually generate enough electricity to power a normal household. That doesn't make it practical, why ? because of money. These things cost ALOT and if you were to add up all your electric bills for the product life cycle, you don't want it. Money. Further, my buddy was working for "Chuck" building the prototytpes and now he has a working system that could be sold, but what he is doing is milking the project. Perhaps he is not so sure he's going to get his full cut later and wants a boodle of money now, just in case he is later discarded once another with the technical aptitude comes along and can reverse engineer one of these things, thus making "Chuck" obsolete. Is that intelligence or greed ? It really doesn't matter, it still comes back to money. Whether it is the extreme cost of these things, or Chuck trying to fill his bags with bread before he gets the boot matters not, it still comes back to money. ' Of course the church is no stranger to money. No doubt it has had a negative impact on our technological advancement, but to what degree is quite difficult to determine. Now I see a thread (upon which I have not yet bestowed a visit) about stem cell research. Now correct me if I am wrong but to my knowledge, stem cell research does not hurt nor kill anyone. Sio what is the big deal ? Same with using aborted fetus' for research, they are dead, they do not care. It is almost as if they are afraid to unlock these secrets of life, for what reason ? Calling it playing God ? Let me sum up my opinion real quick (so quick it'll make your head spin); if we humans have the capacity to become Gods, we should undertake every means possible to do so. I still think money the greater issue.Let's take the hypothetical situation of a guy who needs a birdcage of uranium to develop a new kind of battery that would power an electric car for 80,000 miles or around seven years. The first problem is that someone has to pay for that uranium. Add to that the impact such a thing would have on our petro-based economy and I doubt they get their uranium. Now of course we got government funding a good portion of the scientific research here, and the decisions on what is to be researched and to whom the money is granted is in the hands of people who quite frankly, some of them don't know their ass from a hole in the ground. Remember the joke about a congressman asking a travel agency if it would be cheaper to take a bus to Hawaii ? Think of drug companies making "donations" to medical schools, what impact might that have had on the curricula ? I'll tell you what impact, a generation repleat with supposed doctors who are not much more than pill pushers. And now I suspect we have some doctors who really try to be a cut above, to try to be better who now accuse certain patients of being drug hounds, like in cases of chronic pain like fibro, so there's more of a negative impact. Why do these doctors adopt this attitude ? Perhaps because they have seen through all the the bullshit and have seen that really in some cases doctors are creating people who are dependant on painkillers or are likely to abuse them. What did they see that gave them this opinion ? I say it is the actions of the pill mills, and having seen this, they want to stop the cycle. They want to do better. I can see no other motivation. You have a patient complaining about pain, the easiest thing to do is to write them a scrip. Why don't they ? Are you saying they are a sadist ? (and I don't mean the nice way) I see no other reason for this. I've been feeling tired and cold lately, why can't I walk into a doctor's office and just get a blood test, looking specifically for what I am looking for, which would be deficiencies in minerals mainly ? Why can't I just do that without them having to run me through the mill and have all this physical and all this, I just want to know what I want to know. I got the answer, it has five letters, the first of which is "M". Of course that is not the whole story. Money has influenced education and almost everything on all levels. Take education for instance. Formal education is frequently a joke, very inneffective and school is basically a daycare center. Not only do they oft fail to make the subject matter interesting, they do nothing to instill a hunger for knowledge in the students. When they come across one who has that hunger they havent a clue as to what to do. Many times natural curiousity is at least impeded if not stifled, believe me I know, they tried it on me. It did not work. I dropped out early in the tenth grade, but I was largely gone way before that.I found the secret, it was so simple, just don't ever go to homeroom. For a long time before I actually dropped out I only went to math and science, and for a while music classes. Now do my posts seem like they are written by a doofus ? Don't answer that, I will asume at this time that the answer is no. I will admit that I am missing some facts in history and a few other subjects, something which has been pointed out to me at times on this board, but I got what I need. As I age I am more compelled or at least interested in some aspects of history, and I believe that is the natural order of things. Of course school tampers with that, and look at the results. Sometimes it seems that what they consider a rounded education, mansdatory in nature, is intended to be a distraction in and of itself. I believe selective education is better, even though I can't disagree with Heilein, the body of knowledge has grown to the point where some degree of specialisation is the direction to take. As an electronics technician/tech specialist/engineer why would I need to know on what exact date George Washington cut down the cherry tree ? I'm not saying that we should raise a generation of savants, but tax dollars should be used just to get me productive enough so that I can explore other subjects in my spare time later in life. Tax dollars did not do that for me, I did that for me. Well I did take drafting, but my Dad taught me more about it than they ever did. Thing is I was creative, I had many ideas. Why didn't they prepare me to implement those ideas, or find out why you can't ? Today I have the skills and even the tools to implement lots of ideas, but I simply have alot less ideas. Again I think this a natural progression. I think that each student in every school from day one should be evaluated and have a dedicated curriculum based on their interests. If there was ever a time to rethink our ways, it is probably right now. The US is falling down in almost every criterium that once made us great, the innovators, the inventors, the industrialists (well the ones who refuse to play bank). They seem to be largely gone. What's more we have people graduating highschool who have no idea how to balance a checkbook, and what's scary is that those people are sometimes put into positions of power. And if you think you can take a bus or a train from California to Hawaii, I am not voting for you, but the thing is, someone did. [doing my damndest to stay within TOS here] We are not doing our best for our progeny and if it keeps up things will only get worse. If we keep this cookie cutter mentality when it comes to education we are so doomed that the light from doomed will take twelve minutes to reach us. [think I did it] What if I walked in the door looking for a position as a senior engineer at GM. I have about 912 credits in science, electronics, physics, higher math, chemistry and a few other things. I worked my way through college in various research priojects and that's why I have so many credits. I do not have a degree because I blew off certain subjects to concentrate my education to the matter at hand. Now do you want to hire me or the guy with letters after his name who has never even changed a flat tire in his life ? I know who my choice would be. OK this is long enough. I have a new timer for writing posts. I put a piece of bread out on the desk and when I see the mold it is time to end it and hit send. That might explain why I write more in the winter :-) More later. T
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