Tuesday, November 30, 2010

QUOTES: On the need for a Liberal Education


"W hen young people are asked, 'What are you interested in?' they answer that they are interested in justice: they want justice for the Negro, they want justice for the Third World. If you say, 'Well, what is justice?' they haven't any idea.”


—Robert Maynard Hutchins, 1970

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Don't Go To the Airport With This!

from the Hammacher-Schlemmer catalog...


The Only Complete Swiss Army Knife.


This is the largest Swiss Army knife in the world, holder of the Guinness World Record for "The Most Multifunctional Penknife," with 87 precision-engineered tools spanning 112 functions. Made by Wenger, crafters of genuine Swiss Army knives since 1893, it uses stainless steel for all parts and is hand-assembled by just two cutlery specialists in Delmont, Switzerland, ensuring that every knife meets exacting standards. It has seven blades, three types of pliers, three golf tools (club face cleaner, shoe spike wrench, and divot repair tool), 25 flat- and Phillips-head screwdrivers and bits, saws, wrenches, and more. It also has a bicycle chain rivet setter, signal whistle, 12/20-gauge shotgun choke tube tool, combination fish scaler, hook disgorger, and line guide tool, cigar-cutting scissors, laser pointer, tire-tread gauge, toothpick, tweezers, and key ring. 3 1/4" L x 8 3/4" W. (2 3/4 lbs.)

View the complete list of precision-engineered tools.

Item 74670 $1,400.00

Thursday, November 25, 2010

A Prayer of Thanksgiving

Almighty God, Father of all mercies,
we your unworthy servants
give you humble thanks
for all your goodness and loving-kindness to us
and to all whom you have made.
We bless you for our creation, preservation, and all the blessings of this life;
but above all for your immeasurable love in the redemption of the world
by our Lord Jesus Christ;
for the means of grace,
and for the hope of glory.
And, we pray, give us such an awareness of your mercies,
that with truly thankful hearts we may show forth your praise,
not only with our lips, but in our lives,
by giving up our selves to your service,
and by walking before you in holiness and righteousness all our days;
through Jesus Christ our Lord,
to whom, with you and the Holy Spirit,
be honor and glory throughout all ages.
Amen

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

The Glenn Beck Conspiracy Theory Generator


In the tradition of the Postmodern Generator, here is the Glenn Beck Conspiracy Generator.



Godwin's law (also known as Godwin's law of Nazi Analogies) is a humorous observation made by Mike Godwin in 1990 which has become an Internet adage. It states: "As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches."



.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Outsourcing Your Kid's Spiritual Formation

(another great link via  Brad)
Are youth groups a way parents outsource their childrens' spiritual formation? David Fitch thinks so, in his post, "Youth Groups Destroy Children's Lives."  "The basic evangelical practice of "youth group" - i.e. isolating youth from the greater life, ministry, growth of the congregation - is intrinsically dysfunctional and smacks of age segregation; teenagers need to be mentored ; engaged in ...real productive ministry - they fact that they are generally not is reflected in the massive number of American church kids that go off to college; never return to church."

These are the  things I'm pondering as I read Fitch's post:

1) This fall, a young woman in the U of Oregon grad school has begun attending VCC. Her parents served an Evangelical Free Church in Utah, so she grew up, perforce, without the usual Evangelical Youth Group Experience. The only "group" she had was her church... and it was marginalized, in the greater Mormon culture. The first thing she did when she came to us was to volunteer to help teach Sunday school.

2) Another new couple, whose children are grown, made this observation: "People get saved at [Church A]; they send their kids to [Church B] when they become teenagers; they wind up at [other churches] when the nest is empty.

3) ISTM that part of our protestant DNA is fearing Church, so we have gone the other direction, and so allowed our ecclesiology to be formed by the culture, often rationalizing this as evangelization. Consumer cultures emphasize catering to markets, and measure success by market share. If ministry is understood in terms of markets, then youth ministry will view youth as consumers, and seek to isolate and elevate them, in order to better target and play to their wants and perceived needs. But this is just the opposite of biblical spiritual formation. Instead of persons being formed by the ministry of Word and Sacrament, youth themselves form ministry as consumers.

Here are Fitch's concerns:

1.) YOUTH GROUPS FOSTER PEER ORIENTATION. Youth groups segregate the youth from the adults creating programing geered towards them as a separate culture. This creates a gap between the youth and the adults culturally. This then leads the youth to look to their peers for orientation into life. This I contend works against the discipleship of youth into Christ. I contend this peer orientation is disasterous for the lives of our children.

Of course our culture at large already does this. And our parents generally eat it up. It’s a fact that, due to the economic and cultural changes of modern society, children/teenagers have been segregated in school classrooms, and targeted as a separate niche consumer market by culture industries. As a result, they look increasingly to their peers for a sense of right and wrong, for values, identity, codes of behavior. They have less connection with adults either in or outside immediate family (you need both) as role models for life. This undermines healthy development and fosters hostile and sexualized youth culture. Children lose their true individuality, become overly conformist, desensitized and alienated. Being “cool” matters more to them than anything else. This is American culture! In the words of child psychologist Gordon Neufeld (a book I’d recommend), peer orientation undercuts the necessary parental connection in that parental nurturance cannot get through, is always insecure, cannot bring the child to rest, and is unable to be fulfilled (closeness unmet). As such peer orientation crushes individual development.

Youth groups that play to this peer group dynamic create the playground for all of the above developmental issues to explode. This leads to the next observation.

2.) YOUTH GROUPS UNDERCUT WHOLISTIC COMMUNITY FROM WHICH A CHILD CAN LEARN FAITH IN CHRIST AS A WAY OF LIFE/RELATIONSHIP, NOT JUST INFORMATION SLICKLY DELIVERED.

As Neil Cole has put it so well here (click on “What about kids in Organic Church?”), children learn about the living God by being in living relationships within a community where God is present. Once Jesus becomes infotainment, once it becomes a program, detached from real relationships, it loses its reality. It takes on the character of a learning experience in competition with other learning experiences. That’s a competition I’m just not interested in. In the midst of all these learning programs, children are consistently learning their allegiances from real life interactions with adults they respect. They sense insincerity and/or lack of integrity immediately. The life in Christ becomes attractive through the irresistable love of Christ that is shared visibly in and around our life together. If children are not immersed in this world, chances are they will find church boring and irrelevant. They will not withstand the discipline necessary to be shaped into something more than immediate gratifications. They will not have the wherewithal to give it time and learn what “Jesus is Lord” means as that reality by which we live our lives into His Kingdom.

3.) YOUTH GROUPS TOO OFTEN TRY TO ATTRACT YOUTH PLAYING TO THEIR WORST INTERESTS.

It’s a mistake to try to “attract” youth to discipleship with either social occasions that play on their sexual insecurities or music entertainment that plays on their desire to be “cool.” There will be times I am sure to attend the occasional rock concert or have the occasional social time together. But what the church should do for its youth most of all is foster spaces for meeting God where they can be trained to listen for God and commune with Him in silence, in prayer. Mark Yaconelli does a great job explaining this basic thing. I have seen this basic concept transform youth groups overnight in churches of some of my students. I also think the other best thing we can do for youth is organize mission trips to places in need around the world where youth come together to sacrifice and make a difference for the kingdom. This kind of mission trip (as opposed to a resort-like vacation) is a spiritual practice we must regularly encourage and fund in our churches. Again, I have singularly seen this practice transform the lives of youth in churches I have observed or worked with. Generally speaking, we need to be involved in mission in our everyday lives and take our children with us as we minister in our everyday lives (the other day I suggested to someone take their children to the hospital with them in praying for the sick – this was not a good idea because evidently our children bring germs that adults don’t … oh well).

In closing, I believe the youth ministry of a church is vitally important. But we must discern carefully what we are doing. Whether we have three youth or fifty, we need youth leaders to do things to foster authentic adult relationships with the youth. Let us make the community aware that we ARE A COMMUNITY and we have to treat our youth as among us and indeed take responsibility to love them, pray for them, watch over them, initiate them and model Christ before them and with them. Let us foster safe spaces for them to ask all their questions and learn how to listen for God in their lives. Let us do mission trips and bring them with us in all the ways we participate in Christ’s Mission in the world. ! At Life on the Vine, these are the things we’re ever working on.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Who owns my mortgage?

Man Makes Ridiculously Complicated Chart To Find Out Who Owns His Mortgage

And people think they can't trust the government...what makes them think they should trust banks?

Thursday, November 18, 2010

The Dark Ages descend upon Eugene's 4-j schools




Read the KEZI story here

 
 It's hard not to feel like we are facing a new Dark Ages. In those times, the monasteries were places of refuge and learning. I wonder how, today, churches might serve to "pick up the slack." That is, as music and languages and other programs are threatened, might our churches become sanctuaries/outposts for such education?

Back in Charlemagne's day, the "cathedral school" came into being. Many eventually evolved into universities. The liberal arts are critical for a free society. If we hope to preserve the humanities for future generations, it looks like the job will depend on people who do not worship mammon, but still believe that truth, beauty and goodness are important to our flourishing as human beings, and our faithfulness to Christ.

"You have been treated generously, so live generously." (Matt. 10:8, The Message)


I'm ready to start sharing what I know...is anyone else?
here

Epic. Just epic.

jglee1236 wrote this about a Youtube performance of "Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence"

"i'm not even religious. I don't believe in god and I don't like church music. I was forced to sing in my churches choir growing up. But this hymn, the way it's written, is just epic.


'rank on rank the host of heaven spreads its vanguard on the way, as the light of light descendeth from the realm of endless day, that the powers of hell may vanish, as the darkness clears away.'

Epic. Just epic. they don't write 'em like that anymore."

Hymns can be a subtle way for the Spirit to speak to us. I wonder what jglee would  think of this version.


Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Dolores Umbridge, Utilitarian



Note to self: use this scene (1:25-139, which was deleted from the film) when discussing Utilitarianism in Phl 453. I used to use the penultimate scene from The Wrath of Khan, but most kids today don't know that film anymore.  This will be far better.

Dolores Umbridge, hysterical:
"I mean look what you've done to me! I can't take it anymore! I-I--but I must! Authority...must..be upheld...sometimes...the ends DO justify the means..."

Amazing Staircases

This one is my favorite: More at "Amazing Staircases"

In Defense of the Humanities

A brilliant letter from a scientist to a "university" president. Full disclosure: Gregory Petsko is Professor of Biochemistry and Chemistry, Protein Crystallography, and Gyula and Katica Tauber Professor of Biochemistry & Chemistry at Brandeis University. His Ph.D is from Oxford University.


An open letter to George M Philip, President of the State University of New York At Albany


Dear President Philip,

Probably the last thing you need at this moment is someone else from outside your university complaining about your decision. If you want to argue that I can't really understand all aspects of the situation, never having been associated with SUNY Albany, I wouldn't disagree. But I cannot let something like this go by without weighing in. I hope, when I'm through, you will at least understand why.

Just 30 days ago, on October 1st, you announced that the departments of French, Italian, Classics, Russian and Theater Arts were being eliminated. You gave several reasons for your decision, including that 'there are comparatively fewer students enrolled in these degree programs.' Of course, your decision was also, perhaps chiefly, a cost-cutting measure - in fact, you stated that this decision might not have been necessary had the state legislature passed a bill that would have allowed your university to set its own tuition rates. Finally, you asserted that the humanities were a drain on the institution financially, as opposed to the sciences, which bring in money in the form of grants and contracts.

Let's examine these and your other reasons in detail, because I think if one does, it becomes clear that the facts on which they are based have some important aspects that are not covered in your statement. First, the matter of enrollment. I'm sure that relatively few students take classes in these subjects nowadays, just as you say. There wouldn't have been many in my day, either, if universities hadn't required students to take a distribution of courses in many different parts of the academy: humanities, social sciences, the fine arts, the physical and natural sciences, and to attain minimal proficiency in at least one foreign language. You see, the reason that humanities classes have low enrollment is not because students these days are clamoring for more relevant courses; it's because administrators like you, and spineless faculty, have stopped setting distribution requirements and started allowing students to choose their own academic programs - something I feel is a complete abrogation of the duty of university faculty as teachers and mentors. You could fix the enrollment problem tomorrow by instituting a mandatory core curriculum that included a wide range of courses.

Young people haven't, for the most part, yet attained the wisdom to have that kind of freedom without making poor decisions. In fact, without wisdom, it's hard for most people. That idea is thrashed out better than anywhere else, I think, in Dostoyevsky's parable of the Grand Inquisitor, which is told in Chapter Five of his great novel, The Brothers Karamazov. In the parable, Christ comes back to earth in Seville at the time of the Spanish Inquisition. He performs several miracles but is arrested by Inquisition leaders and sentenced to be burned at the stake. The Grand Inquisitor visits Him in his cell to tell Him that the Church no longer needs Him. The main portion of the text is the Inquisitor explaining why. The Inquisitor says that Jesus rejected the three temptations of Satan in the desert in favor of freedom, but he believes that Jesus has misjudged human nature. The Inquisitor says that the vast majority of humanity cannot handle freedom. In giving humans the freedom to choose, Christ has doomed humanity to a life of suffering.

That single chapter in a much longer book is one of the great works of modern literature. You would find a lot in it to think about. I'm sure your Russian faculty would love to talk with you about it - if only you had a Russian department, which now, of course, you don't.
Then there's the question of whether the state legislature's inaction gave you no other choice. I'm sure the budgetary problems you have to deal with are serious. They certainly are at Brandeis University, where I work. And we, too, faced critical strategic decisions because our income was no longer enough to meet our expenses. But we eschewed your draconian - and authoritarian - solution, and a team of faculty, with input from all parts of the university, came up with a plan to do more with fewer resources. I'm not saying that all the specifics of our solution would fit your institution, but the process sure would have. You did call a town meeting, but it was to discuss your plan, not let the university craft its own. And you called that meeting for Friday afternoon on October 1st, when few of your students or faculty would be around to attend. In your defense, you called the timing 'unfortunate', but pleaded that there was a 'limited availability of appropriate large venue options.' I find that rather surprising. If the President of Brandeis needed a lecture hall on short notice, he would get one. I guess you don't have much clout at your university.

It seems to me that the way you went about it couldn't have been more likely to alienate just about everybody on campus. In your position, I would have done everything possible to avoid that. I wouldn't want to end up in the 9th Bolgia (ditch of stone) of the 8th Circle of the Inferno, where the great 14th century Italian poet Dante Alighieri put the sowers of discord. There, as they struggle in that pit for all eternity, a demon continually hacks their limbs apart, just as in life they divided others.

The Inferno is the first book of Dante's Divine Comedy, one of the great works of the human imagination. There's so much to learn from it about human weakness and folly. The faculty in your Italian department would be delighted to introduce you to its many wonders - if only you had an Italian department, which now, of course, you don't.

And do you really think even those faculty and administrators who may applaud your tough-minded stance (partly, I'm sure, in relief that they didn't get the axe themselves) are still going to be on your side in the future? I'm reminded of the fable by Aesop of the Travelers and the Bear: two men were walking together through the woods, when a bear rushed out at them. One of the travelers happened to be in front, and he grabbed the branch of a tree, climbed up, and hid himself in the leaves. The other, being too far behind, threw himself flat down on the ground, with his face in the dust. The bear came up to him, put his muzzle close to the man's ear, and sniffed and sniffed. But at last with a growl the bear slouched off, for bears will not touch dead meat. Then the fellow in the tree came down to his companion, and, laughing, said 'What was it that the bear whispered to you?' 'He told me,' said the other man, 'Never to trust a friend who deserts you in a pinch.'

I first learned that fable, and its valuable lesson for life, in a freshman classics course. Aesop is credited with literally hundreds of fables, most of which are equally enjoyable - and enlightening. Your classics faculty would gladly tell you about them, if only you had a Classics department, which now, of course, you don't.

As for the argument that the humanities don't pay their own way, well, I guess that's true, but it seems to me that there's a fallacy in assuming that a university should be run like a business. I'm not saying it shouldn't be managed prudently, but the notion that every part of it needs to be self-supporting is simply at variance with what a university is all about. You seem to value entrepreneurial programs and practical subjects that might generate intellectual property more than you do 'old-fashioned' courses of study. But universities aren't just about discovering and capitalizing on new knowledge; they are also about preserving knowledge from being lost over time, and that requires a financial investment. There is good reason for it: what seems to be archaic today can become vital in the future. I'll give you two examples of that. The first is the science of virology, which in the 1970s was dying out because people felt that infectious diseases were no longer a serious health problem in the developed world and other subjects, such as molecular biology, were much sexier. Then, in the early 1990s, a little problem called AIDS became the world's number 1 health concern. The virus that causes AIDS was first isolated and characterized at the National Institutes of Health in the USA and the Institute Pasteur in France, because these were among the few institutions that still had thriving virology programs. My second example you will probably be more familiar with. Middle Eastern Studies, including the study of foreign languages such as Arabic and Persian, was hardly a hot subject on most campuses in the 1990s. Then came September 11, 2001. Suddenly we realized that we needed a lot more people who understood something about that part of the world, especially its Muslim culture. Those universities that had preserved their Middle Eastern Studies departments, even in the face of declining enrollment, suddenly became very important places. Those that hadn't - well, I'm sure you get the picture.
I know one of your arguments is that not every place should try to do everything. Let other institutions have great programs in classics or theater arts, you say; we will focus on preparing students for jobs in the real world. Well, I hope I've just shown you that the real world is pretty fickle about what it wants. The best way for people to be prepared for the inevitable shock of change is to be as broadly educated as possible, because today's backwater is often tomorrow's hot field. And interdisciplinary research, which is all the rage these days, is only possible if people aren't too narrowly trained. If none of that convinces you, then I'm willing to let you turn your institution into a place that focuses on the practical, but only if you stop calling it a university and yourself the President of one. You see, the word 'university' derives from the Latin 'universitas', meaning 'the whole'. You can't be a university without having a thriving humanities program. You will need to call SUNY Albany a trade school, or perhaps a vocational college, but not a university. Not anymore.

I utterly refuse to believe that you had no alternative. It's your job as President to find ways of solving problems that do not require the amputation of healthy limbs. Voltaire said that no problem can withstand the assault of sustained thinking. Voltaire, whose real name was François-Marie Arouet, had a lot of pithy, witty and brilliant things to say (my favorite is 'God is a comedian playing to an audience that is afraid to laugh'). Much of what he wrote would be very useful to you. I'm sure the faculty in your French department would be happy to introduce you to his writings, if only you had a French department, which now, of course, you don't.
I guess I shouldn't be surprised that you have trouble understanding the importance of maintaining programs in unglamorous or even seemingly 'dead' subjects. From your biography, you don't actually have a PhD or other high degree, and have never really taught or done research at a university. Perhaps my own background will interest you. I started out as a classics major. I'm now Professor of Biochemistry and Chemistry. Of all the courses I took in college and graduate school, the ones that have benefited me the most in my career as a scientist are the courses in classics, art history, sociology, and English literature. These courses didn't just give me a much better appreciation for my own culture; they taught me how to think, to analyze, and to write clearly. None of my sciences courses did any of that.
One of the things I do now is write a monthly column on science and society. I've done it for over 10 years, and I'm pleased to say some people seem to like it. If I've been fortunate enough to come up with a few insightful observations, I can assure you they are entirely due to my background in the humanities and my love of the arts.

One of the things I've written about is the way genomics is changing the world we live in. Our ability to manipulate the human genome is going to pose some very difficult questions for humanity in the next few decades, including the question of just what it means to be human. That isn't a question for science alone; it's a question that must be answered with input from every sphere of human thought, including - especially including - the humanities and arts. Science unleavened by the human heart and the human spirit is sterile, cold, and self-absorbed. It's also unimaginative: some of my best ideas as a scientist have come from thinking and reading about things that have, superficially, nothing to do with science. If I'm right that what it means to be human is going to be one of the central issues of our time, then universities that are best equipped to deal with it, in all its many facets, will be the most important institutions of higher learning in the future. You've just ensured that yours won't be one of them.
Some of your defenders have asserted that this is all a brilliant ploy on your part - a master political move designed to shock the legislature and force them to give SUNY Albany enough resources to keep these departments open. That would be Machiavellian (another notable Italian writer, but then, you don't have any Italian faculty to tell you about him), certainly, but I doubt that you're that clever. If you were, you would have held that town meeting when the whole university could have been present, at a place where the press would be all over it. That's how you force the hand of a bunch of politicians. You proclaim your action on the steps of the state capitol. You don't try to sneak it through in the dead of night, when your institution has its back turned.

No, I think you were simply trying to balance your budget at the expense of what you believe to be weak, outdated and powerless departments. I think you will find, in time, that you made a Faustian bargain. Faust is the title character in a play by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. It was written around 1800 but still attracts the largest audiences of any play in Germany whenever it's performed. Faust is the story of a scholar who makes a deal with the devil. The devil promises him anything he wants as long as he lives. In return, the devil will get - well, I'm sure you can guess how these sorts of deals usually go. If only you had a Theater department, which now, of course, you don't, you could ask them to perform the play so you could see what happens. It's awfully relevant to your situation. You see, Goethe believed that it profits a man nothing to give up his soul for the whole world. That's the whole world, President Philip, not just a balanced budget. Although, I guess, to be fair, you haven't given up your soul. Just the soul of your institution.

Disrespectfully yours,

Gregory A Petsko

"Religion (and Climate) Gone Crazy"

Brad Boydston's blog for Monday, Nov. 15 is a real keeper. In it he refers us to Martin Marty's article in the Christian Century, "Global Warming and American Christianity," wherein Marty applauds "true conservatives" whose understanding of Scripture mandates care for God's creation.
Unfortunately, conservative Christians who have this understanding are a) few and/or b) are being drowned out by other conservative Christians who don't. Guess who Juan R. I. Cole, Richard P. Mitchell Collegiate Professor of History at the University of Michigan, hears? Yup. You're right. Below is part of the reason why. Wouldn't it be great if there was a video I could send him, that could show a Christian politician representing Another Perspective?

From Cole's blog:
"Rep. John Shimkus (R-Ill.), who will seek the Energy and Commerce Committee chairmanship maintains that we do not have to worry about climate change because God promised in the Bible not to destroy the world again after Noah’s flood."



As if global warming isn't enough of a problem, read some of the comments following the video on Cole's blog. How shall we witness to people whose view of Scripture, Christians (and therefore Christ) is so negative?

Back to Brad's blog, wherein he quotes Peter L. Steinke:

Another often-used term—post-Christian era—captures the reality that the importance and influence of Christianity in North American society has been in decline for at least three decades. In a "post-Christian" world, the church cannot expect favorable treatment or higher visibility.

One could say that a gathering storm—a confluence of factors—has assailed the church and its dominant perch on the societal ladder. None of this has to do with the church's internal functioning. The sea change is external or contextual...

I'm not so sure the cause is entirely external. To some degree, we have brought the storm--both meterologically and metaphysically--on ourselves.

Comedy for Philosophers: "Analytic Philosophy, Chapter 1"

via the Leiter Report

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

"Nothing Buttery"

Here's a clear, concise talk from the Veritas Forum, challenging the naturalist/materialist worldview. Ard Louis is Royal Society Research Fellow and Reader in Theoretical Physics at Oxford,and a colleague of Richard Dawkins. (View the entire talk here I plan to show this to my Intro to Philosophy class next semester.

Highlights

‎1) Plantinga's analogy: those who say science is the only way to achieve truth are like drunks who say the only place to look for their keys is under the lampost, because ...

2) The romantic dinner where she asks him, "how well do you know who I really am?" and he replies....

Saturday, November 13, 2010

QUOTES: "To generalize means to think"

In our current intellectual climate, where
nominalist thinking has triumphed and is
proudly celebrated by "deconstruction," the business of seeing similarities and relationships is regarded with suspicion. I remember one interchange with a librarian (!) who was perfectly happy to have his living depend on classifying books and other materials, but who resisted attempts to generalize about theological or historical matters. Why was that? Perhaps he thought that the only way to generalize was to impose arbitrary,  socially-constructed categories upon things, much the same way that he saw the Dewey Decimal mode of classification, or the Library of Congress mode of classification imposed upon the works around him.  
      But are all generalizations "useful fictions?"  Are some generalizations actually products of a process of abstraction from forms which are not imposed by us, but which exist independently of our minds, in things themselves? Is there no way to compare our generalizations, and judge which of them captures more of what is real, making that generalization closer to the truth?



"...when we apply categories and classifications to the progression of history, we are challenged to remember that classification and categorisation always relies, to some extent, on generalisation; and generalisation is a dangerous game. When William Blake wrote that 'to generalise is to be an idiot', he was perhaps too harsh. George Bernard Shaw shared his pessimism, though in less alacritous terms: 'Crude classifications and false generalisations are the curse of organised life'. But life mandates, at times, precisely this curse. So Georg Hegel: 'An idea is always a generalisation, and generalisation is a property of thinking. To generalise means to think'. " --M.C. Steenberg,

To put it in premodern language, a generalization can refer either to a universal, or to propositions we make involving universals. We are created in such a way that our minds soak up universals, or "forms" from the world around us. These universals become the concepts which fill our minds, as we grasp what kind of thing we are in relationship with. For example, we  might entertain the concepts "Chair," "Table," "legs" and "four."

We then combine those concepts to form propositions, uniting or dividing them. Thus, we might  combine concepts and make the following statements, or propositions:

        “The chair has four legs.”  or “The table has four legs.”

Or we might "divide" the concepts, and make the following propositions: 
 

          "The table does not have four legs.”   or  “A chair is not a table.”

Finally, we can use propositions  to make arguments, linking them together according to the rules of logic. Depending upon how we do it, and how well we do it, our arguments will be sound or not; or cogent or not. For example,

                    The chair has four legs.
                    The table has four legs.
                    Therefore the chair is a table.
or
                    If this is a chair,  I can use it to sit on.
                    This is a chair.
                    Therefore I can use it to sit on.

God has given us a great gift: "ratio," our ability to abstract concepts, to relate them in propositions, and to create arguments. I don't often find myself in agreement with Hegel, but on this he is correct:  'An idea is always a generalisation, and generalisation is a property of thinking. To generalise means to think.' Of course, the  activities of discursive reason do not exhaust all the intellectual gifts that he has given us. Intuition (or "intellectus,") --that immediate, personal, non-discursive apprehension of what is real and therefore true, good, and beautiful--is another incredible gift.  Let us not fear or neglect either way of thinking.



Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Iranaeus on the Rule of Faith

Today's Worship Quote of the Week:

THE RULE OF FAITH
The church which is scattered over the whole world all the way to the ends of the earth received from the apostles and their followers this faith: We believe in one God the Father Almighty, "who made heaven and earth and the sea and all that is in them" (Exod. 20:11): and in one Christ Jesus, the Son of God who became incarnate for our salvation; and in Holy Spirit, who through the prophets predicted the plans of God.

These divine plans included the first advent; the birth from a Virgin; the passion; the resurrection from the dead; the bodily ascension of our beloved Lord Jesus Christ into heaven; and his second coming from heaven in the glory of the Father to "recapitulate all things" (Eph. 1:10) and to resurrect the bodies of the whole human race, so that to Christ Jesus our Lord and God and Savior and King "every knee shall bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue shall confess Him" (Phil. 2:10-11). This was the good pleasure of the invisible Father.

Christ will raise the dead in order to execute righteous judgment upon everyone. Into eternal fire he will send the "spiritual forces of wickedness" (Eph. 6:12), and the angels who sinned and became apostate, and every person who is profane, unjust, sinful, and blasphemous. But there are others: the righteous and holy, and all who have kept his commandments and remain in his love (John 15:10). The apostles persevered from the beginning of his ministry (John 15:27), while others began at the point of their own repentance. To all of these he will give incorruptible life by his grace, and will clothe them with eternal glory.

Now as I was just saying: the Church which is spread out through the whole world has received this preaching and this faith. And so we Christians diligently guard it as if we were living together in a single house. Or to put it another way: clearly we all believe these things so much, it's like we have a single heart and soul (Acts 4:32). We so consistently preach, teach, and hand down these truths, it's as if we have but one mouth.

For although the languages of the world are dissimilar, the meaning of our tradition is one and the same. The churches founded in Germany do not believe or hand down anything different; neither do the churches established in Spain, or among the Celts, or in the Far East, or in Egypt, or in Libya, or in the middle of the world. Just as the sun which was created by God is one and the same throughout the whole world, so the light which is the preaching of Christian truth shines everywhere, and illumines everyone who wants to come into knowledge of the truth.

No pastor of any congregation, even if he is extremely eloquent, will say anything that varies from the truth. For we all recognize that "no one is above the Master" (Matt. 10:24). Likewise, the pastor who is lacking in eloquence will not diminish the tradition. For since the faith is one and the same, he who can discourse at length about it does not really add to it, and he who is less theologically capable does not diminish it in any way.

— Irenaeus of Lyons, in "Against Heresies," as excerpted by Bryan M. Litfin in GETTING TO KNOW THE CHURCH FATHERS: AN EVANGELICAL INTRODUCTION. Grand Rapids: Brazos Press, 2007), pp. 95-96. ISBN 978-1-587-43-196-8. Highly recommended. There are also chapters on Ignatius of Antioch, Justin Martyr, Tertullian, Perpetua, Origen, Athanasius, John Chrysostom, Augustine, and Cyril of Alexandria.

Sunday, November 07, 2010

All Saints Day: Remembering Clare of Assisi


Last year, in remembrance of this day, I focused on the Martyrs of Compiègne, 16 Carmelite nuns who were guillotined ten days before the end of the French Revolution. I  meditated on the moving finale of Poulenc's opera, Dialogues of the Carmelites.  This year I am being drawn to Clare of Assisi. Here is the third movement, "The Matins of St. Clare," from Ottorino Respighi's Church Windows. As I watch and listen, I am reflecting  on this quote:

"We become what we love and who we love shapes what we become. If we love things, we become a thing. If we love nothing, we become nothing. Imitation is not a literal mimicking of Christ, rather it means becoming the image of the beloved, an image disclosed through transformation. This means... we are to become vessels of God´s compassionate love for others. "


~ St. Clare of Assisi


Saturday, November 06, 2010

Crayola's Law

http://www.noiselabs.com/blog/images/crayons.png

via Noise is Information: "Crayola's Law"

The chart above is a lovely info-graphic showing the introduction of colors into the Crayola crayon box over time. The creator of the chart derived from the data Crayola’s Law: the number of crayon colors doubles every 28 years.

Ah, the memories. My favorite colors were sea green, violet blue, sky blue, and red orange. What were yours?

Visualizing Empires Decline

http://www.noiselabs.com/blog/images/crayons.png

watch what happens around  1960.


Visualizing empires decline from Pedro M Cruz on Vimeo.

Friday, November 05, 2010

Thoughts for All Saint's Sunday: The Apotheosis of the Constitution, etc.








QUICK! Glance at this picture from afar, and what do you think it is?


Wrong.

Yes, it does have gilt edge pages, a satin ribbon to keep  your place, and gold embossing, but it's not a Bible.

Now you too can own your own leather-bound copy of the U.S. Constitution!

                                                                                        Leatherbound Pocket-Size US Constitution

"Carry it with you, keep it on your desk or bedside table, and be proud. Bound in soft black calfskin, pages edged in gold, this little book includes the complete US Constitution and other documents vital to our history, our democracy, and recent Supreme Court decisions: the Bill of Rights (and every constitutional amendment to the present day), Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation, and more. 192 pages, just 2 ¾" x 3 ¾".

Also available in red calfskin.

Some people are already excited about it, like Amazon reviewer E. Bennett who wrote,

"Next to the Bible....I got to thinking, what other book or document would be important enough to want to own with a leather cover? The US Constitution . Rather then ignore it, why not give it the proper respect it deserves! After all, millions have died for it! Fits nicely in my Bible Study bundle."

Are we witnessing the birth of the canon of American civil religion?

"In the Name of Jefferson, Madison and Paine, we will now read the Bill of Rights responsively. I'll read the odd numbered amendments, you read the even numbered amendements.... Thanks be to the Framers for the writing of this Word."

Too bad about Ignatius, Polycarp, Huss, Tyndale, St. Thomas More,  the martyrs of Japan, the martyrs of Uganda, St. Elizabeth Romanova, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer. If only they had known the consolations of the Constitution of the United States!

Monday, November 01, 2010

Somebody please 'splain it to me!



If the Tea Party is really serious about decreasing government spending and running smaller federal deficits, why haven't we heard anything about repealing Bush's 2003 Medicare Drug Plan? As of February 2009, the projected cost of the program over the 2006-2015 period was $549.2 BILLION!


For more, look here