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The Expanding Earth and Mind and other paradox
In article .com,
"Petra" wrote: snip Science needs a lift, but not the kind that you deliver to the seat of the pants. It needs some pizzaz, a little hype and a voice that sounds interested and interesting, like there was real life in the material. There could be, but in the "we do" and so forth I think some of it gets lost. It does? Try some PBS: Nova and Scientific American Frontiers are pretty interesting. And there are tons of specials on cosmology all the time. For that matter, have you read Scientific American or Discover lately? -- Timberwoof me at timberwoof dot com http://www.timberwoof.com |
#22
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The Expanding Earth and Mind and other paradox
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#23
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The Expanding Earth and Mind and other paradox
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#25
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The Expanding Earth and Mind and other paradox
Timberwoof wrote: In article .com, "Petra" wrote: snip Science needs a lift, but not the kind that you deliver to the seat of the pants. It needs some pizzaz, a little hype and a voice that sounds interested and interesting, like there was real life in the material. There could be, but in the "we do" and so forth I think some of it gets lost. It does? Try some PBS: Nova and Scientific American Frontiers are pretty interesting. And there are tons of specials on cosmology all the time. For that matter, have you read Scientific American or Discover lately? Timberwoof, I don't much care for reruns, but at least on television and in publications they are good enough to leave some of the digusting parts as film on the floor or deleted from their computers so "we, the public" don't have to see it. As for current reading material, I recently chose to re-read QB VII by Leon Uris because I wanted to read something that had some sense that someone cared much about something. As we near the Fourth of July it's a perfect read because a gripping tale about how million of persons lost eveything they had, under circumstances which were dire, we who live in a place which is supposed to have so much, frequently goes unacknowledged. While Americans are slowly losing their rights one after the other, we should appreciate what we have and attempt to make this once great land something worthy of being proud of. Heaven Help Us. Petra Petra |
#26
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The Expanding Earth and Mind and other paradox
In article . com,
"Petra" wrote: Timberwoof wrote: In article .com, "Petra" wrote: snip Science needs a lift, but not the kind that you deliver to the seat of the pants. It needs some pizzaz, a little hype and a voice that sounds interested and interesting, like there was real life in the material. There could be, but in the "we do" and so forth I think some of it gets lost. It does? Try some PBS: Nova and Scientific American Frontiers are pretty interesting. And there are tons of specials on cosmology all the time. For that matter, have you read Scientific American or Discover lately? Timberwoof, I don't much care for reruns, but at least on television and in publications they are good enough to leave some of the digusting parts as film on the floor or deleted from their computers so "we, the public" don't have to see it. What are you talking about? As for current reading material, I recently chose to re-read QB VII by Leon Uris because I wanted to read something that had some sense that someone cared much about something. As we near the Fourth of July it's a perfect read because a gripping tale about how million of persons lost eveything they had, under circumstances which were dire, we who live in a place which is supposed to have so much, frequently goes unacknowledged. And this has to do with giving science a "lift" how, exactly? While Americans are slowly losing their rights one after the other, we should appreciate what we have and attempt to make this once great land something worthy of being proud of. Heaven Help Us. Heaven Help Us is exactly what the fundamentalists and other religious political radicals have in mind. -- Timberwoof me at timberwoof dot com http://www.timberwoof.com |
#27
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The Expanding Earth and Mind and other paradox
Timberwoof wrote: In article . com, "Petra" wrote: Timberwoof wrote: In article .com, "Petra" wrote: Timberwoof, (see notes below) What are you talking about? As for current reading material, I recently chose to re-read QB VII by Leon Uris because I wanted to read something that had some sense that someone cared much about something. As we near the Fourth of July it's a perfect read because a gripping tale about how million of persons lost eveything they had, under circumstances which were dire, we who live in a place which is supposed to have so much, frequently goes unacknowledged. If you're looking for something to read which is "empowering" you'd have to look outside of Scientific American you know. And this has to do with giving science a "lift" how, exactly? While Americans are slowly losing their rights one after the other, we should appreciate what we have and attempt to make this once great land something worthy of being proud of. Heaven Help Us. Your answer is one question past the last answer.... No Comment. Heaven Help Us is exactly what the fundamentalists and other religious political radicals have in mind. Have you ever heard that saying "As above, so below?" For those of us who are true believers at least we know there is something of greater intelligence than what's here on Earth. Petra |
#28
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The Expanding Earth and Mind and other paradox
Petra wrote: Timberwoof wrote: Have you ever heard that saying "As above, so below?" Hey Petra, ..we've covered the woof's bowels, ..leave him alone... (!) For those of us who are true believers at least we know there is something of greater intelligence than what's here on Earth. Petra |
#29
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The Expanding Earth and Mind and other paradox
don findlay wrote: Petra wrote: Timberwoof wrote: Have you ever heard that saying "As above, so below?" Hey Petra, ..we've covered the woof's bowels, ..leave him alone... (!) For those of us who are true believers at least we know there is something of greater intelligence than what's here on Earth. Petra Don....you didn't answer the question about where the mass comes from. You have been asked that before and I have yet to hear an answer from anyone. So...in an expanding earth...where does the mass come from? |
#30
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The Expanding Earth and Mind and other paradox
Ken Shackleton wrote: Don....you didn't answer the question about where the mass comes from. You have been asked that before and I have yet to hear an answer from anyone. So...in an expanding earth...where does the mass come from? I don't know how many times I've answered that one. **** off, clever dick. |
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