Archive for November, 2008

Bible-centered Meditations Upon the 2008-2009 Christian Liturgical Year

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

On my other blog, To See a World in a Grain of Sand, I’ll be trying to post a series of weekly entries throughout the 2008-2009 Christian liturgical year which begins on 2008/11/30. This is a major effort for me as my worldview aims at viewing Creation as unified, coherent, and complete. To a Christian, [...]

Ways of Speaking and True Being

Saturday, November 22nd, 2008

Wikipedia tells us that metaphor is: language that directly compares seemingly unrelated subjects. In the simplest case, this takes the form: “The [first subject] is a [second subject].” More generally, a metaphor is a rhetorical trope that describes a first subject as being or equal to a second object in some way. Thus, the first [...]

Some Problems with Substance/Form Dualism

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

This entry is a supplement to Not Monism and Not Dualism but Unity of Creation. One form of dualism, strongly supported by Aristotle, is particularly attractive at first contact: the idea that things come into being when form is impressed upon substance. What’s wrong about this, and perhaps the real error underlying all dualisms, is [...]

Four-dimensional Brains

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

I really don’t know much about neural networks which are organized in space and certainly can’t make much comment upon the discovery that they can be organized through “multiple timescales” as well, yet, I’m hardly surprised. See this article, Robots Show That Brain Activity Is Linked To Time As Well As Space, for a summary [...]

Not Monism and Not Dualism but Unity of Creation

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

In a number of writings, I deny both the monisms of matter and spirit or thought. I also deny the dualism of body/soul, brain/mind, etc. Yet, I use the terms ‘soul’ and ‘mind’ on a regular basis. What gives? I think of being as richer than ‘mere’ matter, yet, I see no reason to speak [...]

Differential Geometry and Moral Narratives

Saturday, November 1st, 2008

Pilgrims travel paths, journeying from one location on earth to another, sometimes those places are fictional but usually quite concrete. To be sure, Dante’s pilgrim found (as some of the more recent translations of The Inferno attest) that the path could wander away from him, a strange event from a fully concrete view of paths. [...]