True, but if you're smart you could use the Song of Time to game housing bubbles in they Hyrulian market.
True, but if you're smart you could use the Song of Time to game housing bubbles in they Hyrulian market.
Now our Castle is in another princess.
Yea, some of those fellas sound like cavemen but I was pretty surprised by how outright accepting some ballplayers were (Lopes, for instance). This is a touching and somber reflection on civil rights and baseball. "42", with all it's over the top cheese, would have been wise to take notes.
Interesting, the player reactions from 35 years ago were a lot BETTER than I expected. Most of them are supportive and at least somewhat understanding with the negatives mostly surrounding not wanted to be punished for their association. I'm in my early 30s, and I would say throughout most of my life anti-gay…
I can't believe I was the first to get to it. Blew my fucking mind.
You don't understand — there's always money in the banana stand.
Haha, that was exactly what I came to post. You beat me to it however!
You can have your next "Modern Warfare" type of game. I stopped after Black Ops. Really can't get into them anymore. Too much Michael Bay, not enough Ridley Scott.
I find that behavior, in anyone, appalling. Appalling and gauche. I particularly do not appreciate it in Evangelical Christians because spitting misinterpreted Bible verses in my face is a quick way to earn my irritation. But I also do not appreciate being told I need to have the "truth" broken to me by an…
I don't generally look down on people who resort to religious belief in their lives - my roommate and very good friend is an extremely devout Catholic (which means we get to argue about religious faith and social policy). I will fully admit that having been, in my mind, fortunate enough to have been raised in an…
In no sense have I appealed to authority at any point in my posts. I haven't in any way insisted that I'm right because I believe that I'm right.
The idea that any belief about the world is just as valid as any other belief about the world is, I'm sorry, simply insane. To suggest that my belief that antibiotics are an…
*You* consider it destroyed because you personally find Russell's philosophical argument compelling. I do not. I find other philosophical arguments compelling. My philosophical and religious positions are not superior or inferior to yours. I'd never assert that they were superior and that you were "wrong," because…
I wouldn't say that I'm passing judgment on all of human history for our ignorance. Isaac Newton was a religious person - when he couldn't determine the cause of the solar system's stability, he suggested that it must be the case that God sometimes reached into the solar system to set the planets right. We can talk…
I've thought of a better analogy!
I don't think that non-believers should try to dissuade believers from their beliefs, unless those beliefs are actively harmful. Lots of unbelievers can be really dickish about that and I have no real issues with other people have faith in something I don't believe in. So I'm not exactly with Ossifrige. However, I…
This entire posts rests on a supposition that was destroyed by Bertrand Russell in 1952. There is no burden whatever on anyone to disprove assertions. By your reasoning it would be perfectly reasonable for your friend to believe that her husband is flying to Jupiter astride a magical pegasus each time he leaves the…
I call the concept absurd because it is completely divorced from the actual universe in which we find ourselves. There is no origin for the idea outside of the speculation occurring in human minds. It's incongruous with everything we can actually see, touch, and measure.
There's a lot that we don't know, for sure. But there's also nothing wrong with admitting that there are things we don't know. There's no actual need any longer for us to posit absurd entities living just beyond the margins of our sight, who reach into the world in invisible ways and direct our personal lives. There's…