Posted on 07/15/2008 4:47:28 PM PDT by Pyro7480
Catholic League president Bill Donohue commented on the latest developments to surface regarding the pledge made by Paul Z. Myers, a professor at the University of Minnesota, to desecrate the Eucharist:
Myers was quoted yesterday saying, I have to do something. Im not going to just let this disappear. [Last Friday it was reported that he had acquired a Host.] He continued, Something will be done. It wont be gross. It wont be totally tasteless, but yeah, Ill do something that shows this cracker has no power.
The biology professor made it clear that he would never disrespect Islam the way he does Catholicism. When asked about those who abuse the Koran, for example, he said such an act was analogous to desecrating a graveyard. Thats completely different, he said. I dont favor [that idea]. But when it comes to the Body of Christ, he opines, The cracker is completely different.
This isnt the first time Myers has shown deference to Islam. For instance, two years ago he was critical of the Danish cartoons that simply depicted an image of Muhammad. They [the cartoons] lack artistic or social or even comedic merit, and are presented as an insult to inflame a poor minority. So now the Planet-of-the-Apes biologist has divined himself an expert on the artistic value of cartoons. So thoughtful of him. He even went so far as to say that Muslims have cause to be furious. (His italic.) Worthy of burning down churches, pledging to behead Christians and shooting a nun in the back, Professor Myers?
We hope Myers does the right thing and just moves on without further disgracing himself and his university. The letter I received from University of Minnesota President Robert H. Bruininks makes it clear that school officials want nothing to do with his hate-filled remarks. It would also be nice if Myers fans would cease and desist with their hate-filled screeds.
Apple-mint jelly, seasoning for lamb, flavoring and decoration on a chocolate cake, just to name a few.
Would you recommend it on crackers?<'p>
***********************
If you put it in your handbag, it smells nice all day. :)
In 1976, a year after Wilson had lit up the sky with Sociobiology: The New Synthesis, a British zoologist and Darwinian fundamentalist, Richard Dawkins, published a book called The Selfish Gene in which he announced the discovery of memes. Memes were viruses in the form of ideas, slogans, tunes, styles, images, doctrines, anything with sufficient attractiveness or catchiness to infect the brain -- infect, like virus became part of the subjects earnest, wannabe-scientific terminology -- after which they operated like genes, passing along what had been naively thought of as the creations of culture.Dawkinss memes definitely infected the fundamentalists, in any event. The literature of Memeland began pouring out. Daniel C. Dennetts Darwins Dangerous Idea. William H. Calvins How Brains Think, Steven Pinkers How the Mind Works, Robert Wr8ights The Moral Animal, The Meme Machine by Susan Blackmore (with a foreword by Richard Dawkins) and on and on. Dawkins has many devout followers precisely because his memes are seen as the missing link in Darwinism as a theory, a theoretical discovery every bit as important as the skull of the Peking man. One of Bill Gatess epigones at Microsoft, Charles Simonyi, was so impressed with Dawkins and their historic place on the scientific frontier, he endowed a chair at Oxford University titled the Charles Simonyi Professor of Public Understanding of Science and installed Dawkins in it. This makes Dawkins the postmodern equivalent of the Archbishop of Canterbury. Dawkins is Archbishop of Darwinian Fundamentalism and Hierophant of the Memes.
There turns out to be one serious problem with memes, however. They dont exist. A neurophysiologist can use the most powerful and sophisticated brain imaging now available -- and still not find a meme. The Darwinian fundamentalists, like fundamentalists in any area, are ready for such an obvious objection. They will explain that memes operate in a way analogous to genes, i.e., through natural selection and survival of the fittest memes. But in science, unfortunately, analogous to just wont do. The tribal hula is analogous to the waving of a wheat field in the wind before the rain, too. Here the explanatory gap becomes enormous. Even though some of the fundamentalists have scientific credentials, not one even hazards a guess as to how, in physiological, neural terms, the meme infection is supposed to take place. . . .
Ideas don't exist?
Memes are simply ideas stored in the physical structure of the brain according to Dawkins. My concept is broader, but lets stick with his. Acquiring a meme would be learning. It has been proven that learning changes the structure of the brain. Contrary to your selected source, these structures are visible, so "a neurophysiologist can use the most powerful and sophisticated brain imaging now available -- and still not find a meme." is a false statement.
Here is an article on learning changing the physical structure of the brain
http://www.nap.edu/html/howpeople1/ch5.html
I put some in a jar of sugar and we use the mint sugar in iced tea.
I think you just don’t understand Wolfe! ;-)
That sounds good too. :)
No, it’s best on homemade bread, toasted with real butter, for breakfast. :D
...Ill do something that shows this cracker has no power....
***
Well, gee, if It has no power, why are you making such a big deal about It?
Dear Lord, please, please, I know we frequently ask for well-directd lightning bolts, but this is truly a perfect situation for one.
Monsters like us show us just how much the Evil One is working among us.
"As the old translations of the Psalms had it, "My heart showeth me the wickedness of the ungodly, ..."
We may rightly protest the spiteful silliness of Myers and Cook. We might also wonder how our lives have helped them to think that Catholic Christianity is fit to be mocked and despised.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.