21.12.05

Dear Reality...

I have a deviantart page now (http://sighter.deviantart.com). Of course, I also have a protopage (http://www.protopage/com/the_neven).
Weird. Years ago I started this... thing.
Weird.
My dad has a page as well.
Maybe he'll link to me...

19.4.05

A Treatise for God, part 2

"Had I not known/that I was dead/already/I would have mourned/my loss of life."
--Ota Dokan (1432-1486)

Well, the greatest argument against God and religion as a whole has been the Secular belief in some sort of 'religious ignorant wars', in which religion is blamed for the wars of the middle ages and so forth.

But weren't the Nazis Secular? Wasn't Stalin a secularist? Wasn't the French revolution, one of the bloodiest in human history, primarily anti-religious?

Psychology, a young science compared to its elder brothers of Chemistry, Astronomy and Geology, has given evidence to us that humans have a certain needs, and that one of these needs has and always will be, a form of faith. This faith often is undercutted by fact, but the overall thirst for some sort of explanation for all things is strong in both cases of reason and faith.
To be continued...

"Light is meaningful only in relation to darkness, and truth presupposes error. It is these mingled opposites which people our life, which make it pungent, intoxicating. We only exist in terms of this conflict, in the zone where black and white clash."
--Louis Aragon (1897-1982)

7.2.05

A Treatise For God, Part 1

"Whether one passes on or remains is all the same./That you can take no one with you is the only difference./Ah, how pleasant! Two awakenings and one sleep./This dream of a fleeing world! The roseate hues of early dawn!"
--Tokugawa Ieyasu (1542-1616)
"I don't know where you get your delusions, Laserbrain"
--Leia to Han Solo, The Empire Strikes Back
"Nothing unreal exists."
--Vulcan Thinker Kiri-kin-tha, 1st Law of Vulcan Metaphysics

From a theological standpoint, one could say that US is a religion's nightmare. Really. One group of people want to end religions and churches, the other wishes to establish more religion that mirrors the old testament type of faith. I'll post a bibliography as I post the parts to this series.

Neither seem to get it, and all our problems stem from it. First off, note that I am not going to state separation of church, or argue any of the usual foul stuff. The first admendment is intended to free us to worship, not end worship.

My point and argument is to argue that God exists, and that the bible is actually based on some truth. However, I will condemn only those who are blind to religion and choose to be so.
The atheist basis on science to prove god doesn't exist, is the most flawed idea I've ever heard: "You see what is there" is the argument. Science cannot prove or disprove the existence of a God or other higher being, since that being is obviously beyond the comprehension of science.
I'm refering to Descartes and his basic premise: That the senses are fake. The only truth there has to be reasoned. Using this he was able to prove he existed ("I think therefore I am"). This lead him to prove there was a God by stating that someone had to of been perfect in order to design him, therefore God existed.

What Descartes said, was simple: The senses are false. Don't believe what you just see. I'm inclined to agree. Apply this to modern thought, and one realizes that science cannot be taken at its face value, that is, it cannot be the end all be all for everthing. Science is by its nature malleable, and frequent to change.
To Be Continued...

"I'm not normally a religious man. But if you're up there, save me, Superman!"
--Homer Simpson

2.1.05

Europe-y and Liberal-y

"I was talking aloud to myself. A habit of the aged: they choose the wisest person present to speak to."
-- Gandalf
"It is the critics themselves who are suffering from pseudo-religious certainty and superstition. Isn't there something self-righteous, slightly crazed, about directing such overwhelming anger at the man whose job it is to pick up the pieces of September 11 on behalf of the free world? George W Bush as we see him today is a response to disorder, not its cause."
--Charles Moore, Theory on why Secularists fear religious conservatives.

Perhaps one of my greater dislikes of the liberal and progressive movement in America is their constant pointing to Europe. "Look at Europe!! Look! There liberals and they make it work!!"
Not to sound crazy and psychotic, but the election is over. Somebody needs to be hosed down and stop talking. The conservatives won.
The intelligentsia of the progressive movement claim the somehow voting republican only can harm the economy. Wow. They sure forgot about Reagan, huh?
But on this note, I really don't understand the "far left" or the "left". Their ideas are interesting, but ultimately don't make sense. They basically want charity run through the gov't, that is what they preach. Yet, the US gov't is designed to be slow and bureacratic, as to prevent laws that misuse the state (Sedition and Alien Act, anyone?), so granting such an organization control over others' lives seems ridiculous. The conservatives speak of capitialism, because it ultimately rewards merit, not position. Those who earn it get to keep it.
And Socialism kills that idea, so Europe ain't bein' that cool.

"The one who does good deeds and expects to be appreciated, does something better then committing a bad deed. However, he does so for his own benefit and not for others. A truly righteous man does good deeds without letting his beneficiary know of his deeds. He does good deeds freely and does not expect that in the future someone will recognize his deeds. A monk must have resolve far greater then this. In treating all sentient beings, he must not discriminate between those who are close to him and those who are scarcely known to him."
--Dôgen (1200-1253)

1.1.05

Tsunami

"...And the battlefield where heaven stood
Was blown to hell again
But for just one fleeting moment
The answer seemed so clear
Heaven's not beyond the clouds
It's just beyond the fear
No heaven's not beyond the clouds
It's for us to find it here..."
--"Belleau Wood", Garth Brooks

Well, unless you don't listen to the news, or, are just very demented and sick, you should know about the disaster in Southeast Asia. I find myself astounded, and even more so by the sheer accuracy this event could be predicted. It frightened me more then anything else. The lack of a system or something, has only made the thing worse. I guessed on monday that the body count would double, although it did even more than that.
About a year ago, I watched a show on tsunamis. Amazingly, the show's example of an earthquake was freaky. And the sheer volume of the earthquake that caused the tsunami scared the hell out of me. Out of my ear, though, the earthquake, if it follows my greatest fear, kills at least a million... Well, then I will start repenting fast. I mean, the earthquake affected the rotation of the earth.
Ah well. The US lucked out once again. We weren't hit. Thank God, I guess.
Its times like this, when the Christian/Jewish strain in the US is kicking in. The American streak of charity is going to help people. And that is a good thing, even if others think were just cowboys or police or etc.
I pray everyone out there is safe and that those in the wake of the disaster will soon return to their normal lives.
"Tell me and I'll forget. Show me, and I may not remember. Involve me, and I'll understand."
--Native American Proverb