Geoff's Miscellany

Posts

Reflectons on Writing

May 16, 2015

One of the greatest difficulties with writing anything is the desire to say too much.

I’ve known many people who think that there is no way they can write a 3-5 page paper about topic X.

In my own experience, even the most concise summary of opposing views, connected issues, potential inferences from available data, practical suggestions for further study, and speculation as to applications of discovered data typically entail the longest and most boring type of prose. There is no way around it. The hardest part of writing is knowing what not to say. Writer’s block may happen with fiction, but with non-fiction the only block is the paralyzing feeling of not being sure where the evidence leads or being afraid to say one thing because other things must then be left out.

Jesus and Irreverence

May 5, 2015

How should Christians respond to public irreverence toward Jesus?

What I mean by this is not, “how should we feel?” We have very little control over this.

I mean, “Should we petition, riot, whine, or write scathing commentary?”

In Matthew’s gospel we read this:

Matthew 12:31-32 ESV  Therefore I tell you, every sin and blasphemy will be forgiven people, but the blasphemy against the Spirit will not be forgiven. (32)  And whoever speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but whoever speaks against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, either in this age or in the age to come.
Now, aside from one confusing issue of interpretation (what is blasphemy against the Holy Spirit?)*, the rest of the passage is obvious. Jesus is completely willing to be insulted and to forgive those who insult him.

As Christians who rightly believe that Jesus loves us, that his death and resurrection have reconciled us to God, and who find in Christ the highest example of exemplary human character we might feel upset if Jesus is portrayed negatively in art or insulted. Yet, he saw it coming and was prepared to forgive those who did it. We should do the same.

Music Monday: Foo Fighters Edition

May 5, 2015

This might be one of the greatest songs of the 90s. I know several people from completely different backgrounds and even vastly different worldviews of love this song. So, enjoy.

Epistemology and Practice: Thoughts

April 30, 2015

One of my chief interests in philosophy has always been epistemology. I even wrote a really bad paper in high school about whether or not one could know religious truths (it has thankfully been lost to the sands of time). For those who do not know, the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy defines epistemology as

Defined narrowly, epistemology is the study of knowledge and justified belief.
While epistemology has, in many ways, been and probably will remain fun to study, one of the aspects of it that troubles me is that it often ends up fruitless. The arguments end up confusing practical people who use know-how in their careers and hobbies. On top of that, the arguments often seem never ending for the philosophers in question. Note, I am not claiming that they are fruitless, they only seem that way.

Personal Speculation

The thing about sin

April 30, 2015

The thing about sin is that it is so pernicious.

It is both alien and completely habitual and enculturated.

Sin is alien in the respect that it feels shameful and is shocking when we see it.

Sin is habitual and enculturated in that the beliefs, habits of thought, and habits of body that lead to sin are in the zeitgeist of every human culture.

The Outsider Test for Logic

April 21, 2015

A quasi-famous thought experiment which is intended to show why any particular religion is silly is the “Outsider Test for Faith.” I think it was developed by John Loftus.

I think that it is very clever. It may even be the best argument against Christianity I have ever heard. What I’ve enjoyed the most about the experiment is that it provides a rather exhilarating perspective on familiar ideas and habits.

Music Monday: Because Sometimes It's Sunny at Night

April 13, 2015

John's Apocalypse and Missing the Point

April 12, 2015

When the book of Revelation is read by Christians today, it is often read as a pastiche of horrifying portents, full stop.

Whether this is a wise reading or not, I’ll leave that to others to determine. But it is, most certainly, a truncated and incomplete reading.

The author of Revelation actually makes this claim:

Revelation 19:10 ESV  Then I fell down at his feet to worship him, but he said to me, "You must not do that! I am a fellow servant with you and your brothers who hold to the testimony of Jesus. Worship God." For the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.
The testimony of Jesus is nothing other than the gospel message about the fulfillment of God's purposes in Jesus Christ. Despite what else it is, the book of revelation is a call for the Christians in John's age and our own to turn their minds and allegiance to Jesus as he has been explained by the apostles. For Christians today, this means the Jesus of the gospels.

The spirit of prophecy is the testimony of Jesus. Another way to say this is that the point of prophecy is to make the message Jesus taught clear.

Speculative Theology and Universal Creatorship

April 7, 2015

I had lunch with a friend yesterday to talk to him about, among other things, a video game he is programming. He mentioned this thought experiment that came to him in the process:

Every hypothetical universe that would allegedly be as good or better than this one has a creator, even completely random ones created by rolling dice to determine constraints (for role playing games and so-on). Even hypothetical universes imagined for the sake of thinking about multi-verse theory are imagined. Thus, anybody who finds the argument from suffering compelling, but accepts various writers, thinkers, and other hypothetical universe constructors to be good or real is inconsistent.
Imaginary is not meant to mean unreal, but simply conceived in the mind. One might object, "but in our universe, real, conscious beings suffer." That's fine, it's a thought experiment, but if there is a creator behind the entire cosmos, one must imagine that any involvement in the life of humans on earth would have to be a statistical anomaly (we're zero percent of the universe). This is a crass anthropomorphism, but the Bible is full of them, so deal with it.* An omniscient being (if we imagine for the sake of argument that this being is like us...which God isn't really) who is managing the cosmos would find any individual event incredibly insignificant.

Also, he noted that this isn’t meant to be a proof of any sort, but a thought experiment to determine whether or not a world created in which suffering is conceivable or even necessary is necessarily created by an evil being.

Music Monday: Tuesday Edition

April 7, 2015

Yesterday I had Diff-EQ homework and lesson plans to write and I forgot to post this. But one of the coolest songs I have ever heard is In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth 3 by Coheed and Cambria.

The song is a embedded in a multi-volume space opera style sci-fi epic. When I first heard this song, just like by buddies Jeff (not me) and Nathan (not my brother), the part at about 6:20 onward got me complete hooked. The song apparently describes a conversation that takes place during an attack on a spacecraft with guns called jackhammers.