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TopBillin on life and the
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    0 starsTopBillin | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 09 2008 | the, religion, life

    Quoted: Despite the vast number of religions, nearly everyone in the world believes in the same things: the existence of a soul, an afterlife, miracles, and the divine creation of the universe. Recently psychologists doing research on the minds of infants have discovered two related facts that may account for this phenomenon. One: human beings come into the world with a predisposition to believe in supernatural phenomena. And two: this predisposition is an incidental by-product of cognitive functioning gone awry. Which leads to the question ...

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    0 starsTopBillin | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 03 2008 | the, life, religion
    Sacred evolution, or an ear from the jaw of a fish? - Philosophy and Life

    Quoted: Some evolutionists are arguing, for example, that 'there seems to be no natural law sufficient to describe Darwinian pre-adaptations', as evolutionary theorist Stuart Kauffman puts it. A Darwinian pre-adaption is a property that has no selection value in one environment, it's value only emerging in another later. 'An example is human middle-ear bones, which are derived from three adjacent jawbones of an early fish,' Kaufmann continues. And its not just ears. Lungs, hearts, livers and much more besides fall in the same category. (The battle over spandrels will be familiar to many, recently stirred up by Jerry Fodor.)

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    0 starsTopBillin | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 03 2008 | the, religion, life
    John Gray - “The Atheist Delusion”
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    0 starsTopBillin | Shared With: Everyone - May 30 2008 | the, books, life

    Quoted: Allegory fell on hard times in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Although the charm of beloved works of English literature such as Spenser’s Faerie Queene and Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress lies in the imaginative use of allegory, biblical scholars banished the term from their vocabulary. Harper’s Bible Dictionary, for example, published in the 1980s by leading scholars of the Society of Biblical Literature, does not even have an entry under the word.

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    0 starsTopBillin | Shared With: Everyone - May 30 2008 | the, life, bush
    The drug abuse of John F Kennedy

    Quoted: In particular, without the knowledge of his other doctors and at the same time as they were giving him other drugs, he was being tended to by Max Jacobson, a doctor known as "Dr Feelgood" because of his reputation as a provider of amphetamines and pep pills. In time Jacobson's drug treatment became almost a recreational drug for Kennedy. Jacobson was later struck off.

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    0 starsTopBillin | Shared With: Everyone - May 25 2008 | the, life, culture

    Quoted: A new book asks all the right questions about animal rights, even if it doesn't canvass all the possible answers

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    0 starsTopBillin | Shared With: Everyone - May 24 2008 | the, life, women
    Keepin' It Unreal by Ta-Nehisi Coates

    Nice history of the evolution of gansta rap

    Quoted: Keepin' It Unreal

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    0 starsTopBillin | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 24 2008 | the, life, news
    Death portraits shared around the world | Newsblog | Guardian Unlimited

    Quoted: Two days ago, the Guardian published in G2, and on the website, a series of photographs by a German photographer, Walter Schels, and his partner Beate Lakotta. The subject matter was death: the pictures consisted of a series of portraits of people both before and - crucially - after death.

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    0 starsTopBillin | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 16 2008 | the, life
    BK FEATURE: Why Superman Will Always Suck - Bam! Kapow!
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    0 starsTopBillin | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 14 2008 | the, life, technology
    The New Atlantis » The Moral Life of Cubicles

    Quoted: It would, in a way, be comforting if the rise of cubicles were simply the result of a bad decision to grant spreadsheets and their budgeteer masters imperial dominion over office space, but that’s just not how it happened. The cubicle revolution, in fact, was above all ideological. The clichés hurled at cubicles were woven into their sound-dampening fabric board from the beginning. Any discerning criticism of office life will have to take this moral history into account. Indeed, it is precisely the axioms of what makes for a good company and a good person buried within the cubicle that most need to be uncovered and held to critical attention.

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