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June 04, 2003

Amen, sister

Joan Chittister sums up my continued thoughts on our invasion of Iraq in a well-written opinion piece.

Thanks to Deana for sending me the article.

Posted by Chris at June 4, 2003 10:38 AM

Comments

I can't believe I just agreed with just about every opinion expressed by a Catholic nun. Apparently Bush is a uniter, not a divider. Uniting the world (and hopefully public opinion, or at least enough of the public to sway an election outcome) against him.

Posted by: Jaime at June 5, 2003 02:51 PM

Exactly. He even got a Gaian rationalist (me) to entitle a post "Amen, sister!" Who woulda thunkit?

There, I just said it again!

Posted by: Chris at June 6, 2003 08:53 AM

I'm doing a little research on Gaian rationalism. I've heard you mention it before, but never took the time to figure out what it meant.

So, let me make sure I've got my sources right. By Gaian, you're referring to belief in some form of Lovelock's Gaia Theory:
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaia_theory ?
If so, is it mostly the political aspects, or do you also follow the biological and philosophical/religious precepts that go along with it?

And, by rationalism, you're referring to the Descartes-style belief in reason over experience (empiricism) or spirituality, as described (somewhat similarly) here:
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/r/rat-cont.htm
and here:
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rationalism ?

Posted by: Jaime at June 6, 2003 04:54 PM

So, am I going to have to start studying YOU now, Chris? Also, why would you refer to a nun as a "he"? At least that's what the comment seemed to be saying...

Deana, too tired to contemplate Gaian rationalism or much else

Posted by: Deana at June 7, 2003 11:34 PM

Actually, the "he" refers to Bush the Uniter. ([shudder])

My own brand of Gaian rationalism uses an extended version of the Gaia Theory (self-organization and coordinated behavior of a connected system) and assumes it applies in a self-similar fashion to systems both smaller (human) and larger (universe) than Earth.

I take it a bit further to maintain that the universe is both a) understandable in a meaningful way by us and b) more awe-inspiring than any deity devised by humans to date. This assumes that reason and experience take precedence over any authoritative knowledge. That would differentiate it from Continental Rationalism, which seems to prefer mathematical logic and assumed first principles.

Posted by: Chris at June 10, 2003 07:35 AM

Jaime,

While you are studying, you should also look in to Catholic liberation theology. (I think that's what it's called!)

It might comfort your radical soul to know there are indeed Catholics out there who are really making a difference in the world.

so says deb the radical lesbian feminist witch

oops, can you say that on the internet? I'm blacklisted now for sure! :)

Posted by: debby at June 17, 2003 11:32 AM

we protect our freaks

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