Glad you all made it past the end of the Mayan calendar.
Let’s hope those who believe that it is the dawn of a better world are right. I
wasn’t worried about the world ending so much as I was that it would continue
more or less how it has for the past few decades.
I put books at the top of my Christmas list again this year,
although a very different list from last year’s. Last year was mostly theology.
This year covers philosophy, psychology and history. There is one “A”-theology
book in there, The Christian Delusion,
a collection of essays edited by John Loftus. I bought this one at the
suggestion of Richard Carrier, a historian whom I have read and heard lecture. I
emailed him and asked for comments on my recent blogging, and he wrote back. It
was not really flattering, but that is his style, and I took it as
constructive.
He recommended I read his entry in this book. So there may
be corrections coming soon. In his essay, he covers earlier history of science
than I do, but notes that many of the claims made by Christians and Muslims
about discoveries of science were already done by the Greeks. So although not
directly addressing the Islamic Golden Age as I did, his comments are quite relevant.
Others are:
381 AD by
Freedman, a history of the shift into monotheistic governing
The Republican Brain
by Mooney, recent science on how conservatives think
Answers for Aristotle
by Pagilucci, I’m not sure exactly what that one is about, but Aristotle
interests me and I wanted to find out more about the author
The Structure of
Scientific Revolution by Kuhn, this is an old one, but I see it referenced
and recommended often.
Hard to say exactly what this year will bring.
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