seeing the glory of God in the ordinary things of life
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Posts from — March 2004

What did the baby corn say to the mother corn?

Where’s the pop corn?!

March 10, 2004   No Comments

March 9, 2004   No Comments

A fun website: BeerAdvocate.com

March 8, 2004   No Comments

Last night Geneva, when it was after her bedtime and she was a bit loopy, was playing on a bedside table. She was sitting on our bed, and putting her feet on it. Megan caught her, and told her not to play on it again. Geneva has been taught to acknowledge our instruction by saying “yes sir” or “yes ma’am”. But, in this instance, she didn’t do that. So Megan said to her, “Say ‘yes ma’am’”. Geneva still didn’t say it. So Megan said to her, “Geneva, what did I tell you?” And Geneva says, very matter-of-factly “Say, ‘yes ma’am’”.

She is a naughty thing, but, man, that was hilarious.

March 8, 2004   No Comments

Stephen J Gould

Scientific genius is equated with an oddly limited subset of intellectual activites, primarily analytical ability and quantitative skill, as though anyone could describe a fossil but only the greatest thinkers could conceive of the inverse-square law. I wonder if we will ever get past the worst legacy of IQ theory in its unilinear and hereditarian interpretation – the idea that intelligence can be captured by a single number, and that people can be arrayed in a simple sequence from idiot to Einstein.

-Stephen Jay Gould, lamenting an anti-Trinitarian worldview.

March 4, 2004   No Comments

Much thanks to Mr. Trevor Acorn, who sent me some bottles of his home brew. How cool is that?

March 4, 2004   No Comments

Yesterday I was intently reading my Gould book, as he explained how they developed a three dimensional reconstruction of an extinct organism found fossilized in the Burgess Shale. They used many different samples in different shapes and positions, and also ‘dissected’ the fossils for internal parts, and used the counterparts (which is the impression the fossil leaves in the rock around it, basically) to visualize how this creature may have looked in life. This particular specimen is called Sidneyia.

And so, after reading that account with great interest yesterday, I dreamed about this little bugger all night.

March 4, 2004   No Comments

Last night I was looking through some old files, and I stumbled upon these fun soundclips…

Why We Love Andy Peterson

Aedan Sings

herb

do you dance kookily

Everybody Poops

they’re all great, but you may need to have some inside information to really appreciate one or two.

March 4, 2004   No Comments

Definitely worth reading: Marriage and the Physical

(duh… Tim wrote it!)

March 1, 2004   No Comments

I watched the academy awards for about twenty minutes last night before going to bed… in that time period (which included commercials, mind you) Return of the King won three oscars.

March 1, 2004   No Comments