AuthorKlintron

R.U. Sirius: don’t let the religious right monopolize “intelligent design”

From R.U.’s blog:

The dark age forces continue their triumphant march, or their spirited crawl, or whatever. It is interesting and peculiar how anti-evolutionary religious reactionary are using the concept of ?Intelligent Design? to force their anti-scientific, 15th Century agenda on American children. Darwinian evolution, of course, is the broadly scientifically validated fact (certainly details are arguable) and ?Intelligent Design? is a belief or theory. If there is intelligent design, Darwinian evolution is a manifestation of it.

I happen to be transcribing an interview I did recently for NeoFiles with Howard Bloom about his book ?Global Brain”. Bloom?s book makes a convincing argument that all of life is a single intelligent system (Intelligent? not random) that operates according to a particular set of rules. It has been iterating and gaining complexity since the big bang. Intuitively, this seems almost obvious to me.

There obviously is a Third Way (there are an infinite number of ways) besided Darwinian chance and creationist nonsense. We should maybe try to keep the religious reactionaries from monopolizing the idea of ?intelligent design.?

Glad to see someone else thinking along these lines. Everything is true.

Over at his place, William Gibson recalls the *real* reason that conservatives reject evolution.

Japanese robot to chat lonely elderly out of senility

This is a bit sad.

Japan’s growing elderly population from will be able to buy companionship in the form of a 45-centimeter (18-inch) robot, programmed to provide just enough small talk to keep them from going senile.

AFP: Japanese robot to chat lonely elderly out of senility

(via Last Word Blog)

Students create biodiseal production plant

Three students at my alamater have created a biodiseal production plant to power the college’s organic farm. Great job guys! I love seeing small-scale projects like this.

Link (via Last Word Blog).

Crowley course by Robert Anton Wilson, RU Sirius course, etc.

Next semester at the Maybe Logic Academy Robert Anton Wilson is teaching a Crowley 101 course (and a few others) and Ken Goffman (AKA R.U. Sirius) is teaching a course on Counter Culture Through the Ages.

Maybe Logic Academy

(thanks LVX23)

Hack Yourself

Practical magick from horror author Michael Montoure:

Find the demon.

Do you know what I’m talking about? It’s the little voice in the back of your head that’s always whispering, ?You can’t.? You know the demon. You may think you hate the demon, but you don’t. You love it. You let it own you. You do everything it says. Everytime there’s something you want, you consult the demon first, to see if it will say, ?You can’t have that.?

What you don’t realize is that your demon doesn’t know anything. It’s an idiot. It’s nothing but a parrot, repeating back to you anything negative that it’s ever heard, anything that makes you hurt, makes you squirm. If a teacher once told you ?You’ll never accomplish anything,? it was listening; it hoards words like that and repeats them back to you to watch you jump. It doesn’t know what it’s saying. It doesn’t care.

Exorcise yourself.

Blood Letters: Hack Yourself

(via 43 Folders)

The Malleus Maleficarum

The Malleus Maleficarum (The Witch Hammer), first published in 1486, is arguably one of the most infamous books ever written, due primarily to its position and regard during the Middle Ages. It served as a guidebook for Inquisitors during the Inquisition, and was designed to aid them in the identification, prosecution, and dispatching of Witches. It set forth, as well, many of the modern misconceptions and fears concerning witches and the influence of witchcraft.

The Malleus Maleficarum

(via Xiombarg).

The Bandler Method

Mother Jones article from 1989 on NLP godfather Richard Bandler.

Mother Jones: The Bandler Method

(via New World Disorder).

Mindhacks, the site

I mentioned the Mindhacks here a while back… here’s the official site, complete with a blog.

The O’Reilly catalog includes some sample hacks: here.

(via 43 Folders).

Excavation of King Solomon’s temple

Did the first Knights Templars have a dead sea scroll that was a treasure map that depicted the location of the treasures buried under Solomon’s Temple when they arrived in Jeruselum?

Excavation of King Solomon’s temple.

Inventions from sci-fi authors

Haven’t had time to poke around here much, but a great idea for a web site:

Explore the wide variety of inventions and ideas of science fiction writers – over 675 are available on Technovelgy (that’s tek-novel-gee!). Use the Timeline of Science Fiction Invention or the alphabetic Glossary of Science Fiction Technology to see them all, see the category that interests you, or check Science Fiction in the News and watch sf come to life.

Technovelgy

(via Post Human Blues)

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