2010-02-27T22:42:00-05:00

Having spent so much time blogging about mythicism, I felt I would be remiss (or is that remyth?) if I were not to share a few last links that have come to my attention. Joseph Hoffmann recently touched once again on the existence of Jesus and the Jesus Project. And although the Christian CADRE blog is clearly apologetic in its aims, in their recent post on this topic they seem to be more honest and accurate about the relevant sources and the... Read more

2010-02-26T22:24:00-05:00

Somehow I missed that Lost Untangled had returned. Here’s the latest one, for the episode “The Lighthouse”: Read more

2010-02-26T12:40:00-05:00

The story which appeared here in an earlier draft will be available in Touching the Face of the Cosmos edited by Paul Levinson. Read more

2010-02-26T12:22:00-05:00

Having mentioned creationism and game in the same post, I was struck to come across this comic strip (shared at Open Parachute) which brings the two together: Read more

2010-02-26T10:54:00-05:00

Just a couple of links and a couple of thoughts. First, two posts from around the blogosphere related to creationism. First, Richard Hoppe has a post on creationism as science-stopper. Second, Nick Norelli notes dubious claims in a forthcoming study Bible. On the topic of LOST, I wonder whether anyone has explored possible connections between the show and either Theodore Sturgeon’s short story “Dazed” or the concept of “game” in Scientology. Read more

2010-02-25T22:21:00-05:00

Tomorrow in my religion and sci-fi class one topic we’ll be talking about is science fiction connected with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. The most famous example is probably the original Battlestar Galactica (with Orson Scott Card a close second). As I noticed the comment of the person who shared the video above (from the episode “War of the Gods”), I realized that a young person today would watch it and wonder why the crew of... Read more

2010-02-25T21:56:00-05:00

Steve Caruso just blogged about this announcement (which has apparently already gone out on the Hugoye list-serv, but hasn’t reached those of us who get e-mails once a day as a digest): The First Hugoye Symposium ܥܐܕܐ ܕܣ̈ܝܡܐ ܣܘܪ̈ܝܝܐ: ܐܘܪܚܐ ܐܪܝܟܬܐ ܡܢ ܒ̈ܬܝ ܐܪ̈ܟܐ ܠܢܘܠܐ Libraries in the Syriac Tradition May 20, 2010 at the Beth Mardutho Research Library, Piscataway, N.J. Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute will hold its First Hugoye Symposium on May 20, 2010 to celebrate the opening... Read more

2010-02-25T19:57:00-05:00

On the theme of research before the internet era, Daniel Kirk shared this cartoon: Read more

2010-02-25T13:29:00-05:00

A friend and colleague sent me a link to this useful web page. It provides a convenient interactive sliding scale that allows you to figure out whether a work is (or is likely to still be) under copyright. Read more

2010-02-25T08:59:00-05:00

A subject that I’ve asked about here before has come up today on Jesus Creed. They’ve shared a letter from someone who accepts that the Genesis creation accounts can rightly be called mythology. The question that is now being asked is what the appropriate way is to share these stories with a child, and to talk honestly about them, so that the child grows into adulthood not with a literalism that sets them up for an unnecessary crisis of faith,... Read more

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