Early one spring morning, while the lawn was still covered with dew, I awoke from a deep and restful slumber to start the day anew. Perched on the rooftop, fresh Owens Corning Shingles, ready to install, Very odd indeed, looking so layered, so tall. One by one out of their bundles, precisely they lay, Not one turn, not one tumble, almost like play. Non-stop they cover this place, such a fast pace, On again, on again, vibrations in time, Hypnotic rhythms, a hypnotic rhyme. Hunger and a grumble, a smile, no time, An appetite can mumble to satisfy lunchtime. Oh my! A loud tummy in need, It’s break-time indeed for the roofing machine. Time to feed—then rise once more, With bread in hand, the roof to restore, A house now whole beneath the sun’s gleam, Built by sweat, shingles, and a well-fed dream.


Be Born From Above...
Silence is the voice of complicity. = more Dr. Pangloss quotes
Be Born From Above...: "Dr. Turek, would you kill your family?" Cody strikes again!

Followers

About Me

My photo
ajroofsright@gmail.com | Andyroofs = And He Roofs... I love my job, my job loves me... I love it so much I’d do it for free… Yep, his job he loves, come watch and see. Is your tile roof leaking?

Digital Time

Digital Time

Trumped Up

Aristotle The Great

Aristotle the Great

 Aristotle (384 B.C.E.—322 B.C.E.)


ARISTOTLE (384 B.C.E. - 322 B.C.E)

Aristotle is a towering figure in ancient Greek philosophy, who made important contributions to logic, criticism, rhetoric, physics, biology, psychology, mathematics, metaphysics, ethics, and politics. He was a student of Plato for twenty years but is famous for rejecting Plato’s theory of forms. He was more empirically minded than both Plato and Plato’s teacher, Socrates.
A prolific writer, lecturer, and polymath, Aristotle radically transformed most of the topics he investigated. In his lifetime, he wrote dialogues and as many as 200 treatises, of which only 31 survive. These works are in the form of lecture notes and draft manuscripts never intended for general readership. Nevertheless, they are the earliest complete philosophical treatises we still possess.
As the father of western logic, Aristotle was the first to develop a formal system for reasoning. He observed that the deductive validity of any argument can be determined by its structure rather than its content, for example, in the syllogism: All men are mortal; Socrates is a man; therefore, Socrates is mortal. Even if the content of the argument were changed from being about Socrates to being about someone else, because of its structure, as long as the premises are true, then the conclusion must also be true. Aristotelian logic dominated until the rise of modern propositional logic and predicate logic 2000 years later.
The emphasis on good reasoning serves as the backdrop for Aristotle’s other investigations. In his natural philosophy, Aristotle combines logic with observation to make general, causal claims. For example, in his biology, Aristotle uses the concept of species to make empirical claims about the functions and behavior of individual animals. However, as revealed in his psychological works, Aristotle is no reductive materialist. Instead, he thinks of the body as the matter, and the psyche as the form of each living animal.
Though his natural scientific work is firmly based on observation, Aristotle also recognizes the possibility of knowledge that is not empirical. In his metaphysics, he claims that there must be a separate and unchanging being that is the source of all other beings. In his ethics, he holds that it is only by becoming excellent that one could achieve eudaimonia, a sort of happiness or blessedness that constitutes the best kind of human life.
Aristotle was the founder of the Lyceum, a school based in Athens, Greece; and he was the first of the Peripatetics, his followers from the Lyceum. Aristotle’s works, exerted tremendous influence on ancient and medieval thought and continue to inspire philosophers to this day
.



https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjTJ-7k6k9D2GEphxuzN4ZUiJYb-zATojJ4DrxZH5Rur0JXzVMAja5Hrdr7QKPFAod2U2MdGVHRbNxlnAhGX_z-7zTbxOCfnJsgNOz7ukcgQycg19xuvtk4toqD9P9bM_-x1zIJ_6mpdYRt/s320/Marcus+Aurelius.png
Aristotle the Great

Wednesday, October 6, 2021

"Dr. Turek, would you kill your family?" Cody strikes again!

An aggressive atheist asks Frank if he would kill his family if God told him to, and then further questions Frank about killing the Canaanites. What would you do? And isn’t God barbaric for ordering these things in the Old Testament? ➡️ Support CrossExamined (Tax-Deductible) Website: https://crossexamined.org/donate/ PayPal: https://bit.ly/Support_CrossExamined_... ⬇⬇⬇𝗦𝗢𝗖𝗜𝗔𝗟 𝗠𝗘𝗗𝗜𝗔⬇⬇⬇ ● Facebook: https://facebook.com/CrossExamined.org ● Twitter: https://twitter.com/Frank_Turek ● Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drfrankturek/ ⬇⬇⬇𝗥𝗘𝗦𝗢𝗨𝗥𝗖𝗘𝗦⬇⬇⬇ Website: https://crossexamined.org Store: https://impactapologetics.com/ Online Courses: https://www.onlinechristiancourses.com/ ⬇⬇𝗦𝗨𝗕𝗦𝗖𝗥𝗜𝗕𝗘 𝗧𝗢 𝗢𝗨𝗥 𝗣𝗢𝗗𝗖𝗔𝗦𝗧⬇⬇⬇ iTunes: http://bit.ly/CrossExamined_Podcast Google Play: http://bit.ly/CE_Podcast_Google Spotify: http://bit.ly/CrossExaminedOfficial_P... Stitcher: http://bit.ly/CE_Podcast_Stitcher #FrankTurek #Canaanites #OldTestament

No comments:

Post a Comment