Life as an Extreme Sport

Faith, Science and The Art of Proof

Did a strong wind along the Gulf of Suez part the Red Sea? Did a freak meterological event cause a patch of ice on the Sea of Galilee, allowing Jesus to walk on it? Does it really matter? According to this article, no, it doesn’t.

And while I find myself agreeing with the article, I also disagree with it. Yes, for situations like whether or not the Red Sea parted or Jesus walked on water, or other matters of faith, that are oral traditions written down, there is no science in the world that will be able to prove what happened. All we know is that some people a while back believed it, and chose to continue telling it. And maybe that’s all we need to know; leave context such as cultural values and other oral stories to the scientists specializing in those fields, and remove the meterology from the question to begin with.

That said, I do see validity in dealing with objects like the Shroud of Turin or the Dead Sea Scrolls in a scientific manner. Figure out their date, their authenticity, and what’s going on. There were way too many artificats generated during the very dishonest dark ages in continental Europe; let’s at least make sure what’s being dealt with is at least somewhat near what the claim is. But, these are tangibles, things that can be tested, held, examined. They’re not intangible stories, but solid matter to be scientifically studied.

As noted, science and religion don’t play by the same rules. Attempting to squeeze one into the rules system of the other does nothing more than underscore the fact that science and religion serve very different and distinct functions within our lives.

Veronica the Vampire Slayer

Over at Beliefnet, the religion and pop culture blog is comparing Buffy the Vampire Slayer to Veronica Mars, with the latter show not yet living up to the former. She has some interesting things to say, but per the norm, fans go a bit weird in the comments and defend Veronica Mars as though the show will be killed based on this single article. I mostly find it to be an odd case of coincidental timing, since I was just talking about the show and why it no longer holds my attention with both Sandra and Michael. Sort of summing it up is what I said in the comments in the Idol Chatter thread:

I should confess that I only started watching Buffy when it was for a class, and then I got hooked and ran through 5 seasons in 3 months – so story arcs and progress was much more evident than it may have been in a “time of viewing” situation.

That said, I’ve tried VM. Several friends were very hooked last year, and persuaded me to watch. And I did, and I really enjoyed some of the interactions between characters – especially Logan and Veronica.

This year, though, failed to hold my attention. Yes, it’s a modern attempt at noir, a genre I love. They did it very well last year,… but what it’s missing is what Buffy had in spades, although BtVS lost it in the last two years of the show.

Buffy was a teenager, and so were all the other characters. Sure, they were fighting supernatural beings and had powers and such…but at the core of everything, they were teenagers, and they acted like it. Teenage crushes, first loves, awkwardness, pimples, cramps, bad hair days.

VM has adults running around a high school setting. The only time I’ve truly enjoyed the show ahs been in the interactions between Veronica and Logan, because those feel like interactions between teenagers. The rest of it, I just don’t buy – Veronica is a early 20s girl in a high school, as are the rest of the characters. Very rarely, they slip into being teens, and then the show grabs my attention, because then it feels like it’s supposed to.

That said, I think that, provided VM gets renewed for another year or two, it gives the show much more potential than BtVS had, because the background they hang the stories on will be able to grow into the characters they’ve developed – they will become adults, and the cognitative dissonance that exists currently will disappear, and create what I think will become a very compelling show. The point at which BtVS began to fade – college and life beyond, areas Joss just isn’t good at writing – should be where VM finally finds its feet.

Morally Superior, Relative, UnSpeak

Since all the cool kids are doing it, I’ll jump on the “Oliver Kamm is a pompous tush” bandwagon, too.

Seems Mr. Kamm has been engaging in spats of moral relativism recently, saying, in response to Professor Ron Greaves calling the July 2005 terrorist attacks on London “an act of demonstration”,

Moral clarity on terrorism requires distinguishing the force used by the democratic state from the violence of private armies. […] It is true […] that the word terrorism is used politically in order to denote illegitimacy of certain types of violence. And there’s much to be said for that, as there is for referring (as I have done in this post) to the “force” exercised by the security services of a democratic state as against the “violence” of those arraigned against democratic authority. To do this is […] to use language discriminately where moral discrimination is essential. The democratic state uses violence, and terrorists use violence; but these acts are not alike.

Mmm… so because a democratic state sanctions the violence, it’s okay and legitimate and morally hunky-dory, but those terrorists have no state backing, so bad them! Morally suspect!

Save, of course, the whole question of just what it does mean to have democratic support for an idea. In some countries, polls as low as Bush has certainly shows an opinion, and it ain’t support.

What’s interesting is that Steven Poole goes on to quote Captain Assaf L, an Israeli Air Force captain who, along with 29 other members of the air force, refused to continue bombing Palestine. Captain Assaf L said that

You don’t have to be a genius to know that the destruction from a one-tonne bomb is massive, so someone up there made a decision to drop it knowing it would destroy buildings. Someone took the decision to kill innocent people. This is us being terrorists.

In what can only be seen by some who know me as an unusual move, I’m going to disagree with the good captain, while simulanteously continuing to make disapproving noises towards Kamm.

What this comes down to, at the heart, is exactly what terrorism is. These days, the rhetoric used by Kamm is far from unusual: we’re democratic, therefore it’s a war of liberation. They’re bad guys who attacked us a few times, they’re evilbad terrorists! In Captain Assaf L’s case, he’s taken to defining terrorist in another common way, a rhetorical method favoured by the so-nicknamed peaceniks: all intentionally caused death is bad.

Now, as a Buddhist, I gravitate more towards the latter attitude by default, but I am willing to draw a historical distinction between terrorism and…rebellion, if you will. This is where I think the Israeli/Palestinian situation differs from the US/alQauda situation. Israel and Palestine are, for better or worse, stuck in a civil war. They are attempting to figure out where country boundaries are, if any are, and they’re killing each other in the process, each side proclaiming the other terrorist rebels. As many others have noted, this isn’t far off from our own country’s beginnings in its own civil war. Tactics of terror are certainly used, but I don’t think that automatically makes one side or the other terrorists.

In the US/alQauda case, the tables are turned, and are different. Yes, alQuada is a terrorist organization. Yes, the US responded to terrorist attacks…and after that, the US kept going. Iraq? Not so much with the being of alQuada. The US? Not so much with being anything other than a giant bully…doing exactly what Britain did during her heyday: forming empire. It’s just a different form of empire these days, as it’s a different era. But the modernization of life shouldn’t blind anyone to what’s going on: the United States attacked, without provocation, people who had nothing to do with any of the reasons the US laid out as justification for attacking. It is the action of a police state, of a neocon movement to establish a new world order. (Perhaps I shouldn’t be listening to Operation: Mindcrime while writing this…)

Anyhow. Deviation and digression. Back to the more general topic at hand, Poole notes that arguing about ‘moral clarity’ is an interesting rhetorical paradox that

usually signals the introduction of a double standard, an attempt to split morality into a twin-track system whereby, for instance, “they” are evil, and “we” just make mistakes. In this sense, “moral clarity” is really moral relativism: if you criticize us, we will just point over there and remind you of how bad they are . . . This seems like a good thing to keep in mind, the next time you see/hear someone talking about moral clarity. Exactly what are they arguing, and what are they attempting to obscure with that particular use of, as Poole calls it, unspeak?

Spam be-gone!

I’m trying a new plug-in, which requires you to do basic math before posting a comment. I’m hoping this will stop the influx of spam, and allow me to go back to not having to hold comments in queue before they appear. Math is, after all, scary. ๐Ÿ˜‰