Archive for September, 2005

Battles of Language

September 13th, 2005  |  Published in Books & Reading, Language, Quotes, Religion

The major social and moral debates are often simply battles over language. Indeed, whichever side succeeds in choosing the words our culture uses to discuss these issues will control the way people think about them. Abortionists speak of “terminating a pregnancy” instead of killing a baby (or is it “a fetus” or even simply “fetal tissue”?). “Having an affair,” with its connotations of glamour and lack of consequences, is a euphemism for adultery. The semantic shift away from “sodomy” (which its Biblical allusion to sin and judgment) to “homosexuality” (a medical-sounding, pathological term) to “gay” (denoting happiness, joy, and celebration) has made this “sexual orientation” seem perfectly acceptable and moral.

A person who thinks in terms of the Biblical language may be less likely to commit the sin than the person who thinks in terms of soap opera language. We think with words. Our attitudes and our behavior are shaped by the language that we choose, or that we pick up unconsciously from the world around us. For this reason, Christians need to cultivate a sensitivity to language. Reading and reflecting upon literature is perhaps the best means to that end.

—Gene Edward Veith, Jr. Reading Between the Lines: A Christian Guide to Literature (1990), pp. 51-2

Thoughtful Articles of the Week

September 12th, 2005  |  Published in General

Jane Jacobs (Interviewed by Jim Kunstler)

Ties That Bind at Mealtime (Jonathan Yardley)
Sitting and eating a meal is something a struggling family needs. Strong families are already doing it.

Extremism USA (Douglas Groothuis)
Everything in America has to be biggie size. Groothuis says, “We crave stimulation, bigness, and bravado to hide our inner emptiness and to impress others. But beneath it all is the same needy, shabby self, which can never be cured by the excesses of the flesh.”

Private FEMA: In Katrina’s wake, Wal-Mart and Home Depot came to the rescue.
The beauty of the free market system.

Profanity and God

September 12th, 2005  |  Published in Culture, Quotes, Religion

Profane language would include irreverent invocations of the name of God (“Oh my God!”); insincere promises based on holy things (“I swear on a stack of Bibles!”); the calling down of God’s wrath upon another human being (“God damn you!”). Apparently, God sees these expressions as prayers. He takes them seriously even if we do not. Ironically, such expressions seem mild and inoffensive today. We might be shocked at “bathroom language” or our four-letter sexual obscenities, but not at an “oh God” when someone is surprised or a “go to Hell” when someone is angry. Here, as so often, our worldly standards and those of Scripture are turned upside down. What seems shocking to us may mean little to God, and what may seem minor to us may be a grave offense to God’s holiness.

—Gene Edward Veith, Jr. Reading Between the Lines: A Christian Guide to Literature (1990), p. 39

Christians, Art, and the Totality of Life

September 11th, 2005  |  Published in Art and Design, Quotes

What a Christian portrays in his art is the totality of life. Art is not to be solely a vehicle for some sort of self-conscious evangelism.

—Francis A. Schaeffer, “Perspectives on Art” in The Christian Imagination (edited by Leland Ryken), p. 46

Principles of Technorealilsm

September 10th, 2005  |  Published in Technology

Principles of Technorealilsm

1. Technologies are not neutral.
A great misconception of our time is the idea that technologies are completely free of bias — that because they are inanimate artifacts, they don’t promote certain kinds of behaviors over others. In truth, technologies come loaded with both intended and unintended social, political, and economic leanings. Every tool provides its users with a particular manner of seeing the world and specific ways of interacting with others. It is important for each of us to consider the biases of various technologies and to seek out those that reflect our values and aspirations.

2. The Internet is revolutionary, but not Utopian.
The Net is an extraordinary communications tool that provides a range of new opportunities for people, communities, businesses, and government. Yet as cyberspace becomes more populated, it increasingly resembles society at large, in all its complexity. For every empowering or enlightening aspect of the wired life, there will also be dimensions that are malicious, perverse, or rather ordinary.

3. Government has an important role to play on the electronic frontier.
Contrary to some claims, cyberspace is not formally a place or jurisdiction separate from Earth. While governments should respect the rules and customs that have arisen in cyberspace, and should not stifle this new world with inefficient regulation or censorship, it is foolish to say that the public has no sovereignty over what an errant citizen or fraudulent corporation does online. As the representative of the people and the guardian of democratic values, the state has the right and responsibility to help integrate cyberspace and conventional society.

Technology standards and privacy issues, for example, are too important to be entrusted to the marketplace alone. Competing software firms have little interest in preserving the open standards that are essential to a fully functioning interactive network. Markets encourage innovation, but they do not necessarily insure the public interest.

4. Information is not knowledge.
All around us, information is moving faster and becoming cheaper to acquire, and the benefits are manifest. That said, the proliferation of data is also a serious challenge, requiring new measures of human discipline and skepticism. We must not confuse the thrill of acquiring or distributing information quickly with the more daunting task of converting it into knowledge and wisdom. Regardless of how advanced our computers become, we should never use them as a substitute for our own basic cognitive skills of awareness, perception, reasoning, and judgment.

5. Wiring the schools will not save them.
The problems with America’s public schools — disparate funding, social promotion, bloated class size, crumbling infrastructure, lack of standards — have almost nothing to do with technology. Consequently, no amount of technology will lead to the educational revolution prophesied by President Clinton and others. The art of teaching cannot be replicated by computers, the Net, or by “distance learning.” These tools can, of course, augment an already high-quality educational experience. But to rely on them as any sort of panacea would be a costly mistake.

6. Information wants to be protected.
It’s true that cyberspace and other recent developments are challenging our copyright laws and frameworks for protecting intellectual property. The answer, though, is not to scrap existing statutes and principles. Instead, we must update old laws and interpretations so that information receives roughly the same protection it did in the context of old media. The goal is the same: to give authors sufficient control over their work so that they have an incentive to create, while maintaining the right of the public to make fair use of that information. In neither context does information want “to be free.” Rather, it needs to be protected.

7. The public owns the airwaves; the public should benefit from their use.
The recent digital spectrum giveaway to broadcasters underscores the corrupt and inefficient misuse of public resources in the arena of technology. The citizenry should benefit and profit from the use of public frequencies, and should retain a portion of the spectrum for educational, cultural, and public access uses. We should demand more for private use of public property.

8. Understanding technology should be an essential component of global citizenship.
In a world driven by the flow of information, the interfaces — and the underlying code — that make information visible are becoming enormously powerful social forces. Understanding their strengths and limitations, and even participating in the creation of better tools, should be an important part of being an involved citizen. These tools affect our lives as much as laws do, and we should subject them to a similar democratic scrutiny.

The Correlation Between Style and Content

September 9th, 2005  |  Published in Art and Design, Quotes

For those art works which are truly great, there is a correlation between the style and the content. The greatest art fits together the vehicle that is being used and the message that is being said.

—Francis A. Schaeffer, “Perspectives on Art” in The Christian Imagination (edited by Leland Ryken), p. 41

Don’t Refloat: The case against rebuilding the sunken city of New Orleans

September 9th, 2005  |  Published in Politics

Don’t Refloat: The case against rebuilding the sunken city of New Orleans.

Nobody can deny New Orleans’ cultural primacy or its historical importance. But before we refloat the sunken city, before we think of spending billions of dollars rebuilding levees that may not hold back the next storm, before we contemplate reconstructing the thousands of homes now disintegrating in the toxic tang of the flood, let’s investigate what sort of place Katrina destroyed.

The city’s romance is not the reality for most who live there. It’s a poor place, with about 27 percent of the population of 484,000 living under the poverty line, and it’s a black place, where 67 percent are African-American. In 65 percent of families living in poverty, no husband is present….

The police inspire so little trust that witnesses often refuse to testify in court. University researchers enlisted the police in an experiment last year, having them fire 700 blank gun rounds in a New Orleans neighborhood one afternoon. Nobody picked up the phone to report the shootings. Little wonder the city’s homicide rate stands at 10 times the national average….

Thoughtful Articles

September 7th, 2005  |  Published in General

Here are a few articles that have caught my attention this week and I think are worth your attention.