Places to go

Paul's admin links

  • Local pages

  • Categories

  • Quote of the year

    If you write for God you will reach many men and bring them joy. If you write for men you may make some money and you may give someone a little joy and you may make a noise in the world, for a little while. If you write only for yourself you can read what you yourself have written and after ten minutes you will be so disgusted you will wish that you were dead.

    - Thomas Merton, from New Seeds of Contemplation

  • Acknowledgement

    Image of Saturn (tbsp) and Rhea courtesy NASA/JPL

    Posts Tagged "History"

    Irony 101, Lesson 7: Creationists co-opt Scopes

    John Thomas Scopes was a teacher in Dayton, Tennessee, who was charged on May 5, 1925 for violating Tennessee’s Butler Act, which prohibited the teaching of evolution in Tennessee schools. He was tried in a famous case known as the Scopes Monkey Trial. He later said of the trial, “I furnished the body that was [...]

    Back to Top | Comments Off

    Advent III: Behold the star, or comet, or supernova, or planetary conjunction, or UFO, or celestial trope, of Bethlehem

    Giotto di Bondone, The Adoration of the Magi, 1304-06. In Giotto’s time comets were considered to be harbingers of significant earthly events, so it’s not surprising that he chose a comet to play the role of the star. Entertaining note:  From 1985 to 1992, the European Space Agency managed a deep space mission named Giotto. [...]

    The majesty of the man: his palace, his serfs, his nose, his elk, his dwarf, his murder(?): exhuming Tycho (again)

    Tycho Brahe’s great mural quadrant. One of the most famous images in the whole of the history of astronomy was the fresco that was painted within the arc of the great mural quadrant at Uraniborg, Tycho’s palatial observatory on the (then Danish) island of Hven. Tycho is portrayed beneath portraits of his liege-lord and in [...]

    Welcome to the boundary: dragons, dark, a desert

    Detail of the Carta marina, one of the first maps of Scandinavia, by Olaus Magnus, 1593. Click on the image to get a beautiful high-resolution reproduction of the entire map At the boundaries, knowledge gives out. The simplest example of this is the edges of old maps that say things like, “Here there be dragons.” [...]