Category Archives: humanities

fossils

Found in the archives (1999 Jul 15): What might be the biggest event of our time of which the only surviving evidence, a thousand years from now, will be indirect allusions rather than direct records? For example: the life of … Continue reading

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the way the future was

Who is this Bill Walker? Fortunately, real life is too chaotic to predict via linear extrapolation. If Nero had tried to predict history with linear extrapolation, his picture of 2003 would have included: Imperial legions from the only world superpower … Continue reading

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the third day the music rose?

Roy Taylor Ministries: American Pie and the Armageddon Bible Prophecy. You can find anything on the Web.

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wish I’d saved that issue

Once upon a time The New Republic had a contest to find the most boring headline. It is often said that the winner was “Worthwhile Canadian Initiative” — but my erratic memory says that headline was the inspiration for the … Continue reading

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dialect, chronolect

Ken MacLeod’s novel The Sky Road is set at least a few centuries in the future. I once argued that there’s a limit to how far it can be, because the protagonist plays some voice-recordings from our time without mentioning … Continue reading

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the case of the haunted teddybear

A tale of exorcism. (Linked by Jim March, who is doing good RKBA work here in California.)

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Cogito, ergo non possum dormire

The above delightful phrase is the title of a new “mostly political (libertarian), mostly link-hound, mostly for my amusement blog.” Oops! For those of you whose Latin has gone rusty, that means I Think, Therefore I Cannot Sleep.

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