Home Updated Thursdays

Site News


  • Still not dead, I swear - January 30th, 10:43

    I'm still not dead. I'm just in the midst of trying to figure things out before I write them down in any kind of permanent fashion. If you'd like to know something, email me and maybe I'll write about it.

  • Read more..

    About the Author


    Ben Craton holds a BA in the history of science and technology from Purdue University.
    Currently reading:
    Recently read:

    Navigation


    Find What You're Looking For:
    The Pages
    The Archives
    Subscribe

    Enter your e-mail address to receive notifications when there are new posts


    Tsunami.No.Kami

    Something to Think About

    By Tsunami.No.Ai

    Lately, I’ve been studying some Eastern philosophy; specifically the codes of honor from Japan. Here is something that everyone, regardless of creed, should probably read and take to heart.

    The other blog

    Something I have to share with everyone I know: http://tsunaminoai.wordpress.com/

    Weird Science

    This is something I have been meaning to say for a long time. I have been asked on numerous occasions “Why does science and how the world was formed matter to Christians?” Here I try to explain why it matters and why we should all be concerned that we are dividing ourselves from the rest of the world. Even if you think you have your mind made up about this issue, please consider this article carefully.

    From Noble to Savage (Part III: Social Justice)

    For 200 years the mentality of Capitalism dominated the Western world. Money and knowledge became bargaining chips, values once held to be sacred began to lose meaning, and the public at large was split into a brutal class system. Yet at the end of the Victorian era, a single force would arise that would shake Western thought and Western political systems to their core, a force that was not even Western: India.

    From Noble to Savage (Part II: Capitalism)

    For nearly 400 years the Renaissance and its progeny dominated Western thought. The movement had influenced nearly all of society by the time the rumblings of its own demise were first felt. The downfall for the culture came from the most unlikely of sources: the Scottish highland. These Scots, with their minds bent on getting back at the Britain who had stolen away their means of living, would ultimately subvert and change the entirety of Western culture.

    Feed: RSS, Atom

    The Categories