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  • 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.

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    Ben Craton holds a BA in the history of science and technology from Purdue University.
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    Tsunami.No.Kami

    From Noble to Savage (Part I: Magna Carta)

    By Tsunami.No.Ai

    The concept of truth has a history that is peculiar and event filled. Even though seemingly benign, the history of this singular base concept of “what is truth” has shaped the world as it is today. Three times in the history of humanity since the fall of the Roman Empire, truth’s definition and the meaning men give it have changed. With each change came a catalyst that took the boiling water of philosophy and emotion at the time and allowed it to erupt into an all-encompassing idea that shaped the Western world.

    Preface to “From Noble to Savage”

    Ok, so the paper I was going to publish like 2 weeks ago has still gone ungraded. Well, to be fair it could be graded, but I haven’t gotten it back yet. As a result, I’m going to go ahead and post it anyway.

    I’m not dead

    I’m not dead yet, even though I’m sure you forgot about this site and weren’t worried about it too much. I spent the last month researching and writing a paper on the evolution of relativism for a class. I am now waiting to get the paper back so I can post it here without fear […]

    Affirmation

    There comes a point in everyone’s life when he or she just snaps and they stop caring about causes that before hand they had staked their life on.

    Restoration of American Christianity

    In the early part of the nineteenth century, Christianity took a turn. The Christians at the time saw around them a sea of confusion and of man made authorities. The quest for unity in the church was a daunting one but one that was undertaken by some of the most famous theologians in history. The restoration movement sought out to unify the church under a single banner of Christianity and return it to a primitive, pure state which scripture was the only creed and God the only authority. Two groups, the New Testament restorationalists and the Mormons, who shared this same end, but whose paths took radically different roads, attempted this goal.

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