Thursday, October 23, 2008

Christianity and the Survival of Creation, Berry, Wendell

The reading was interesting. It had me really stop and think about it. I do like some of his ideas on the topic he has about us as ‘dust and breath’. Also, I have to say his way he went around to his point was very different.
I like how he quotes from the Bible to get his point. I found it funny that he ties it into his economy view. Another thing I like when he was talking about the idea of the church having a building. I don’t go to church as much as I would like to, but I think he’s right when he says God is everywhere, that we don’t need a building to practice.
“We are holy creatures living among other holy creatures in a world that is holy.” I really like this quote. It is kind of saying that we are no special or we are as special as the thing next to us. Bringing in Christianity to bring by these points is a really neat way.
I also like his viewpoint on the idea of work, “To work without pleasure or affection, to make a product that is not both useful and beautiful, is to dishonor God, nature, the thing that is made, and whomever it is made for.” The other quote I like about work is this, “Work connects us both to Creation and to eternity.” I believe that work should be something someone loves and it should {no matter what belief you have} be based off your love and belief.
For the most part he stresses on how “He formed man of dust; then, by breathing His breath into it, He made the dust live.” He is saying that we are a part of nature and that we are doing harm to His world.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

The Argument Culture by Deborah Tannen

There is a lot of truth to this essay. We debate all the time. I believe we are an argument culture. The humor of it is, I try-not very well- not to debate a lot . I find it pointless. He mention that at a point we ‘distort facts’. I agree, we do, and it’s one of the reasons why I believe debating has no impact on us. We all end up debating what we believe or our ‘feelings’ rather than the hard cold facts. I agree that it waste valuable times and sadly I have to agree that it will encourage us to lie. Look at the debates and you hear people say ‘Oh he lies,’ or so on and so on.
I noticed we do like to pin sides, that there’s only the ‘other’ side. He says we should mention that there are more than two sides.
On a random note: I noticed again the attack on poor technology. That it isolates people in a bubble. Or it enhances aggression. I sometimes just feel sorry for all the attacks on technology that helps our lives and even allow me to do this assignment. Why is it that people feel the need to blame a tool for their anti-social behavior?
In general, this essay has a lot of good points. It was well written and I liked how the writer divided everything.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

It's Time to Ban Handguns by Lance Morrow

I really truly with a deep passion hate some topics. The ‘anti-guns’ topic is one of those topics. I always get angry when reading topics like this that I can’t help but digress away from the actually writing. So, please, excuse me if I get off topic. In the essay she uses words to paint very vivid images of how ‘evil’ guns are. She puts up little facts like those country that ‘ban hand guns.’ Have lower crime rate. Yet, I believe that we aren’t the highest crime rate. It shows how data can be put out there to support one end or the other.
I think what I found most offense is this comment “Most murders are done on impulse, and handguns are perfectly responsive to the purpose: a blind red rage flashes in the brain and fire a signal through the nerves to the trigger finger—“ To me, this is saying ‘ People can’t handle guns because they all act on impulse. I just have a hard time having someone tell me I can’t protect myself because I might get mad and shoot someone.
She had also mention list of people shot, but I believe wither there were hand guns are not, those people who had been shot by something else.
I believe Gun free zones do nothing but put other people in danger, I believe that a gun is a tool used to protect someone.
She had also mention the fact that ‘so many’ people want no guns, yet this isn’t a popular vote issue, it is an amendment that gave us the right to.
This has a lot of personal opinion in the topic and despite my hate for her view the essay was well done.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Leave No Child Inside by Richard Louv

This reminds me of Thoreau essay. Not because it has involves the environment but it points out the lack of activity we as people take part in as playing outside. I always like to refer back to other things I’ve read. Anyways, I agree with him that children are not outside as much as they use to be. You can see the difference back to, what, twelve years ago when I was a kid. That to me is a really short time. I look at kids that are ten or even seven and my jaw drops about their style of clothing—I think: How can a person play in that?
I had a friend say to me, as girls, that we all go through a tomboy age, were we just run around outside and get dirty. I hardly see anyone doing that anymore. I’ll have to say though after moving to Florida I rarely went outside. I was surprise when I first went down here in 8th grade that we couldn’t go outside during our lunch break and play.
I think that a lot of problem with the kids behavior and health problem would lessen if we had more kids outside playing, exploring and enjoying being kids. I was a health kid and I was always outside, I still go outside and listen or take a walk when I’m depress, and I still sometime feel trapped if I can even see outside. {It’s true, I hate when we have to put up our shutters, or my room is so dark or a place with no windows.. I go insane}. I don’t think it matters what type of ecosystem you’re in, wither it’s dirt or green, each environment is fun and important. I prefer piles of sands and desert like place.
I like the idea of outside classes, for a class that has to do with the environment. I cannot see a math class being conducted outside as I can a Science class, or depending on what writing they’re studying an English class.
Over all, I enjoy this essay. I enjoy that it didn’t bring in the ‘bad’ developer or builders as most essays on the topic would. I love the last part to quote it one more time:
“Developers and environmentalists, corporate CEOs and college professors, rock stars and ranchers may agree on little else, but they agree on this: no one among us wants to be a member of the last generation to pass on to its children the joy of playing outside in nature.”