Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Physical Anthropology Books to read..

Couple books that sound interesting, especially for my father who is an Anglophile, and sort of interested in physical anthropology :

The Origins of the British: A Genetic Detective Story (Hardcover)
by Stephen Oppenheimer

Saxons, Vikings, and Celts: The Genetic Roots of Britain and Ireland by Bryan Sykes



Deep Ancestry: Inside the Genographic Project (Hardcover)
by Spencer Wells

1 piece of shopping done..

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

What is heaven?

One day, when some of us were cooking, we discussed why we want to go to heaven. One person asked: "wouldn't eternal liturgy get a big boring after a while?" It had been a while since I read Peter Kreeft Heaven: The heart's deepest longing
http://www.amazon.com/Heaven-Longing-Peter-J-Kreeft/dp/0898702283

so I was at a loss of words. And I don't know who has my copy right now...

Anyway, on Godspy is an ad for another book of interest:

Lorenzo Albacete: God at the Ritz
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0824519515/godspy-20

May be a good read.

It would be wonderful to have these at the library of my local parish..

On Women priests (III)

One may ask:
"If men become "bride of Christ" as members of the church, why can't women become the bridegroom as a priest?

1. Certainly all baptized men and women participate in the church, who together constitute what is feminine, as a Bride. Also, all baptized men and women as member of the church participate in Christ's priesthood in living a life of sacrifice with him.

2. individual person becoming a sacrament of Christ is a different issue: to have efficacious sacraments, the physical reality must reflect correctly the spiritual reality. If a priest baptizes someone with the words of baptism while pouring motor oil over his or her head, there is nobaptism. The cleansing symbolism [as well as death and life] of water is not there. Likewise, nothing would happen if a bishop laid hands on a woman and said the words of ordination, because woman is not an accurate symbol of the bridegroom.

This discussion clearly reminds me that I don't remember my sacramental theology well at all...

On Women priests (II)

to continue paraphrasing CW:

A culture that eliminates this difference kills itself - a "unisex" world - leads to a culture of death - [how, you say?] The very sexual difference..." is the beginning of a path in which we discover the ultimate and fundamental difference for human beings: the difference between God and [humans]". blurring this difference blurs the great nuptual mystery: the call to life-giving communion for men and women, and between God and us.

[Men cannot complain that we can't bear children either..]

Preists "efficaciously" symbolize Christ's giving up his body for his Bride so that she can bring fort live in the holy spirit - only men and do this - it does not make sense for women to symbolize giving up her body for his bride. Otherwise, the symbolism becomes bride to bride - theire is no nuptual union, and no possibility of new life . Sexual communion in marriage is intimately linked to the Eucharist.

[Yet this would bring up the question - don't consecrated religious give their life to the service of the church?] ... on the next post...

Dialogue with Islam

Stratford Caldecott has an interesting article that sheds the light on this issue of God as Logos vs. Will. The Sufi tradition (the mystical tradition) very much recognizes the "orderliness" of God based on the attributes of God. The aesthetics of who God is lends themselves to God having order, in the Sufi view. Unfortunately, most of this tradition is not standard Islamic canon, apparently. In this, Christianity and Islam are not that far apart.

"The cause of fanaticism, whether in Christianity or Islam, does indeed lie in the separation of Will from Intellect…" - Christians also have a bloody history..

So what of the recent violence? Stratford says that modernist and especially Wahhabi Islam (thought to be the first from of modern extremists) has suppressed much of the Sufi traditions.

Again the call to the Muslims: "
We must encourage and assist moderate Muslims to raise their voices and speak on behalf of Islamic traditions that may be more ‘rational’ than we [as Christians] suppose."


Monday, October 09, 2006

Creating blue soup

Recipe for some blue food.

Make it with some red cabbage, that contains anthocyanin. when cooked, the mauve color will turn blue. It will stain most proteins, such as white fish. In fact, I made some cabbage-pollock soup, which made the fish bright blue. However, they are heat sensitive, so the color will fade pretty fast if they are left in heat.

I have not yet tried other food applications. Stories?

Regensburg Address and the concept of God - Logos and/or Will

Just a quick quote from Zenit: (stolen from http://www.catholic-pages.com/forum/topic.asp?topic_id=9457)

Q: At Regensburg, Benedict XVI highlighted the Christian understanding of God as Logos. How does the idea of God as Logos differ from an Islamic conception of God?

Father Schall: The Holy Father posed the fundamental question that lies behind all the discussion about war and terror. If God is Logos, it means that a norm of reason follows from what God is. Things are, because they have natures and are intended to be the way they are because God is what he is: He has his own inner order.

If God is not Logos but "Will," as most Muslim thinkers hold Allah to be, it means that, for them, Logos places a "limit" on Allah. He cannot do everything because he cannot do both evil and good. He cannot do contradictories.

Thus, if we want to "worship" Allah, it means we must be able to make what is evil good or what is good evil. That is, we can do whatever is said to be the "will" of Allah, even if it means doing violence as if it were "reasonable."

Otherwise, we would "limit" the "power" of Allah. This is what the Pope meant about making violence "reasonable." This different conception of the Godhead constitutes the essential difference between Christianity and Islam, both in their concept of worship and of science.


He also talked about the "dialogue" between different cultures (as would be between the west and Islam) - and he had this essential insight:

Q: The Western media have often taken Benedict XVI's words out of context and stoked the flames of Islamic aggression. How does the cultural dominance and hostility to the Church by the mass media affect its ability to participate in the dialogue of cultures?

Father Schall: There can be no "dialogue" about anything until the basic principles of reason are granted both in theory and practice. Chesterton remarked on the fact that those who begin to attack the Church for this or that reason, mostly end up attacking it for any reason.

What is behind the attack on reason or the refusal to admit that God is Logos is already a suspicion that the Church is right about intellect and its conditions. We have no guarantee that reason will freely be accepted.

Von Balthasar said that we are warned that we are sent among wolves. We are naive to think that Christ was wrong when he warned us that the world would hate us for upholding Logos and the order of things it implies.

But Benedict is right. He has put the citizens of world on notice that they are also accountable for how they use or do not use their reason. No one else could have done this. The fact is, the world has wildly underestimated Benedict XVI precisely because it would not see the ability he displays in getting to the heart of intellectual things.

See the whole thing (and many more goodies) at:
http://www.zenit.org/english/visualizza.phtml?sid=95902

So what is logos? Wikipedia (click for the definition) defines it as having an order, being rational, etc. Benedict XVI's definition is also cited. For christians: "Christianity has understood itself as the religion of the Logos, as the religion according to reason";"s also open to all that is truly rational." [1]"

Truly an interesting discussion.

Fr. Schall has more comments here
Some highlights:

That "God can contradict himself in his decrees so that certain political or moral actions are thereby justified as obedience to God" is rather prevalent outcome of the notion "God as "will""
[Schall]. [Rather confusing sentence]

Hmm. Certainly pertains to the definition God as "will" And yet, Judeo-Christian concept of God can do somewhat the same, no? Christianity is also a religion of contradiction in some sense: death unto life; the incarnation and death of Jesus; obedience unto freedom;

Or are these "contradictions" not contradictions at all? Death has become the vehicle for life; God who is powerful enough to put aside his divinity to become human; True freedom refers to the power and the courage to do good and to love, and it only comes about from total integration of the self, which comes from obedience to our true natures as God as created.

What also seems to follow: God as will can bend the definition of good and evil at will, and make evil to be reasonable. What is good or evil is at the whim of God? [Doesn't sound all that bad - God is omnipotent, right?] This also means that the revelation of God is not necessarily stable, demonstrated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, where the current prophet can change the deposit of faith as stated by the previous prophet.

One consequence of this line of thought as Schall quotes it: If certain moral and political actions can be attributed to the obedience to the will of God, the recent Muslim terrorist activities, that justify violence as obedience to God, make sense.

Another consequence of this line of thought: modern relativism and skepticsm. The modern mind does not accept that one can know AND believe; Especially in Europe, people don't think faith and reason belong in the same sphere, despite the fact that it was where the relationship between the two were hammered out during the last 2000 years.

For us academics, the scientific method is based on the metaphysics of a world of order: that things behave in orderly, predictable ways. Otherwise, the scientific method would not work. We can't do experiments and expect repeatable results; We can't test hypotheses; we can't expect anything to work in a predictable manner. [Granted, at the cutting edge of scientific discovery, things certainly look that way.

Full text of the address here:

BBC says that there is an update, but I can't find the final edition online... any help would be nice...


Tuesday, September 26, 2006

For a more informed discussion on women priests

From "Good News about Sex and Marriage", Ascention Press

Christopher West says [paraphrased by moi]:

For many women, that the Church reserves sacramental priesthood only to men stirs much emotion fueled by "historical consciousness" of past oppression of women. Only recently, did the Church acknowledged and asked for forgiveness in JPII's letter to women, "objective blame, especially in particular historical context, has belonged to not just a few members of the church. May this regret be transformed on the part of the whole church, into a renewed commitment of fidelity to the Gospel vision" [for more complete discussion on the Gospel vision, one needs to study Theology of the Body in more in depth.]

This gospel vision is the great "nuptual mystery" of Christ's union with the Church, which is symbolized by our creation as male and female. To be faithful to this vision, we must uphold the dignity of woman always, and resist the social structures that have been made to favor men. It also calls us to resist the other extreme - considering men and women to be interchangeable.

Equality between the sexes does NOT mean sameness. The very difference, between men and women, is what reveals the awesome nuptual mystery. This fundamental difference literally brings life to the world [both by childbearing, and and the Incarnation of Christ].

More on this on the next post..

The Eucharist and the Bridegroom

Since some of us are still discussing the issue of sacramental priesthood and women...

The Eucharist is the Sacrament of our Redemption. It is the Sacramentof the Bridegroom and the Bride... Christ is united with this 'body' as the bridegroom with the bride... Since Christ, in instituting the Eucharist, linked it in a such an explicit way to the priestly service of the Apostles, it is legitimate to conclude that he thereby wished to express the relationship between man and woman

From On the Dignity of Women, #26
More discussion on this here

Lord, help us understand our sexual differences.

Monday, September 25, 2006

Need for better academic settings

In reading some of blogs on the our Holy Father's regensburg lecture, particularly the need for Catholic academics to step up, and educate the world, got me thinking: How can we, as catholics in academia do this?

First line of thought was that how nice it would be for me, who may get a job in the kinesiology department, to create a course to go along with "Human Sexuality." Except, this course would be cross-listed in religious studies and philosophy and anthropology, and be entitled something like "Human Sexuality and Phenomenology: Biblical anthropology." It would be a class on the theology of the body. Obvious question: what department head would allow that? One of my old ChE professors (Ed Seebauer) in undergrad taught an engineering ethics course he developed with Fr. Bob Barry, OP. Hey, if he did it, why can't I? It helps to have tenure..

Or if I had my own university (or made the president of a university) (or had $1B to start a college), I could develop a theology department. Would that be a way to do step up?

Then I got thinking. As academics, we certainly have duty to teach this stuff (even though I only took I philosophy class, so I don't know if I am qualified). But, we can preach this just as much by simply living the Theology of the Body. I am not quite sure how one does that as an academic, other than ... give your whole self to teaching.. ? [that's if your don't give yourself away in marriage].

How can we teach and live the truth of faith and reason in harmony and as two wings of the soul? How does faith play a role in studying the stability of stochastic limit cycles applied to human walking? How do we include that in our teaching? how is our teaching philosophy informed by our faith and theology? We have to apply for jobs and play the tenure game, and not get flagged as a "right wing religious fanatic who can't keep his own churchy stuff to himself."

Thursday, May 04, 2006

A Tribute of St. Albert the Great

St. Albert was a Dominican friar who was the teacher of Tommaso d'Aquino, often known as St. Thomas Aquinas.

He is also the patron of this blog, as he exemplifies some of my ideals and personality.
- He was a great teacher, and is the patron of teachers
- He is a Dominican, who lived by the guidelines of:
- Laudare, Benedicere, Praedicare (to praise, to bless and to preach)
- Veritas (Truth)
- Contemplare et Contemplata Aliis Tradere (Study and share the fruits of your contemplation)

You can learn more about him here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albertus_Magnus

I hope that the blog helps me hone my skills as a teacher and a student of truth, as I go through the formation to become an academic.