100 Things, Featured »

[15 Jun 2009 | 227 views]
See A Rocket… (Thing #49)

Catching a glimpse of an old rocket, space suit, shuttle, satellite, or (if you’re in my country) Canada’s remote manipulator arm is not going to — blink — turn a kid into a scientist. But then that’s not the point. If you’re raising kids RIGHT NOW there is one simple fact you already know: those kids will never know a time before humanity reached out to the stars. Big deal, right? Actually… I’d argue it is. And that argument wouldn’t be framed in reasons of nostalgia, historical perspective, or all that wishy-washy ‘hooray for us’ inspirational talk (though all valid in their own way.) I’d argue it is a big deal because while my generation didn’t exactly turn our backs on space, we did refocus much of our gaze on the unlimited realms information made possible by the technology of the so-called space age.

100 Things, Featured »

[15 Jun 2009 | 372 views]
Three Questions You’d Ask Someone Famous… (Thing #27)

Chances are that over the course of your life you’re going to meet a lot of people who are — well — famous. That doesn’t necessarily mean they are movie stars. They might be people famous only to others in your community, famous for something they do that you happen to enjoy or follow like the president of a large club or lead singer of a band, or famous because they accomplished something that most of us have not or could not, such as in sports or their job.

the skepdad blog »

[17 Feb 2009 | 106 views]
Stating the Obvious

Think of this issue of the skepdad blog as an editorial on definitions. If I was to write, for example, that the meaning one might derive from a collection of words on a page is deeply dependent on the way in which one chooses to define those words, one might argue counter to that premise and state that, well, no actually; Definition is secondary. Presumably meaning is more than the sum of the parts. We’ve agreed on definitions for the words, but the way that they are strung together into ideas is what matters. Who cares what the definitions might be; that’s the obvious part. Get a dictionary if you want to ponder definitions. Ideas are built around definitions, but are emergent within context and purpose.