Night Off

Feb 04, 2010 12:59

In spite of remnants of lurgy still dogging me I stole the chance last night to have a night off from children. People who know me know I am a frequent visitor at PZ Myers's blog Pharyngula which is a hotbed of information and discussion on topics of science in education, evolution, anti-creationism, bacon and atheism. PZ has been in Ireland for a ( Read more... )

pz-myers, educate together, health

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Comments 9

daftnewt February 4 2010, 16:38:37 UTC
I read Pharyngula too, and I've been following his Irish trip, so your encounter gave me a delighted 'small world' feeling! I'm glad you got to attend, but I'm sorry you're sick so often. Hugs from across the water!

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sammywol February 4 2010, 19:49:51 UTC
Sat there and thought of you :) It was a very 'small world' kind of talk really.

and yes, wish I wasn't sick so often. No real idea what to do about it. My mum is convinced that if I was thin and fitter this would all wondrously vanish but the weight and the sloth have always seemed to follow the lousy resistance rather than precede it, even when I was a kid. Stupid genes! although the current lurgy may well help the weight thing as eating is not all that comfy right now. Nothing is helping the exercise aspect though. Maybe when our pool/gym reopens next week I can get back into swimming.

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alaimacerc February 4 2010, 16:40:04 UTC
Not nearly Godless enough! They keep electing Ronan Mullen! Unless he gets in entirely by means of the Maynooth block vote. (Irish seminarians vote early, and often?)

Sorry to hear about the poor prospects for a ET Cork secondary. Let's hope they get there eventually, though "sooner" would be better.

Mrmmm, baaaaaacon.

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sammywol February 4 2010, 19:52:57 UTC
Oh they aren't really godless and never have been but they were vilified by Daniel O'Connell for not dragooning students to regular worship. He wanted proper Catholic institutions not just institutions lacking Oxbridge's then ban on Catholics graduating. For once the poor Brits were trying to be 'sensitive' but it did not get them very far, except of course that we still have the colleges (and some nice statues of Queen Vic) and, for three of them at least, the British authorities are no longer an issue.

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alaimacerc February 5 2010, 00:27:35 UTC
Somewhat as I suspected; from the same school of thought that gave rise to a pie chart by religion and major denominational division that I once saw, one segment of which was labelled "Protestants (including agnostics and atheists)".

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sammywol February 5 2010, 13:01:48 UTC
Not quite. The point about the Queen's University Colleges was that they were disestablished. They were not Protestant institutions at all. This was all going on around the time of Catholic Emancipation and British unis were in no hurry to accept non-recanting Catholics. These Irish Colleges accepted all comers equally. There was not even a college chapel in UCC before the C20th.

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