Anonymous ID: ac234b Dec. 15, 2020, 5:29 a.m. No.12036472   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6496 >>6783 >>6945 >>6981

>>12036306

Bill Barr's brother Stephen is a fat ass too. Reconcile.

 

https://www.thecatholictelegraph.com/catholic-scientist-stephen-barr-to-speak-at-u-c-march-7/49289

 

How do you reconcile faith and science in your life?

 

The word “reconcile” is wrong here. It suggests that there is a conflict that has to be resolved. I have never felt there to be such a conflict; rather, science and the Catholic faith have always seemed to me profoundly in harmony. Both involve a conviction that the world makes sense and that everything fits together in some coherent way. Physics gives us a wonderfully coherent picture of the physical world, the world of sensible and measurable things. The Catholic faith gives us a wonderfully coherent view of reality as a whole. Science is based on faith in the power of human reason to understand the world. The Catholic faith tells us that the world is the product of eternal Reason, the Logos of God.

 

https://www.americamagazine.org/content/all-things/faith-and-science-15-questions-dr-stephen-barr

Anonymous ID: ac234b Dec. 15, 2020, 6:25 a.m. No.12037081   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>12036622

 

Donald Barr also wrote a book called "Who pushed Humpty Dumpty" just like the Humpty dumpty foundation.

 

So much for Barr the man of rea soned judgments. There is another, far less interesting Barr in chap ters of “Who Pushed Humpty Dumpty?” This Barr has forsaken the conservative's prime task, the promulgation of sound values, and has instead succumbed to a particu lar hazard of the conservative en terprise. The scholastics used to say that all beings, including angels, risk characteristic forms of corruption. Radicals can be corroded by their hatreds and (as Barr notes) by the distinctions they too readily draw between micro and macro moralities, the universal causes they serve and the web of human relations they ac tually inhabit. One occupational dis ease of conservatives and reaction aries is the recurring temptation to appeal to two enduringly conserva tive traits in any audience, the sense of complacency and the sense of fear.

 

https://www.nytimes.com/1971/09/26/archives/who-pushed-humpty-dumpty-dilemmas-in-american-education-today-by.html