There are 6 books... but how many of them were great? I submit that the first three were great. The others were good, but not great... and good is the enemy of great.
"Persevera, per severa, per se vera." Persist through difficulties, even though it is hard.
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I will not take de-bait ... but that's the great thing about opinions - everyone can be correct in having their own, even though an agreement may never be reached.
...and according to Charles Durning in Home for the Holidays (one of my all-time fave movies): "Opinions are like a$$holes - everybody's got one, and everyone thinks everyone else's stinks."
Last edited by DukkhaWaynhim on Mon Feb 18, 2008 7:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.
DukkhaWaynhim wrote:...and according to Charles Durning in Home for the Holidays (one of my all-time fave movies): "Opinions are like a$$holes - everybody's got one, and they think everybody else's stinks."
"Persevera, per severa, per se vera." Persist through difficulties, even though it is hard.
Proud Member of THOOOTP.
Buy my best friend's fantastic fantasy book! Pulse is also available here.
"facts are more susceptible to change than theories" (from my science notes for this week)
"Persevera, per severa, per se vera." Persist through difficulties, even though it is hard.
Proud Member of THOOOTP.
Buy my best friend's fantastic fantasy book! Pulse is also available here.
Auleliel wrote:"facts are more susceptible to change than theories" (from my science notes for this week)
Is that because the facts can always be rearranged as needed to support the theory du jour? Some of the best lies are supported by indisputable facts....
Auleliel wrote:"facts are more susceptible to change than theories" (from my science notes for this week)
Is that because the facts can always be rearranged as needed to support the theory du jour? Some of the best lies are supported by indisputable facts....
dw
My science teacher said something along the lines of new technology makes more accurate observation possible, which changes the facts themselves, but usually not enough to change the theories.
"Persevera, per severa, per se vera." Persist through difficulties, even though it is hard.
Proud Member of THOOOTP.
Buy my best friend's fantastic fantasy book! Pulse is also available here.
I can see your teacher's point - but it sounds like a matter of degrees. So maybe the facts aren't actually changing, just our measurements of them are becoming more accurate? A well-written theory should be able withstand a few extra decimal places of accuracy... but it seems when our technological advancements boost measurements by several orders of magnitude that we end up having to confirm, deny, or at least refine our theories...
The example my teacher gave was the number of chromosome pairs--people thought there were 24 until new technology showed there were only 23.
"Persevera, per severa, per se vera." Persist through difficulties, even though it is hard.
Proud Member of THOOOTP.
Buy my best friend's fantastic fantasy book! Pulse is also available here.