A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

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  • Here’s a link (via Eve Tushnet) to a blog called Bloggers Against Torture, sponsored in part by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. They’ve declared June “Torture Awareness Month” as “an effort to respond to the growing evidence that the United States government is engaging systematically in the use of torture and inhuman treatment as Read more

  • Amendment follies

    The stupid anti-gay-marriage amendment went down to defeat yesterday in the Senate. As someone who has lived in Massachusetts for almost five whole days, I can confidently report that the social fabric is not falling apart, despite the existence of state-recognized gay marriage. But seriously, folks, this is something that I think would be best Read more

  • Boston!

    Well, the move from Philly to Boston went about as smoothly as you can expect these things to go, though we appear to arrived in the middle of monsoon season. Next time we move I’d definitely like to avoid doing it ourselves. Technically, we’re living in Somerville, which is outside of the city near Cambridge. Read more

  • There’s an interesting discussion going on over the blog Connexions about atonement theory. I think Richard is right to point out that penal substitution should be considered one theory among several and not as an essential Christian belief as some evangelicals insist. The universal church has never deemed one account of Christ’s work to be Read more

  • Whither the blog?

    I don’t know if it has to do with being away from electronic media for over a week and out of touch with the varied gyrations and conniptions of the ‘blogosphere,’ but I just can’t muster the wherewithal to comment on the latest bad news out of Iraq, the GOP’s cynical resurrection of the anti-gay-marriage Read more

  • Florence, part two

    Another big highlight of the visit to Florence were trips to the Uffizi and Academia Galleries, which house some of the most important works of late Medieval and Renaissance art. The Uffizi is full of works by Giotto, Fra Angelico, Filippo Lippi, Botticelli, Mantegna, Correggio, Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, Michelangelo and Caravaggio. It was truly Read more

  • Florence, part one

    After four days in Rome we took the train up to Florence. Here’s the train station in Rome: On the streets of Florence (apparently with a car about to run me down!): First stop in Florence was the Basilica di Santa Maria del Fiore, the cathedral or Duomo as it’s called. The Duomo was constructed Read more

  • Rome, day four

    On Sunday we went to the Catacombs of St. Callixtus which are south of the center of Rome, down the old Via Appia and out in the countryside a bit. This particular network of catacombs, one among several in the area, is around 12 miles long and contains the tombs of over 500,000 Christians, about Read more

  • Too Many Books?

    Dear Blog-Friends, Discuss: Can one ever have too many books? Lee is packing box number 7 as we speak and is not half-way done. He did allow me to give away a couple of William F. Buckley’s spy novels and a few George Will books, but that’s about it. Abby Read more

  • As I mentioned, my friend Patrick lives in Berlin and knows his way around Rome pretty well. Here we are outside of his favorite trattoria near the Colosseum: Here’s the Colosseum at night: Rome is for … romance! Enjoying a late-night beer at an outdoor cafe: Read more