Day: July 20, 2006

Everything Else

Why bloggers blog

The Pew Internet and American Life Project has just published Bloggers: A portrait of the internet’s new storytellers (PDF document).

In the study they note the breakdown of the reasons bloggers blog. They are as follows:

The Pew Internet Project blogger survey finds that the American blogosphere is dominated by those who use their blogs as personal journals. Most bloggers do not think of what they do as journalism.

Most bloggers say they cover a lot of different topics, but when asked to choose one main topic, 37% of bloggers cite —my life and experiences— as a primary topic of their blog. Politics and government ran a very distant second with 11% of bloggers citing those issues of public life as the main subject of their blog.

Entertainment-related topics were the next most popular blog-type, with 7% of bloggers, followed by sports (6%), general news and current events (5%), business (5%), technology (4%), religion, spirituality or faith (2%), a specific hobby or a health problem or illness (each comprising 1% of bloggers). Other topics mentioned include opinions, volunteering, education, photography, causes and passions, and organizations.

Cool, I’m part of the 2%. While 2% seems small as a percentage, in real numbers it represents 2% of 12 million bloggers or 240,000 bloggers blogging on religion and spirituality.

Everything Else

I don’t feel very emotional about this…


Which Hellenistic School of Philosophy Would You Belong To?



You are a Stoic.

Stoicism is a school of philosophy commonly associated with such Greek philosophers as Zeno of Citium, Cleanthes, or Chrysippus and with such later Romans as Cicero, Seneca, Marcus Aurelius, and Epictetus. Organized at Athens in 310 BC by Zeno of Citium and Chrysippus, the Stoics provided a unified account of the world that comprised formal logic, materialistic physics, and naturalistic ethics. Later Roman Stoics emphasized more exclusively the development of recommendations for living in harmony with a natural world over which one has no direct control. Their group would meet upon the porch of the market at Athens, the stoa poecile. The name stoicism derives from the Greek stoa, meaning porch.The Stoic philosophy developed from that of the Cynics whose founder, Antisthenes, had been a disciple of Socrates.

The Stoics emphasized ethics as the main field of knowledge, but they also developed theories of logic and natural science to support their ethical doctrines.

Holding a somewhat materialistic conception of nature they followed Heraclitus in believing the primary substance to be fire. They also embraced his concept of Logos which they identified with the energy, law, reason, and providence found throughout nature.

They held Logos to be the animating or ‘active principle’ of all reality. The Logos was conceived as a rational divine power that orders and directs the universe; it was identified with God, nature, and fate. Human reason and the human soul were both considered part of the divine Logos, and therefore immortal.

The foundation of Stoic ethics is the principle, proclaimed earlier by the Cynics, that good lies in the state of the soul itself, in wisdom and restraint. Stoic ethics stressed the rule “Follow where Reason leads”; one must therefore strive to be free of the passionslove, hate, fear, pain, and pleasure.

Living according to nature or reason, they held, is living in conformity with the divine order of the universe. The four cardinal virtues of the Stoic philosophy are wisdom, courage, justice, and temperance, a classification derived from the teachings of Plato.

A distinctive feature of Stoicism is its cosmopolitanism. All people are manifestations of the one universal spirit and should, according to the Stoics, live in brotherly love and readily help one another. They held that external differences such as rank and wealth are of no importance in social relationships. Thus, before the rise of Christianity, Stoics recognized and advocated the brotherhood of humanity and the natural equality of all human beings. Stoicism became the most influential school of the Greco-Roman world and produced a number of remarkable writers and personalities.

Take this quiz!

Poland - Polish - Polonia

The Universal Hope Offered by Poland

Bill Saunders, Senior Fellow and Director of the Family Research Council’s Center for Human Life & Bioethics writes on The Universal Hope Offered by Poland. He states in conclusion:

Unlike Disneyland, Poland is not a fairy-land. It is a real country, with real problems, and I will return to them in my next column. But Poland is preeminently a country whose “particularity” gives hope to a “universality,” a universality that recognizes true human rights in service of the truly common good.

Saints and Martyrs

St. Elias pray for us

Fr Joseph Huneycutt of Orthodixie has an excellent article and reflection on St. Elias, commemorated today in the Orthodox Church. He is also honored among the members of the Jewish, Moslem, and Druze faiths.

Check it out —“ he’s a icon for Christian witness to the powerful.

Current Events, Perspective

My life, my disease

As some of you may know, I have Type 1 diabetes. I have been a diabetic since the age of four, a long time now.

I am simply amazed at the incredulity of those objecting to the President’s veto of funding for embryonic stem cell research. I am really amazed when objections are raised by the medical community. They should know better.

Embryonic stem cell research has led to absolutely zero cures or treatments. As a matter of fact, in some of the trials in which they have been used, they have made the patients worse.

At the same time, research on adult stem cell lines has produced real cures. Why doesn’t the medical community focus on adult stem cell lines and other areas that have a proven track record? I’m sure I would have a cure sooner if science would focus on what works, rather than on wild money chases. Could it be the funding itself —“ doctors and scientists lining their pockets with research grants at taxpayer’s expense?

Anyway, if I had a choice between a cure and the disease, and the cure was developed from murdered children, I would choose no cure. I may die earlier, I may be sicker, I may loose a lot, but at least I would die knowing I haven’t killed.

The following is a statement from the American Diabetes Association on the recent events and the President’s veto:

Lawrence T. Smith, Chair of the American Diabetes Association (ADA) and the parent of a daughter who has type 1 diabetes, issued the following statement in response to today’s passage in the U.S. Senate of the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act (H.R. 810). The ADA has been a strong supporter of the bill, which would accelerate medical advancements by easing existing restrictions and supporting research that uses embryonic stem cells, while maintaining strict ethical guidelines.

“This is a memorable day for Americans with diabetes and other debilitating diseases, and we thank the bipartisan group of Senators who voted to allow scientists to pursue the most promising avenue to find a cure and better treatments for diabetes. Unfortunately, today’s sense of hope will be shattered for the 20.8 million American children and adults with diabetes — and those who love and care for them — if President Bush vetoes this legislation.

“A veto — his first ever — would be a devastating setback for Americans who are affected by diabetes and other debilitating diseases. The President has a responsibility to the 70% of Americans who support embryonic stem cell research. This is a historic opportunity to advance scientific research and it shouldn’t be squandered,” Smith said.

I feel sorry for Mr. Smith and his daughter. Diabetes is no picnic —“ I know first hand. Still, is his daughter’s life worth more than another child’s life?

Saints and Martyrs

July 20 – St. Margaret of Antioch (Św. Małgorzata)

Święta Małgorzato, któraś srogiem męczeństwem wysłużyła sobie królestwo niebieskie, uproś nam u Boga, abyśmy w stałości naśladowali cię, wiarę katolicką otwarcie wyznawali, według niej żyli, i kiedyś połączyli się z tobą tam w górze, gdzie nie będzie ani smutku, ani płaczu, ani boleści, lecz radość i szczęśliwość wieczna. Przez Chrystusa Pana naszego. Amen.