Early in George W. Bush’s first term, I was dining with a friend who didn’t agree with my worldview. He challenged my certitude, allowing that he wasn’t sure about many issues. “Don’t you wonder ...
As the eternal omniscient Son of God, there is nothing that is unknown to him, nothing about which he is confused. He not only speaks the truth but as he said in John 14:6, he is the Truth. That in ...
We are now into our series, “The Belt of Truth.” In the introduction, we learned that trust is the foundation needed to build it, and that only comes through truth. Additionally, we covered the ...
Where does one begin when delving into the perplexing world of Søren Kierkegaard’s concept of subjectivity? To approach it with the tone of a dispassionate academic would be to betray the essence of ...
As has been noted, South by Southwest is lousy with panels on artificial intelligence this year. One of those filled a conference room at the Thompson Hotel and kicked off with a useful definition ...
BMS: Bulletin of Sociological Methodology / Bulletin de Méthodologie Sociologique, No. 116 (OCTOBER 2012), pp. 76-87 (12 pages) We propose, like D. Merllié, to study the links between "objective" ...
The Zen teacher Chuang Tzu dreamed he was a butterfly. When he woke, he wondered, "Am I a man who dreamt about being a butterfly, or am I really a butterfly who now dreams about being a man?" The ...
For government contractors, a Contractor Performance Assessment Reporting System (CPARS) rating can make or break future opportunities. But how objective are these ratings? A recent ruling[1] by the ...