пʼятниця, 10 квітня 2009 р.

Conventional Logic Vs. Religious Logic (Comic)

We would have also accepted...
1. This bread and wine turns into a baseball when you eat it.
2. The baseball is actually 3 baseballs, all different but all 1 and the same.
3. This baseball died for your sins.
4. This baseball wants you to give me lots of money.
5. If I touch you with this baseball you won't have cancer anymore... also give me lots of money... just in case.
6. If you don't believe I have a baseball you will go to hell, but the baseball still loves you.
7. If you believe anybody else has a baseball just like mine you are definitely going to hell.
8. If you deny the holy spirit part of my baseball you can NEVER be forgiven and are SUPER DEFINITELY going to hell.
9. This baseball doesn't want you to tell the police what the priest did to you.
10. The baseball hates fags.
11. The baseball hates liberals.

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Best school name ever?

This had to be intentional on someones part, I googled and searched wikipedia for a Pansy Kidd with no results beyond the middle school itself... unless the person who got a school named after them is just that obscure.

Oh nvm I found it on the school's website they should have included her middle name: "The name of our school originated back in the early nineteen hundreds. In 1912 a lady named Pansy Ingle Kidd came to Poteau. She was a graduate of Indiana University with a Masters' Degree in English and Library Science. Pansy Ingle became a third grade teacher until 1915 when she married Frank Kidd. Since a regulation of the 1915 school board was not to hire married female teachers, she had to quit teaching. Pansy did not teach again until 1921 when the regulation was finally changed. For 40 years she taught with all her heart, and was called by many, "Dean of Poteau's Teachers." Mrs. Kidd taught whatever her superintendent needed her to teach. During her tenure she was a teacher of Science, Math, and English, Librarian, Counselor, and Principal. She organized the beginning of the Junior High School. This same school was later named in honor of Mrs. Kidd. Pansy Kidd taught for 42 years, and retired in 1960. She lived in Poteau until her death in 1978. Our school is indeed proud to be named for such an outstanding educator."

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"Friends With Benefits": The Chart

I had to comment on this one because I think represents something in our culture. Why are we so risk adverse? It seems everything we do in this country (writing from USA) is attempted to be done without any risk of hurt to oneself. What are people thinking? "Wow! I can have lots and lots of superficial relationships and have all the sex I want without ever feeling rejected!"?

I have witnessed this mentality both when in college and now among my peers in the workforce. I think one book, the Paradox of Choice (why more is less), described its roots lucidly. The author's tests showed that people only wanted to make choices that had the most limited effect on their future choices. That, as our opportunities in life have abounded, we've become less willing to commit to any one of them because we aren't determined enough about any one choice to consider it the "best" and worth rejecting the other ones for. Freedom can be debilitating if you don't have the wisdom to know what to do with it... (so can externalizations of happiness -- that it is supposed to be presented to you in the form of some perfect partner instead of created by you with whichever partners you end up with in life.)

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Can you guess which of these quotes belong to Ex-president, George W. Bush, and which belong to Batman? It's harder than you think...

Can you guess which of these quotes — provided by Philadelphia sketch group, Secret Pants — belong to ex-president, George W. Bush, and which belong to Batman from his 1960s TV series?



"The Constitution is the cornerstone of our great nation. We must abide by it."

-- Batman

p/s The batman ones actually sounded more like what a president would say.

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TURN AROUND TURN AROUND OH MY GOD IT'S TOO LATE.

"That guy" pulls off the psychopathic look better than most actors O-o
The look in that kids eyes isnt desire or awe, its like i'm watching invasion of the body snatchers again, an emotionless yet evil stare

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Fail Grades In The Exam But A's For Creativity

After I was accepted to college I pulled a fast one on my AP-English course. I thought I did, anyway. We had to write about literary works and how they influenced societies, so I went on a limb.

I took Tolkien's society and broke it down as a modern day interview, expressing and focusing on how the hobbits hated him, the trolls, wizards, elves, etc. all dispised him for exposing their lives from a biased point of view and went on to explain it from "their" point of view. I flipped good and evil, basically. Try to imagine the book but with the characters and the fight inverted, and summed up on 10 pages.

I thought I was going to get an F for sure. Fucking bitch gave me an A+ and sent it into somewhere and I got an award.

I stopped believing in school that day.

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вівторок, 7 квітня 2009 р.

Girls are becoming as good as boys at math

TRADITION has it that boys are good at counting and girls are good at reading. So much so that Mattel once produced a talking Barbie doll whose stock of phrases included “Math class is tough!”

Although much is made of differences between the brains of adult males and females, the sources of these differences are a matter of controversy. Some people put forward cultural explanations and note, for example, that when girls are taught separately from boys they often do better in subjects such as maths than if classes are mixed. Others claim that the differences are rooted in biology, are there from birth, and exist because girls' and boys' brains have evolved to handle information in different ways.

Luigi Guiso of the European University Institute in Florence and his colleagues have just published the results of a study which suggests that culture explains most of the difference in maths, at least. In this week's Science, they show that the gap in mathematics scores between boys and girls virtually disappears in countries with high levels of sexual equality, though the reading gap remains.

Dr Guiso took data from the 2003 OECD Programme for International Student Assessment. Some 276,000 15-year-olds from 40 countries sat the same maths and reading tests. The researchers compared the results, by country, with each other and with a number of different measures of social sexual equality. One measure was the World Economic Forum's gender-gap index, which reflects economic and political opportunities, education and well-being for women. Another was based on an index of cultural attitudes towards women. A third was the rate of female economic activity in a country, and the fourth measure looked at women's political participation.

On average, girls' maths scores were, as expected, lower than those of boys. However, the gap was largest in countries with the least equality between the sexes (by any score), such as Turkey. It vanished in countries such as Norway and Sweden, where the sexes are more or less on a par with one another. The researchers also did some additional statistical checks to ensure the correlation was material, and not generated by another, third variable that is correlated with sexual equality, such as GDP per person. They say their data therefore show that improvements in maths scores are related not to economic development, but directly to improvements in the social position of women.

The one mathematical gap that did not disappear was the differences between girls and boys in geometry. This seems to have no relation to sexual equality, and may allow men to cling on to their famed claim to be better at navigating than women are. However, the gap in reading scores not only remained, but got bigger as the sexes became more equal. Average reading scores were higher for girls than for boys in all countries. But in more equal societies, not only were the girls as good at maths as the boys, their advantage in reading had increased.

This suggests an interesting paradox. At first sight, girls' rise to mathematical equality suggests they should be invading maths-heavy professions such as engineering—and that if they are not, the implication might be that prejudice is keeping them out. However, as David Ricardo observed almost 200 years ago, economic optimisation is about comparative advantage. The rise in female reading scores alongside their maths scores suggests that female comparative advantage in this area has not changed. According to Paola Sapienza, a professor of finance at the Kellogg School of Management in Illinois who is one of the paper's authors, that is just what has happened. Other studies of gifted girls, she says, show that even though the girls had the ability, fewer than expected ended up reading maths and sciences at university. Instead, they went on to be become successful in areas such as law.

In other words, girls may acquire an absolute advantage over boys as a result of equal treatment. This is something that society, more broadly, has not yet taken on board. Mattel may wish to take note that among Teen Talk Barbie's 270 phrases concerning shopping, parties and clothes, at least one might usefully have been, “Dostoevsky rocks!”

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