Skip to main content

jaydinitto.com

Email me: [email protected]

Jay

How to Die Properly

In turn of the century letter-writing—I can’t exactly point to where—I have read on “dying a good death”. In a general sense this means dying under favorable circumstances, and most of us would take the phrase to mean favorable material circumstances: living to a prosperous old age, free of disease or dysfunction, in the company How to Die Properly

Book Review: Invisible Man

Ellison’s Invisible Man, not H.G. Wells’ more enjoyable The Invisible Man, deals with race relations both in the south and north of 1940’s America. The treatment is abstract, though, as everything is filtered through the nameless protagonist’s first person perspective. The story follows him through a series of unfortunate circumstances, starting at college, to his Book Review: Invisible Man

A Blatant Use Of Words You Are Not Supposed To Publish On Your Blog

I wonder how I had missed this article, on the Department of Homeland Security’s List of Naughty Words* that will flag their systems or whatnot. DailyMail covered their nethers well by posting an image of the words, not the words themselves. Poking around to see if any other blogger-types actually published the words, Soveriegnman.com looks A Blatant Use Of Words You Are Not Supposed To Publish On Your Blog

A Bad Argument For Gun Ownership Rights

Because of this, and most recently this, there’s been a lot of discussion lately about gun ownership/rights, the 2nd amendment, etc.—as there always is when the media cycle restarts and a report of a shooting hasn’t been done in a while. There exists one common argument that gun rights people* use to counteract proposals for A Bad Argument For Gun Ownership Rights

Are You an Electrical Current Or a Human?

Short post today. Read below the delicious red meat-quote on Austrian vis-a-vis Marxist or Keynesian, etc., economic theory, from an interview with Robert Higgs: Most of all, an understanding of Austrian economics reveals that mainstream economics is the exact opposite of what it claims to be: it is not science, but scientism. Relying on crude Are You an Electrical Current Or a Human?

You’re Not an Idiot If You Answer Some of These Questions Wrong

Forbes posted yesterday about “10 brainteasers to test your mental sharpness”. Most of the riddles were the trick/”false premise” type of questions with crucial information that tend to sneak by the testee. Riddles like these focus on ambiguities of language rather than actual problem-solving. When we hear a riddle or problem we tend to pick You’re Not an Idiot If You Answer Some of These Questions Wrong

Recipe: No-Bake Primal Energy Bites

Ingredients 1 cup chopped nut(s) (almonds, walnuts, etc.) 1/2 cup nut butter (almond, walnut, etc.) 1/3 cup raw honey 1 cup coconut flakes (unsweetened) 1/2 cup flaxseed 1/2 cup cacao/carob (powdered or chopped, unsweetened) 1 tsp salt 2 tsp vanilla 2 tsp cinnamon Directions 1. Throw everything into a bowl and mix (hands are best) Recipe: No-Bake Primal Energy Bites

Correction: Abraham Vs. Aristotle

In reading my last post I noticed I made a subtle but fatal error. I said that atheists and skeptics have an epistemological apparatus that can apprehend supernatural things. While I think this is true it is only acceptable—according to the state of philosophy as I know it—if the actor is a supernaturalist to begin Correction: Abraham Vs. Aristotle

Abraham Vs. Aristotle

I’ve been reading one guy here and another guy here and here. They talk about Hebrew/Middle Eastern (H/ME) epistemology, the existence of which I and most other Christians are aware and utilize under different names and applications. H/ME relies heavily on revelatory knowledge—our radar aimed at the metaphysical or supernatural—as a legitimate form of knowing Abraham Vs. Aristotle