zerodeviation.net - musings of an engineer, developer, and picky theologian

Archive for April, 2008

Technology

April 24, 2008

Opera Dragonfly

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Just got an email from Opera talking about their new product, Opera Dragonfly. Dragonfly will be a suite of developer tools aimed at, well, web developers. That’s all I know for now, but I sure am excited. They have a countdown on their site counting down to May 6, 2008. I am very excited and will check it out ASAP.

Developer tools have been the only thing still keeping me with Firefox and its Firebug extension. Webkit is shipping with dev tools that are not half bad and beautifully designed, but I have high hopes for Opera dev tools so I can do all my development in one browser.

You can find more info at the launch manager’s blog.

Personal

April 23, 2008

It’s a….

Boy! Just got back from the second ultrasound appointment and it’s very obviously a healthy boy! His name is Eli Noel and he will spend a few more months with his mom before seeing the light of the world!

We are thrilled to pieces and are already planning a soccer team with all the other boys who are on the way among all our friends. Of course Eli will be able to beat up all the other kids and <insert more manly stuff here>. :)

Culture

April 14, 2008

CNN Compassion Forum

There’s a good blog post about CNN’s Compassion Forum and human life over at Human Life Matters. Well worth a read.

Culture,Personal,Theology

April 6, 2008

Marriage

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Albert Mohler wrote a nice article on marriage. Here are some excerpts:

Our culture is so sexually confused that the goods of sex are severed from the vows and obligations of marriage. Thanks to modern technologies, we can have sex without babies, babies without sex, and both without marriage. For many, marriage has become an irrelevancy.
How does marriage glorify God? Tertullian, one of the early church fathers, offers wisdom: “How beautiful, then, the marriage of two Christians, two who are one in home, one in desire, one in the way of life they follow, one in the religion they practice . . . Nothing divides them either in flesh or in spirit . . . They pray together, they worship together, they fast together; instructing one another, encouraging one another, strengthening one another. Side by side they visit God’s church and partake God’s banquet, side by side they face difficulties and persecution, share their consolations. They have no secrets from one another; they never shun each other’s company; they never bring sorrow to each other’s hearts . . . Seeing this Christ rejoices. To such as these He gives His peace. Where there are two together, there also He is present.”

Having been married for over four and a half years now I can say that it’s true. It’s truly an awesome thing. Every day is better than the day before. We have fallen more in love with each other every day. I can’t wait to walk with my wife for many more decades -God willing- and see how God can use it for His glory and what all He has in store for us.

Culture,Philosophy,Theology

April 4, 2008

Ethics without Religion

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For some odd reason I was thinking back to my high school days. As a student at a Catholic private school (which sounds far worse than it was), we had to take Religion class until grade 13. At some point I remember talking about several ethical issues and our objection to teaching Religion -and naming the class thus- instead of simply teaching ethics, and having an Ethics class instead.

I have never made the connection, but tonight I realized what a stupid idea that was. I named this post Ethics without Religion to draw the parallel to the class I had to take, but since I am no big fan of religion, it would be more accurately named “Ethics without God.” My friend Alan (see the blogroll for a link to his blog) frequently takes on atheists and their moral positions, so you can get some more stuff from him if what I present is not good enough for you.

There is no moral argument for the existence of God per se, in the sense that the argument doesn’t lead to the conclusion that God exists, but it does provide a framework for true justice, so I’d like to present it here.

In most conversations about morality in a world without God that I have witnessed or been a part of, I see two things happening. Either good and bad are arbitrarily defined, or the fallacy of begging the question is committed. Let me explain.

Most people would say they learned right and wrong from their parents. In a sense that’s true; we did in fact learn from our parents. However, what if I was taught that raping and murdering little girls was good? Or eating other people? Or child pornography? Most people would agree that those things are indeed bad (if not, congratulations! You are indeed consistent in your world view, though I find the result exceedingly sad). So we cannot take our upbringing as the standard for morality.

Society is another candidate for determining morality. There are social norms and rules that shape us. However, if society is our standard, then Hitler wasn’t wrong because his behavior was socially acceptable. If society is our standard, then the little (imaginary, I hope) tribe in Africa that’s still eating people and sacrificing women by burning them is not wrong because their behavior is socially acceptable. Instead of one person making up the standard, it’s now many people making up the standard, which doesn’t solve the problem.

In both cases, good and bad are based solely on personal or collective opinion. We can try and define good by saying that it’s “whatever is beneficial for most and doesn’t cause harm,” which is begging the question: What does “beneficial” or “harm” mean? How are those defined beyond personal or collective opinion? This definition madness can and unfortunately sometimes does go on forever, but the bottom line is always opinion.

The problem with opinion is that it’s not binding. Who am I to say that my opinion of not raping and killing little girls is in any way superior to somebody else’s opinion who enjoys those things? It’s not. So without God, there can be no justice system. Sure, we can define laws and enforce them, but on the one hand legal doesn’t always mean moral, which is very apparent with the legality and immorality of abortion. On the other hand, those laws would be based on the opinion of some group of people, which again raises the question of why one set of opinions is superior to any other set of potentially conflicting opinions.

As a Christian who realizes that God does exist, I can say that raping and murdering is wrong, because God said so, thereby setting the absolute standard. Anybody adhering to a non-theistic world view who is judging right and wrong is borrowing from a theistic world view or trying to impose his opinions on others, something that Christians are ironically often charged with. I hope I made my point clear. I am not saying that atheists cannot act in a moral way, i.e. do the right thing; they can. What I am saying is that there is no true justice without God. 

Personal

April 2, 2008

AdMuncher

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Hey all! 

I signed up for the AdMuncher partnership program, so I get 20% of all the proceeds if you buy it after having been referred by me. All details are on the new page I just created for it. Honestly, it’s the best ad blocker ever. Really. I would use it right now if they had the Mac version done already. Just try the 30 day free trial and see if you like it.