Bought an iPod touch but I could just have gone to the Olympics instead

Critics are questioning Travel Alberta's decision to spend more than $200,000 to hand out free iPod Touches to passengers on the Alberta Train during the Olympics. ... "It's a little bit over the top to spend that much money handing out free iPods," NDP Leader Brian Mason said Wednesday.

...[Travel Alberta's spokesman, Don] Boynton said the iPods were an environmentally friendly way to provide media and guests with videos, stories and pictures of Alberta's tourism hot spots. While some organizations might put the same information on USB sticks, Boynton said, "This (promotion) was distinctive and highly interactive."

Source: Calgary Herald

Let's see: A 1 gig USB stick would be maybe $5 in bulk (and that's probably a drastic overestimate), whereas the cheapest iPod touch about $200. Spend 40 times as much and you'd better get something "distinctive"! And yes, iPods grow on trees and are ever so "environmentally friendly" compared to printing out a booklet with some photos.

The mind

Lazy minds breed lazy hearts and hands. Presupposing the naturalistic worldview of their neighbors, liberalism assumed that religion inhabits the realm of inner mystical experience and universal morality. Why would anyone feel compelled to consider Christian claims if their would-be defenders either denied them or denied intellectual access to them? The greatest threat to Christianity is never vigorous intellectual criticism but a creeping senility that transforms truths into feelings, public claims into private experiences, and facts into mere values. Christianity is either true or false, but it is not irrational. If its claims are not objectively true, then they are not subjectively useful. If our only reason for believing that Jesus is alive is that "he lives within my hearth," then as Paul said, "our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain." "We are even found to be misrepresenting God, because we testified about God that he raised Christ ... And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins ... If in Christ we have hope in this life only, we are of all people most to be pitied" (1 Cor. 15:14-19). We must recover our distinctively biblical commitment to rigorous, inquisitive, and persuasive thinking before there can be a genuine renewal of Christian conviction, faith, repentance, and discipleship. It is time once again to love God with our minds.

- Excerpted from Michael Horton, The Gospel-Driven Life: Being Good News People in a Bad News World, p. 262

Should you take notes?

We discussed note-taking in sermons before, but some scientists seem to think that multitasking is so bad that you shouldn't even do it in class:

"I'm teaching a class of first-year students," says David E. Meyer, a professor of psychology at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. "This might well have been the very first class they walked into in their college careers. I handed out a sheet that said, 'Thou shalt have no electronic devices in the classroom.' ... I don't want to see students with their computers out, because you know they're surfing the Web. I don't want to see them taking notes. I want to see them paying attention to me."

Wait a minute. No notes? Does that include pen-and-paper note-taking?

"Yes, I don't want that going on either," Meyer says. "I think with the media that are now available, it makes more sense for the professor to distribute the material that seems absolutely crucial either after the fact or before the fact. Or you can record the lecture and make that available for the students to review. If you want to create the best environment for learning, I think it's best to have students listening to you and to each other in a rapt fashion. If they start taking notes, they're going to miss something you say."

Give Meyer his due. He has done as much as any scholar to explain how and why multitasking degrades performance. In a series of papers a decade ago, he and his colleagues determined that even under optimal conditions, it takes a significant amount of time for the brain to switch from one goal to another, and from one set of rules to another.

- Source: Divided Attention in the Chronicle of Higher Education (emphasis mine)

The guilt of Sodom

Behold, this was the guilt of your sister Sodom: she and her daughters had pride, excess of food, and prosperous ease, but did not aid the poor and needy.

- Ezekiel 16:49 (ESV)

(Via The New York Times. Can't say I agreed with the entire article, but it was interesting none-the-less)

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