Calculus, olddog, calculus. We’d still be stuck in place by Zeno’s paradox if Newton and/or Leibniz hadn’t come along and invented calculus so we could move again.
^dwnoname, as a priest (not Roman Catholic), I hope that is quite a ways in the future. I don’t mind going, but a stone falling on my head doesn’t sound appealing.
^dwnoname, as a priest (not Roman Catholic), I hope that is quite a ways in the future. I don’t mind going, but a stone falling on my head doesn’t sound appealing.
@dwnoname, Does that include secular priests? What will people do without a psychologist to hear their confession? What will they do without a man in a white coat telling them what is “de fide”, whoops, I mean “scientific”?
Olddog1 about 14 years ago
I’d rather do algebra
Larry Miller Premium Member about 14 years ago
Calculus, olddog, calculus. We’d still be stuck in place by Zeno’s paradox if Newton and/or Leibniz hadn’t come along and invented calculus so we could move again.
Olddog1 about 14 years ago
LafinLarry: Maybe that’s why I’m stuck where I am.
jpozenel about 14 years ago
I agree CharlieTuba, but he certainly isn’t alone.
dwnoname about 14 years ago
Civilization will not attain perfection until the last stone, from the last church, falls on the last priest.
cdward about 14 years ago
^dwnoname, as a priest (not Roman Catholic), I hope that is quite a ways in the future. I don’t mind going, but a stone falling on my head doesn’t sound appealing.
cdward about 14 years ago
^dwnoname, as a priest (not Roman Catholic), I hope that is quite a ways in the future. I don’t mind going, but a stone falling on my head doesn’t sound appealing.
stuart about 14 years ago
@dwnoname, Does that include secular priests? What will people do without a psychologist to hear their confession? What will they do without a man in a white coat telling them what is “de fide”, whoops, I mean “scientific”?