Twilight hits the Box office this weekend.
For good reason, I always take the chatter from Hollywood with a modicum of salinity but this quote is informative:
It is fascinating that author Meyer, who is a Latter-day Saint and has never tried alcohol or seen an R-rated movie, will be the toast of Hollywood this weekend. Twilight is “squeaky clean,” promoting pre-marital abstinence as opposed to teenage fumbling in the back seats of cars. Parents who shake their heads at the crassness of Gossip Girl and the new version of Beverly Hills 90210 may find the romantic restraint and chivalry-before-all-else mentality of Twilight both refreshing and morally sound. Thomas Sowell has an interesting article about the "Right to Win." Why the left is always one step away from Fascism: no restraint at all.
Example #1:
Blacks who just happened to be driving through Westwood, near UCLA, were accosted in their cars and, in addition to being denounced, were warned, "You better watch your back." Example #2:
In their midst was a San Francisco Supervisor who said "The Mormon church has had to rely on our tolerance in the past, to be able to express their beliefs." He added, "This is a huge mistake for them. It looks like they've forgotten some lessons." Perhaps the two most historically persecuted minorities in the United States (Blacks who suffered injustice in the bonds of slavery and Mormons who had to flee the U.S. from government sanctioned and institutionalized genocide), have forgotten to be submissive.
Summary:
When the majority of the people become like sheep, who will tolerate intolerance rather than make a fuss, then there is no limit to how far any group will go. Over in the scientific corner, Nature (probably the most respected scientific journal) has just published an article on the neurobiology of human volition (or 'will' if you please), and on the importance of sleep in neurobiology.
The former artice brings my mind back to the day when I had a discussion on the neurobiology of free will with another family member (who is now a faculty member at a major University). I may have seemed to support the mechanistic naturalism inference of will (that it's not free per se), and certainly nothing in Nature will be published that hints towards ‘free will’ as any non-materialistic mechanism (it's science after all); but I may have been overly enthusiastic about criticizing psychotherapy in arguing the affirmative of pharmaceuticals as a good way to manage things like PTSD or MDD (major depressive disorder). Certainly I think there is more to individual agency than absolutely predetermined sets of billiard balls running into each other in the brain.
(5) Thu Nov 20 08:17:19 Morning Reads: Twilight, and Free Will:
Posted by John at Thu Nov 20 19:56:33
Joseph: Have you read the Twilight series? This comment seems to have been made about the movie, and not the series. Bella is constantly trying to jump Edward. She scoffs at his "morality" and desire to marry her. And just because they aren't having sex, doesn't mean they don't sleep together every night sans parental knowledge/approval. Granted, I've only read 3 of the 4 novels. But that's what I've seen thus far.
Posted by John at Thu Nov 20 19:56:35
Joseph: Have you read the Twilight series? This comment seems to have been made about the movie, and not the series. Bella is constantly trying to jump Edward. She scoffs at his "morality" and desire to marry her. And just because they aren't having sex, doesn't mean they don't sleep together every night sans parental knowledge/approval. Granted, I've only read 3 of the 4 novels. But that's what I've seen thus far.
Posted by John at Thu Nov 20 19:57:53
Sorry, Maggie hit send before I finished my thought. Harry Potter, written by a non-LDS author, is much more wholesome, in my opinion.
Posted by Joe Walch at Fri Nov 21 19:41:41
I agree with you John. I've never read the books and Louise concurs with your judgement, but I was just being tribalistic.Why don't they ever mention J.K. Rowling's religion? She's probably Anglican; not bad company with old Clive and J.R.R.
Posted by Kristen at Mon Nov 24 13:24:24
Yeah, I was not impressed with the Twilight series. They are ok, but not worth all the rave it's receiving. I think Stephanie Meyer is a terrible writer yet she does have a talent of making you want to finish the book and read the whole series. I wonder how she does that. I am annoyed practically the whole time, yet I can't put it down. Odd.

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