On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 9:50 AM, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> On Oct 3, 1:16 pm, James Lynch <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Very similar to my more serious take Pat, still looking forward to the
>> book! Glad you can make it by here lately. :)
>>
>
> Thanks, James!!  BTW, we may be related.  My father's father's mother
> was a 'Lynch'; so, we could, very well, be distant cousins of some
> variety.  Perhaps, even as close as fourth or fifth cousins, depending
> on your background.  The Lynch family from which I derive were from
> County Cork but immigrated to New Haven Connecticut.  The Lynch I
> descend from was Annie E. Lynch, who married my great grandfather,
> John Jay Harrington.  I thought I'd put it down just to see if it
> jives with any of your family's history.
>

Not sure, but if she was from North Carolina there is a possibility.
I'd consider you family more than most in thought alone. My feelings
of kinship with nature have increased as of late. It is a source of
hope to consider humanity beyond the confines of culture, and an
inspiration to feel a bond with ancestors and other animals. Ghosts in
the machine perhaps, remnants of an ancestral genetic memory capacity,
who knows? It might explain a few dreams I've had.

>>
>>
>> On Mon, Oct 3, 2011 at 5:51 AM, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> > On Oct 3, 1:27 am, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >> I guess I'm more convinced now of the existence of extraterrestrial
>> >> life than anything religious being true.  I can't see why any general
>> >> principles of love and the rest should change because other life is
>> >> out there - yet given the sickening propensity of our religions to
>> >> inspire elitism amongst adherents (chosen people and other junk) and
>> >> clown attempts to know better than everyone else, would ET turning up
>> >> be a reason for people to change views?  Mars has an atmosphere that
>> >> is saturated with water vapour at some times in its solar cycle,we are
>> >> finding planets.  Personally, I rather hope for a set of really tough
>> >> aliens.  Rather cost fellows in other ways they put conquered
>> >> creatures on their knees for a last prayer to god.  When you turn and
>> >> say you'd rather have a beer they give you a key to a free bar
>> >> anonists?d a free pass to their university of the intelligent
>> >> universe.  But what is the significance of ET being real for
>> >> religionists?
>>
>> > None, in truth.  No more so than the Earth revolving around the Sun.
>> > God would still remain the Creator of all life forms, so extra-
>> > terrestrials would only serve to expound on God's omnipotence and
>> > likeness for variety.  Given the fact that they can reach the Earth,
>> > that pre-supposes intelligence; that would, then, support an
>> > 'intellicentric' view rather than an anthropomorphic view, which I
>> > believe would be FAR more correct and, in fact, it is a theme of my
>> > book.- Hide quoted text -
>>
>> - Show quoted text -
>

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