Cathar1950 wrote:Early manuscripts have found 616 instead of 666.
Does that help any?
I want to know what you have heard about blarney stones.
This could change a lot of plans I have made.
Well, no. I knew about that (thanks to this site), but it's still 666 that I don't like. I don't even believe in a devil, for Pete's sake(who's Pete, anyway?

) And I don't even believe there was a biblical Jesus, so the term "Antichrist" doesn't really mean anything to me. According to Al/John, I'd be one of them myself.
As for the Blarney Stone, just don't kiss it!
QED wrote:You once spent a whole year being 13 -- and you seem to have made it through OK. I wouldn't worry about it anymore.
The thing is, I don't worry about it. I just don't
like the number. You might say I'm unfairly prejudiced against the number 13, which never did anything to me, really.
QED wrote: That one goes way back to a long stretch of time when night really was dangerous. Now it's only appropriate in certain parts of town.
Oh yeah, I lived there.

That makes sense, I guess, but I feel silly when I can't sleep, even though I
know there's nothing there! It doesn't help that my kitties occasionally stare at the corner or towards the closet and howl. I think they do it on purpose...
It also doesn't help that the guy that lives below me screams for no reason, and wonders around in the hallways at 4:30 in the morning shouting, "SHUT THE F*** UP!" when there's nobody making any noise except him.
QED wrote:
Jose wrote:
I kinda think it helps to recognize that a lot of the things we feel and wonder about are holdovers from a distant past, and that they made sense at one time. It's not goofiness, for example, but hard-earned lessons--even if the real target of the emotion isn't there any more.
What other explanation would make half as much sense. These sorts of feelings are incredibly difficult to overrule using our conscious will. This indicates that they're as hard-wired as our breathing. Another good example is the modern tendency towards obesity. The lure of the doughnut is a holdover from the times when fats and sugars were scarce but valuable commodities. Our bodies were programmed a long time ago to lock onto such targets as a matter of survival. How Ironic that now, when sugars and fats are available in abundance, survival sometimes means fighting off these very same urges.
So consistent is this (evolutionary) explanation that I would dare say that we could explain any other human urge or instinct in this way. Are there any other curiosities that we can think of to test the theory?
Mmm...fats and sugars! My downfall, I'm afraid.
Other curiosities? Let me think...what do you consider a curiosity/urge/instinct?
Liquor?
Gambling?
Attachment to pets?
Why the people in our society who entertain us are paid more than the people who do more worthwhile work?
Workaholics? Personally, I think I'd rather be a bum.
Cathar1950 wrote:When my children were young I told them they shouldn't be afraid of monsters under their bed because they are more afraid of them or they wouldn't be hiding under their beds.
Now my kids don't belive a thing I say.

Cathar, you funny man!
When I was a kid, I was afraid to be away from my mother. Turns out, she's scarier than any monster...
