Rousseau
Today's Story on SELF DEVELOPMENT: Practice Makes Perfect! If we were an artist or an athlete, we could not expect to reach the top of our profession without practicing. To introduce good habits we need to practice them. As a consequence we become better with practice. This suggestion is nothing new, but we don't always apply these principles to our own life. We may apply it with reference to education from school, college or our workplace, but rarely will we practice to self develop the aspects of our mind related to the growth and development of wisdom. The very fact that you are reading this would suggest you are aiming to put that very observation and possible frailty correct. However we must not tap ourselves on the back just yet. QUOTE: "Take the first step in faith. You don't have to see the whole staircase, just take the first step." (Dr. Martin Luther King Jnr). An athlete would see the results of practice in the next race he ran. An artist would see the benefits in the next sale of his painting. A person who practices wisdom cannot see the results so readily. Yet be assured the value is enormous. The lady in the next story had a belief, a faith and a determination that her perseverance would benefit her personally. If you believe you will benefit from greater wisdom remember this story... DEPEND ON MIRACLES One Sunday morning I heard my minister say if you want result from prayer, pray for thirty days without ceasing. I didn't know why it was thirty days, but I was willing to give it a try. The following became my daily prayer: I am available, Lord, to be used by You each day. Guide me, precious Lord, and lead me in what I say and do. May my words and actions be a witness that You are living in me. To the one that is lonely, may I be a friend. To those with heavy burdens, help me to meet their needs. Lord, I do not want fame or fortune. My prayer is that You will use me to glorify your name. I know I don't have much to offer, but I will give You my all. Guide me to be what You want me to be. Amen On the twenty-first day of this prayer, CPR took on a new meaning for me. I was working an extremely busy twelve-hour night shift in Labour and Delivery. I had just sat down for my first break when a phone call came from my friend working in the Emergency Room. I barely recognized her urgent voice. An eighteen-year-old boy had been brought to the ER for alcohol and drug overdose. The young man was very close to death and they had done all they could do to help him. The father of this boy was requesting a priest or minister and they were having difficulty locating one that could come to the ER quickly. My friend stated, "We know you're a Christian and we need you to come and try to comfort this father. Please help." Reluctantly, I said I would come down. As I waited for the elevator my thoughts became very judgmental and frustration welled up inside me. Then I remembered the prayer I'd been praying. I walked into the ER and approached the father. Taking his hand, I silently led him to the chapel. Before I could even say, "I am not a minister, " this six-foot, two-hundred-twenty-pound man sank into the chair and became a broken hearted child. Through his non-stop sobbing he spoke, "Christian, pray for Raymond. I remember the first time I held my boy. I felt so proud and I just kept saying, 'I have a son.' As the years passed those tiny feet became bigger and walked away from his family's love and entered a strange, hardened, and destructive world. Tonight, too much alcohol and an overdose of drugs are taking his life. It's as though he wants to rebel against everything his family stood for. He knew what he was doing was wrong. Sometimes he seemed so afraid, but he wouldn't stop. Now it is too late. Christian, you have to pray for Raymond." Those large hands trembled in mine and as I looked into his eyes, I mourned with him. Silence fell between us, as I searched for the words that would comfort this crumbling tower of a man. I felt so inadequate. I wanted to scream, "Lord it has only been twenty-one days since I began that prayer! I am not ready for this!" Time was running out and I knew I couldn't stall any longer. I clutched his hands, now wet with tears, and began to pray. The words came easy, much to my surprise. I finished praying with him and went to Raymond's bedside. I took his cold, lifeless hand and once again began to pray. "Lord I am asking for a miracle and I know You can do it." I stayed with them both until Raymond was taken to Intensive Care. I visited Raymond on a daily basis and continued to pray for him. Eight days passed with little improvement. On the ninth day I entered the ICU and a miracle had taken place. Raymond was awake and talking with his father. CPR had taken on a new meaning for me: "Christian Pray for Raymond". As I left the ICU with tears falling down my face, I realized, today is the 30th day of my prayer. Now I not only believe in miracles, I depend on them. (Author Unknown). QUOTE: "A strong positive mental attitude will create more miracles than any wonder drug." (Patricia Neal).
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Rousseau News
Man Commits Suicide Before Foreclosure
22 May 2012 at 11:46am "The engine is smoking like a chimney," Norman Rosseau told his wife after working on an RV that was expected to be home for the couple after they were evicted from their house in Newbury Park, Calif. Those would be the last words Oriane Rousseau heard from her husband, who shot himself May 15, days before the couple were scheduled to be evicted after a long battle over their mortgage held by ...Read more...
'Harv' Rousseau celebrates 90th birthday
21 May 2012 at 6:00am Lifelong Macedon resident Harvey ?Harv? Rousseau marked his 90th birthday on May 9 with friends and family at Log Cabin Restaurant. Harv is known to area residents and motorcyclists as the founder of Harv?s Harley-Davidson on Kittering Rd. Following are highlights of his life as he told it at the celebration.Read more...
Norman Rousseau, Foreclosure Victim, Commits Suicide
17 May 2012 at 7:06pm Norman Rousseau was a normal man, facing a forced foreclosure from Wells Fargo, but he made the decision to commit suicide rather than face the prospect of his family being homeless. According to Huffington Post, Rousseau spent hours on Saturday night trying to fix a motorhome that would become the family?s (hopefully) temporary home. Unfortunately, he [...] Norman Rousseau, Foreclosure Victim ...Read more...
Freeland school administrators speak out about Marcie Rousseau case
17 May 2012 at 4:39pm Former Freeland teacher Marcie Rousseau is serving a four-year prison sentence for having sex with a student.Read more...
Norman Rousseau, Foreclosure Victim, Commits Suicide During Wells Fargo Lawsu...
17 May 2012 at 12:44pm Last Saturday night, Norman Rousseau reportedly spent hours trying to fix an old RV . He was facing the prospect of foreclosure, and he wasn't about to see his family forced onto the street.Read more...
Death postponed: Pat Rousseau's brush with Jamaica's top badmen
13 May 2012 at 11:37am PATRICK HO 'Pat' Rousseau says he will always remember the chilling experience of being held up at gunpoint in South Africa on November 26, 1998.Read more...
Bay City Western's Courtney Rousseau comes full circle as true student-athlet...
8 May 2012 at 10:46am Rousseau is finishing up her playing career as a starting outfielder for the Broncos, while earning academic honors in the classroom as a civil engineering major.Read more...
Rousseau pitching well in first year at WKU
3 May 2012 at 5:34pm WKU is out-pitching opponents this season in almost every major statistical category.Read more...
Eva A. Rousseau, 90
2 May 2012 at 10:03pm FAIRHAVEN ? Eva A. (Lague) Rousseau, 90, of Fairhaven and formerly of New Bedford, died Wednesday, May 2, 2012. She was the wife of the late Wilfrid B. Rousseau.Read more...
Rousseau Farming Sees Superior Pallet Quality and Greater Customer Value with...
2 May 2012 at 9:00am Rousseau Farming Company, a leading grower and shipper of vegetables, onions and watermelons from Arizona, today announced that it has signed a new multi-year contract with CHEP, an industry leader in pallet and container pooling solutions.Read more...
Is there shared concern between Rousseau's arguement in The Social contract and David's The Death of Socrates
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''Man is born free ...but everywhere he is in chains..'' (JJ Rousseau) True?
God, I wish I'd written that line...but is it true?
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Is the Open University and it's cohort the BBC simply a tool for indoctrinating atheistic beliefs?
Evidenced by the bias in some 'Humanities' course material that selected Hume and Rousseau as the right and wrong way of seeing the world.
AS you can tell I really couldn't care less whether the OU or any other self-delusional authority believes their codification is for my obedience or not. As long as you understand the nature of the question is to argue that the absolutist attempt to draw a line between objective truth and dogma is a delusional enterprise.
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Why did the chicken philosophically speaking?
Why did the chicken cross the Road ?
Karl Marx: (1) It was a historical inevitability.
(2)To escape the bourgeois middle-class struggle.
(3) She was driven by the lash of economic necessity.
John Stuart Mills: It was a utilitarian function. She had tasks that were better performed on the other side.
Thomas More: For the good life and pleasure of all chickens.
Friedrich Nietzsche: (1) Because if you gaze too long across the Road, the Road gazes also across you.
(2)There was no chicken, no road, no crossing. There was only an interpretation.
Camille Paglia: It was drawn by the subconscious chthonian power of the feminine which men can never understand, to cross the road and focus itself on its task. Hens are not capable of doing this - their minds do not work that way. Feminism tries vainly to pretend there is no real difference between them, falsely following Rousseau. But de Sade has proved....
Plato: (1) For the greater good.
(2) The ideal chicken must ideally cross the ideal road. Therefore, imperfect chickens in this world cross imperfect roads, imperfectly.
(3) Because it is in the nature of chickens, strictly defined in as much as they are chickens, to cross roads.
Alexander Pope: To cluck is avian, to cross devine.
Richard Posner: As a perfectly rational, utility-maximizing being, the chicken, aware of the possible consequences of its act, voluntarily faced the risk that it would be injured while crossing the road, in order to obtain the benefits that it perceived to accrue from that transaction. Allowing chickens to make this sort of decision, unfettered by restrictions by government or elsewhere on their freedom of choice, is absolutely necessary if an efficient and free society is to be maintained . Any Philosophy 101 Professor: Why not?
Pyrrho the Skeptic: What road?
Rosenzweig: The chicken hasn't actually crossed yet, but I hope it may one day do so.
Jonathan Sacks: It is impossible to answer this quesion, (or, for that matter, any other), without referring to Alasdair MacIntyre's magisterial "After Virtue" (London: Duckworth, 1981). His argument is taken further in his "Whose Justice ? Which Rationality ?" (London:Duckworth, 1988) and "Three Rival Versions of Moral Enquiry" (London: Duckworth, 1990). Also of interest are his earlier works, "A Short History of Ethics" (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1967), "Against the Self-Images of the Age" (London: Duckworth, 1971) and especially "Secularization and Moral Change" (London: OUP, 1967). MacIntyre's ideas are developed in a theological context in Stanley Hauerwas, "The Peaceable Kingdom" (London:SCM,1983). The Talmud Bavli and the London Beth Din also hold views on this question.
Jean-Paul Sartre: (1) In order to act in good faith and be true to itself, the chicken found it necessary to cross the road
(2) To impose a meaning upon her accidental existence.
(3) Because there was NO EXIT.
George Santayana: Animal faith.
Socrates: (1) I will think about it.
(2) To pick up some hemlock at the corner druggist.
Baruch Spinoza: To affirm his essence as a part of nature and God.
Henry David Thoreau: (1) To live deliberately... and suck all the marrow out of life.
(2) To be wild and free like all good things.
Ludwig Wittgenstein: (1) The possibility of "crossing" was encoded into the objects "chicken" and "road," and circumstances came into being which caused the actualization of this potential occurrence.
(2) There are indeed things that cannot be put into words. They make themselves manifest. They are what is mystical.
(3) What we cannot explain we must pass over in silence.
Zeno of Elea: (1) To prove it could never reach the other side.
(2) The chicken can never reach the other side because there are an infinitesimal number of segments between him and the other side
Zeno The Skeptic: Did she really cross the road? How can you be certain?
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Locke said to Ben: "you wouldn't keep meat in the refridgerator"?
The full phrase was "If you knew what this island REALLY was, then you wouldn't keep meat in the refridgerator"
What do think is the significance of that statement?
Please Note I am a die-hard LOST fan & I've read practically EVERY theory on every web site going, (I have an apollo bar and walts comic..both not easy to get hold of) so please I only want sensible answers, unless you seek to deliberately confront me coz u got nothing better to do.
I know Jacob does not like technology but Locke's statement is much deeper than simply referring to that point.
And while we're at it, just what was it that Mikael said to him just before they arrived at the sonic fence!?!?!
"The John Locke I knew was b......" what was he going to say before Rousseau interrupted them?
all SENSIBLE help appreciated.
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