Last Tuesday attended a meeting of the Atheist Society at Trades Hall. Rick Barker gave a surprisingly intelligible presentation on "The Truine Metaphysic of the Christians: Visible or Invisible?". Despite some of the very difficult Greek-derived terms (logos versus logia; emical versus etical; keros, theoria and chronos) this work was heavily derived from Gregory of Nyssa.
Sweet consistency finally reached in CCNA semester 2, with module test results of 87.0% (Routing and Routing Protocols) and 88.9% on Distance Vector Protocols. This week is TCP/IP Error and Control messages and Router Troubleshooting.
On Thursday went to David Scott's book launch ("Last Flight out of Dili") at Uni of Melbourne. David (a neighbour of mine, literally less than 100 meters away) was the founding director of Community Aid Abroad and served on the HMAS Arunta which was responsible for rescuing Australian soldiers from Timor in WWII. He was also in Dili in November 1975 just proir to the Indonesian invasion. The book is a very hefty tome, full of empirical data, references and so forth. It's not a light read by any stretch of the imagination and contains some quite choice quotes by the supporters and appeasers of the annexation. The other practical upshot of the launch (which was attended by hundreds of people) was the opportunity to catch up with Jose Ramos-Horta whom I had a couple of words with.
Sunday was spent voting in ALP elections for State Conference delegates, which apparently has seen a state-wide swing to the Socialist Left/Labour Left of 2-4%. Managed to get to the city just in time to give my presentation at the Unitarian Philosophy class on the last two books of the trial of Socrates, namely Crito, which deals with justice and just actions, and Phaedo, which has some rather interesting arguments for the immortality of the psyche. This was followed by the Outbreak of Heresy game which was primarily about local gypsies causing problems, but was seriously disrupted by
dukeofmelbourne who managed to spoil the entire day for everyone with his unacceptable behaviour.
National Day of Protest against Industrial Relations changes is on tomorrow.
Sweet consistency finally reached in CCNA semester 2, with module test results of 87.0% (Routing and Routing Protocols) and 88.9% on Distance Vector Protocols. This week is TCP/IP Error and Control messages and Router Troubleshooting.
On Thursday went to David Scott's book launch ("Last Flight out of Dili") at Uni of Melbourne. David (a neighbour of mine, literally less than 100 meters away) was the founding director of Community Aid Abroad and served on the HMAS Arunta which was responsible for rescuing Australian soldiers from Timor in WWII. He was also in Dili in November 1975 just proir to the Indonesian invasion. The book is a very hefty tome, full of empirical data, references and so forth. It's not a light read by any stretch of the imagination and contains some quite choice quotes by the supporters and appeasers of the annexation. The other practical upshot of the launch (which was attended by hundreds of people) was the opportunity to catch up with Jose Ramos-Horta whom I had a couple of words with.
Sunday was spent voting in ALP elections for State Conference delegates, which apparently has seen a state-wide swing to the Socialist Left/Labour Left of 2-4%. Managed to get to the city just in time to give my presentation at the Unitarian Philosophy class on the last two books of the trial of Socrates, namely Crito, which deals with justice and just actions, and Phaedo, which has some rather interesting arguments for the immortality of the psyche. This was followed by the Outbreak of Heresy game which was primarily about local gypsies causing problems, but was seriously disrupted by
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National Day of Protest against Industrial Relations changes is on tomorrow.