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Previously on "The Beauty of the Moon"

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  • AlfredJPruffock
    replied
    Originally posted by FSM with Cheddar View Post
    What telescope do you have?

    Do you have any moon filters for it? I was considering buying some, cos it's a little too bright.

    Got the spec now for the TeleScope we used -

    Its a MEADE LXD75

    No moon filters were required due to the Moon being low in the Horizon and was ochre in its appearance rahter than white.


    * * * * * * *



    Hippolyta I am weary of The Moon ! Would he change !



    Theseus It appears by the small light of discretion - that he is on the wane.



    The Moon being a World of perpetual Spring . yeilding all pleasure and that free from any annoyance at all.
    Last edited by AlfredJPruffock; 8 July 2009, 15:17.

    Leave a comment:


  • EternalOptimist
    replied
    Originally posted by AlfredJPruffock View Post
    Perhaps if you are standing on another World as an Astronaut and seeing your insignificance in the Cosmos - the awareness of - an 'UnSeen Love' permeating the Universe must be a tremendous solace.


    Personally I can relate to this perception of an 'Unseen Love' - as a child I recall visiting the coastal town of Troon near where I live in Scotland.



    There were some rock pools on the sea front - I was gazing into the pool observing the little creaturess (winkles , crabs etc) crawling around - they were in turn unaware that I was watching them.



    Suddenly I looked up at the sky - I was aware that I was being observed by an Infinite Invisible Power - in the same fashion that I was observing the little creatures in the pond.


    Altough I could not 'see' this Entity with my eyes - I knew it was very real - it was an 'UnSeen Love' and I realised then - that I was not alone.


    Now - some 45 years later - I can look at the sky and still sense that Infinite Unseen Love - and there's nothing to say, there's nothing to do - and there's nowhere to go.


    And thats why - I find the Moon so beautiful.


    Because I am not alone.
    Alf
    my friend


    I had crabs once, I didnt look down on those little fckers with infinite unseen love.

    I guess some of us are born to be the loved ones, some are born to be Gods crabs.

    Leave a comment:


  • singhr
    replied
    Originally posted by RichardCranium View Post
    It is a vanguard posting; a test of weakness.
    What the flips a vanguard posting? All the pics I've seen show a near perfect fit and I've always thought it odd. For the record I don't believe in G*d and didn't intend the post as some kind of sh*t stir.

    Leave a comment:


  • AlfredJPruffock
    replied
    Perhaps if you are standing on another World as an Astronaut and seeing your insignificance in the Cosmos - the awareness of - an 'UnSeen Love' permeating the Universe must be a tremendous solace.


    Personally I can relate to this perception of an 'Unseen Love' - as a child I recall visiting the coastal town of Troon near where I live in Scotland.



    There were some rock pools on the sea front - I was gazing into the pool observing the little creaturess (winkles , crabs etc) crawling around - they were in turn unaware that I was watching them.



    Suddenly I looked up at the sky - I was aware that I was being observed by an Infinite Invisible Power - in the same fashion that I was observing the little creatures in the pond.


    Altough I could not 'see' this Entity with my eyes - I knew it was very real - it was an 'UnSeen Love' and I realised then - that I was not alone.


    Now - some 45 years later - I can look at the sky and still sense that Infinite Unseen Love - and there's nothing to say, there's nothing to do - and there's nowhere to go.


    And thats why - I find the Moon so beautiful.


    Because I am not alone.
    Last edited by AlfredJPruffock; 8 July 2009, 12:32.

    Leave a comment:


  • Menelaus
    replied
    Originally posted by Churchill View Post
    Some people get a lot of comfort from their faith. It is most uncharitable to try and remove that faith.
    WHS.

    As a former medic my view on religion and faith was that it doesn't matter what my beliefs are: if you get comfort from it I've no right to tackle your faith.

    There's also some (mainly anecdotal) evidence that having a long-held belief or faith can help with healing times.

    Leave a comment:


  • d000hg
    replied
    Typical evangelical atheist, can't resist an opportunity to spout his views without being asked. Obviously ok for him to do this, but wrong for religious folk to act in just the same way, because he knows he's right.

    Leave a comment:


  • Churchill
    replied
    Originally posted by RichardCranium View Post
    There is immense fascination and beauty to be seen in understanding the mathematics and physics of the world around us. It is indeed cheerful, to spot the Fibonacci series in your own garden, to see a spectrum on the surface of a puddle, to be able to see a fluffy cloud and know it will turn into a thundercloud so you bring in the picnic without getting wet.

    There is more beauty, interest, joy and fulfilment to be had in knowledge and the empowerment of being able to affect the world around you than lurking in some dark, dusty stone building praying on your knees for mercy from an imaginary unknowable Big Thing.

    Yes, it is cheerful.
    Some people get a lot of comfort from their faith. It is most uncharitable to try and remove that faith.

    Leave a comment:


  • RichardCranium
    replied
    Originally posted by d000hg View Post
    What a cheerful life you must lead:

    "Daddy isn't this beetle beautiful!"
    "It's just pigment to warn birds not to eat it."

    "Daddy look at the sunset!"
    "It's just sunlight reflecting off pollution in the atmosphere"
    There is immense fascination and beauty to be seen in understanding the mathematics and physics of the world around us. It is indeed cheerful, to spot the Fibonacci series in your own garden, to see a spectrum on the surface of a puddle, to be able to see a fluffy cloud and know it will turn into a thundercloud so you bring in the picnic without getting wet.

    There is more beauty, interest, joy and fulfilment to be had in knowledge and the empowerment of being able to affect the world around you than lurking in some dark, dusty stone building praying on your knees for mercy from an imaginary unknowable Big Thing.

    Yes, it is cheerful.

    Leave a comment:


  • d000hg
    replied
    Originally posted by Bunk View Post
    Rubbish. Just because someone doesn't believe in God, doesn't mean they can't appreciate beauty in nature. We disagree over how and why it is the way it is, not over the end result.
    I didn't mean all atheists. Just him in particular.

    Leave a comment:


  • AlfredJPruffock
    replied
    Originally posted by Bunk View Post
    Rubbish. Just because someone doesn't believe in God, doesn't mean they can't appreciate beauty in nature. We disagree over how and why it is the way it is, not over the end result.
    In a way perhaps thats what the Poet Robert Burns said :


    The voice of Nature loudly cries,
    And many a message from the skies,
    That something in us never dies.


    R Burns New Year's Day, st. 3 (1790)

    Leave a comment:


  • Bunk
    replied
    Originally posted by d000hg View Post
    What a cheerful life you must lead:

    "Daddy isn't this beetle beautiful!"
    "It's just pigment to warn birds not to eat it."

    "Daddy look at the sunset!"
    "It's just sunlight reflecting off pollution in the atmosphere"
    Rubbish. Just because someone doesn't believe in God, doesn't mean they can't appreciate beauty in nature. We disagree over how and why it is the way it is, not over the end result.

    Leave a comment:


  • EternalOptimist
    replied
    Originally posted by d000hg View Post
    What a cheerful life you must lead:

    "Daddy isn't this beetle beautiful!"
    "It's just pigment to warn birds not to eat it."

    "Daddy look at the sunset!"
    "It's just sunlight reflecting off pollution in the atmosphere"
    In Liverpool one night, I says to my mate - 'wow, look at the knockers on her'
    he says 'they are just two lumps of fat designed to feed milk to babies'


    we were not mates for much longer but it took me thirty years to spot where he had been wrong - it was the 'just'

    there's nothing 'just' about the moon, a sunset or a fine pair of knockers


    Leave a comment:


  • d000hg
    replied
    Originally posted by RichardCranium View Post
    It's bollocks, bollocks, bollocks, bollocksy bollocks and trying to use that to say there must be a god is barking mad behaviour. I cannot be doing with it.
    What a cheerful life you must lead:

    "Daddy isn't this beetle beautiful!"
    "It's just pigment to warn birds not to eat it."

    "Daddy look at the sunset!"
    "It's just sunlight reflecting off pollution in the atmosphere"

    Leave a comment:


  • AlfredJPruffock
    replied
    Originally posted by zeitghost
    From some ancient record of my dad's:


    I .

    Fascinating ZG - Ive never heard of these Artists - was this on an old 78 rpm per chance ? I found a box of these 78 Rpm's records up the attic - with such gems as

    'Frankie and Johnny were Lovers '

    'You got to have money in the Bank - Frank'

    And Lonnie Donnegan - 'The Battle of New Orleans'

    Leave a comment:


  • Churchill
    replied
    "I wish I was a spaceman,
    the fastest guy alive

    I'd fly you ‘round the universe.
    In fireball xl5.


    Way out in space together.
    Conquerors of the sky.

    My heart would be a fireball.

    A fireball.

    Every time I gaze into your starry eyes.

    We’d take a path to Jupiter and maybe very soon.
    We’d cruise along the Milky Way and land upon the Moon.

    To a wonderland of stardust.
    We’ll zoom our way to mars.

    My heart would be a fireball.

    A fireball.

    And you would be my Venus of the stars.”

    Leave a comment:

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