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Showing posts from October, 2025
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Do the Houses Speak? A four-minute film that lets a town whisper its truth Do you ever wonder what the houses in your town say at night when you are asleep? Do you ever wonder if they talk about you—what they whisper about the lives lived inside them? For a moment, imagine it. The porches, the windows, the painted trim. Grateful for the attention, the care, the love. And yet—aware that sooner or later, you will be gone. Another family will move in. Life will continue, but without you. This is the conceit of Nyack , a four-minute short film that is as beautiful as it is unsettling. It looks like a sentimental portrait of a town. But listen closely: the voice you hear is not a narrator’s. It belongs to the houses themselves. They thank us. They remember us. And they remind us of something we try not to face: that we are temporary, and they endure. Watch the Film Nyack (short documentary) Watch on Vimeo A Quiet Reminder Nyack is not a film about architecture, or even about a town. It’s a...
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The Metropolis Organism, blog post #18,  Casting a Net for One When most people write a blog, they cast a net wide, hoping to gather followers. Success is measured in numbers: clicks, likes, shares, subscribers.   I am grateful for a few friends and occasional curious click, They are being kind and I appreciate the expression. My goal is different. I cast my net across the world not to gather many, but to sift for one. Just one person. Someone who knows the philosophy of science, who understands what I am saying, and who is open enough to discuss it. (Dare I say it—it is intellectually lonely out here, but I have a lovely wife and family to keep me warm.) Why Most People Don’t Care The truth is, most people could not care less. They are too busy living their lives to bother with speculative, conceptual questions about existence. Part of me envies them. Life might be easier without this burden of thought. Others—my dear friends among them—try to be sympathetic. With the best of...
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#17 Theism and the Weight of Time Why I struggle with the argument from design I am not a militant atheist. But from time to time, I encounter a particular argument from friends—delivered with sincerity, even emotion—that I find difficult to accept. The argument goes something like this: Look at this amazing world we live in. Its beauty, its complexity, its intricacy—surely it must be evidence of a supreme being, an intelligent designer. The world could not possibly exist without one. It’s an argument that has a certain intuitive appeal. I admire it, I respect it, and in some ways, I even envy it. But when I look more closely, the reasoning does not hold up. The Weight of Deep Time Science and paleontology tell a different story. The earliest evidence of Homo sapiens dates back about 300,000 years. That may seem like a long time—until we place it against Earth’s history. Life has existed here for roughly 3.7 billion years before the appearance of humans. That is an unfathomable stretc...

#16 Living in Two Worlds

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  Living in Two Worlds How I learned to live with both love and science, meaning and indifference Living in Two Worlds We live in two worlds. One is the world of love, warmth, and human connection. The other is the world of science, where life is explained by forces indifferent to us, where death is inevitable and final. For much of my life, I could not reconcile these two worlds. They seemed like contradictions—one full of meaning and belonging, the other stripped of comfort, exposing a cold truth. The Struggle to Reconcile In my twenties, I lived with this tension uneasily. I wanted to believe in the human world alone, where love and hope make sense of existence. But I could not ignore the other world—the scientific one—that spoke in the language of atoms, entropy, and death. To hold both at once felt unbearable. A Turning Point After becoming a parent, something shifted. Life became more layered, more complex. My children were living proof of the warmth of one world, and at the ...