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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/books/item_id/1986033-Kits-Korner/day/2-7-2020
Rated: 13+ · Book · Inspirational · #1986033
I’d rather write than talk. Nobody interrupts! Posting monthly or less now--see below.
My original purpose for this blog, which I started in August of 2019, was to see if I could maintain consistency, to discover what I want to write about, and to find my writing voice. In January, I started a "niche-less" blog at Wordpress.com where I've published weekly. -- Kit’s Kontemplations  .
--

I'm preparing to start a Catholic blog on Wordpress.com where I'll post weekly, and another site to put the rest of my writing. I also want to spend more time reading other blogs and offering thoughtful comments, both here on WDC and elsewhere. At most, I will publish once a month at no set time in this blog starting in September of 2020.

Thank you to those who have read and rated any posts on this blog. I really appreciate it.

I did NOT want to write “about” me on this blog. I wanted to share my interests, discoveries and maybe a few useful insights. If anything I've written helps even one person, whether or not they respond to the post, then this blog has been successful.
February 7, 2020 at 4:00pm
February 7, 2020 at 4:00pm
#975049
When something happens, we know the “what” and the “where”. Scientific and forensic research can often determine the when and the how. This leaves the “who” and the “why”. In the case of crimes, we may also determine the “who” which will achieve justice. Without an answer to the “why”, we remain unsatisfied.



If we could teleport a toaster to an alien planet, they would know when and where it appeared. If they were sufficiently advanced, they might accurately determine how it arrived and what it was made of but they would have no idea who sent it, why it was sent or even what its function was. How likely is it that these aliens would assume the toaster resulted from a random chain of events? Would they not assume some intelligent being conceived the idea and assembled it? Intuitively they would know that the only way to be certain of its purpose would be to ask its creator.



If something as basic as a toaster shows clear evidence of design by an intelligent creator, logically something as complex as a human being must have also been the result of a super-intelligent being. This being is the only one who can tell us why we were created. Those who, like Carl Sagan, believe in a closed universe, that “the cosmos is all there was, all there is and all there ever will be” expect that science can satisfy all our curiosity.



Although the things we have passion for can contribute subjective meaning to our lives, determining the objective meaning of our lives is impossible unless this is revealed by the being who created us. When I first attempted to read Dante’s epic poem The Divine Comedy, I was able to understand parts of it but much of it mystified me. I didn’t know anything about the people and events mentioned. I had a similar experience trying to read Homer’s Illiad. Reading commentaries can only be useful if you trust that their authors based them on accurate and reliable information. After all, Homer and Dante died centuries ago, spoke a different language and came from vastly different cultures.



When you read a mystery novel or watch a crime show long enough to find out “who did it”, do you put the book down or switch channels before finding out why they did it? If the book or the show doesn’t give that answer, would you bother reading any other novels by that author or watching any other episodes of that crime show? We want to know more than what, when, where and how. We want to know “who” and “why”. Contrary to popular opinion, science does not answer all questions. Science cannot fully satisfy even a three-year-old whose favourite word is “why”.



Source

Chapter 1 of Thinking?: Answering Life’s Five Biggest Questions  





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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/books/item_id/1986033-Kits-Korner/day/2-7-2020