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06 Nov 14:25

Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask remake announced for Nintendo 3DS

by Sam Machkovech
This article's author still fervently believes that Majora's Mask is way better than A Link Between Worlds. Sorry, Andrew.

On Wednesday, Nintendo took to its Nintendo Direct video channel to update fans about forthcoming games like Splatoon and Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker, along with Mario Kart 8 DLC, but the headliner announcement was The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask 3D, a 3DS-exclusive remake of the 2000 N64 classic.

"Compared to other Zelda games, the world of Majora's Mask is extremely strange and somewhat spooky," Nintendo of Japan President Satoru Iwata said in the presentation. Fans were shown a few minutes of gameplay, which resembled last year's 3DS Ocarina of Time remake, in that small tweaks like updated textures were visible. Iwata appeared to hint at slight changes to gameplay, as well: "We set out to maintain the original level of challenge while leaving the game accessible for anyone," he said.

Fans have long clamored for a Majora's Mask remake and it makes particular sense as a portable game, considering its structure requires frequent replays of its "three days" time structure. That's probably why an elaborate fake trailer got so many fans' hopes up in 2012. Up until now, the game's most modern version came as a Zelda bonus compilation disc for the Nintendo GameCube, which players received if they pre-ordered that system's The Wind Waker.

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30 Oct 16:28

Marriage

People often say that same-sex marriage now is like interracial marriage in the 60s. But in terms of public opinion, same-sex marriage now is like interracial marriage in the 90s, when it had already been legal nationwide for 30 years.
28 Oct 15:41

On The Good Wife, an Atheist Running for Political Office Tries to Shy Away from the Label

by Hemant Mehta

Early last year, on The Good Wife, Julianna Margulies‘ character Alicia Florrick outed herself as an atheist.

That’s coming back to bite her in the ass now that she’s running for State’s Attorney. On last night’s episode, her campaign manager, who knows how much atheism is a political liability, urged her to walk it back… it led to some all-too-real conversations about the difficulties of being openly non-theistic while running for public office.

Two scenes in particular stood out: One, when Florrick was trying to prepare for an interview with a popular pastor and asked her (religious) daughter Grace for advice on what to do:

Julianna Margulies (left) and Makenzie Vega

Grace: Are you gonna say that you believe in God?

Alicia: No.

Grace: Are you gonna say that you’re an atheist?

Alicia: No…

Grace: What are you gonna say?

Alicia: I don’t know. That I think I’m struggling with it?

Grace: Are you?

Alicia: No… Maybe. I don’t know.

Grace: [Laughs] Need some help with that?

Alicia: I can’t believe in God, Grace.

Grace: I know… why not?

Alicia: I don’t feel it the way you do. I don’t feel the need.

Grace: Then what’s the struggle?

Alicia: … Politics.

Grace: … K.

The second scene was the actual interview. Turns out the ambiguity of her answers did her wonders:

Pastor Jeremiah: And now, turning to God.

Alicia: [Laughs] Uh-oh…

Pastor Jeremiah: Why do you say uh-oh?

Alicia: I think you’re preparing to pull a quote from my past…?

Pastor Jeremiah: Well, [as] a matter of fact, two years ago, you went on the record and declared that you were an atheist. Now, do you still believe that?

Alicia: Do I believe that I’m an atheist?

Pastor Jeremiah: Well, you were quite insistent at the time…

Alicia: [Laughs] That sounds like me. My life has gone through a lot of changes over the years.

Pastor Jeremiah: You’re speaking of the scandal?

Alicia: Yes, and everything. If you had asked me six years ago where I would be today, it would not be running for State’s Attorney.

Pastor Jeremiah: Yes, life is humbling.

Alicia: It is that. And with each passing month, I find my dogmatism decreasing.

Pastor Jeremiah: I don’t understand.

Alicia: Well, I can’t say for certain that God doesn’t exist.

Pastor Jeremiah: So you’re not not an atheist?

Alicia: Sorry, that’s my inner lawyer coming out. I’m listening. If it’s one thing I hate, it’s when people don’t listen. So I’m open.

Pastor Jeremiah: … to people who talk about God?

Alicia: Yes. Recently, I have looked for answers outside of myself.

It’s a lot of circling around the truth to make herself more acceptable to the public — and it worked. The reaction to her interview was pretty positive, though as the episode progressed, you could sense that this wasn’t the last time her religious beliefs would be brought up.

Alex Kritselis at Bustle writes about how Florrick is trying her best to be honest about her beliefs… but not completely honest:

… Being honest about her atheism might not be a “smart” political move, but in some ways, Alicia really is “St. Alicia” — she’s just not comfortable lying about this sort of thing. Well, not yet, anyway. Maybe that will change if she ends up winning the election and spends a couple of years immersed in the corrupt Chicago political scene…

Scripted television or not, it’s nice to see a character who admits to being an atheist and knows damn well she’s not going to “find God” anytime soon. Though I wish she didn’t equate atheism with dogmatism in her interview, it wasn’t exactly unexpected. It’d be fascinating to see her character get elected as a prelude to her coming clean about what she really thinks about faith.

05 Sep 12:29

Meet Dreadnoughtus, the 65-ton dinosaur

by The Conversation
Jennifer Hall

Some species of dinosaur were astonishingly enormous compared to anything alive on land today, which becomes obvious the moment you stand in the shadow of their skeletons in a museum. This is a key reason why we remain fascinated with these long-extinct beasts. The colossal size of the long-necked species like Brachiosaurus stretches the limits of our imaginations and exhausts our vocabulary. And nothing quite gets the hyperbole flowing like the discovery of a gigantic new dinosaur.

So meet Dreadnoughtus, the 65-ton, 26-meter-long plant-eating behemoth from the latest Cretaceous—84 to 66 million years ago—found in Argentina. It is named after the World War I British battleship Dreadnought.

This discovery comes only a few months after another team of Argentine researchers reported a slightly older, and apparently even larger, long-necked dinosaur. That discovery dominated the science news for days, to the point where elderly relatives, who never took much of an interest in my career in science, were phoning me up to ask how something so huge could have possibly existed.

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28 Mar 21:20

Before the Internet

We watched DAYTIME TV. Do you realize how soul-crushing it was? I'd rather eat an iPad than go back to watching daytime TV.
10 Mar 16:20

Feb 10, 2012 - Crackpot Scorecard

Phil.bonnevie

Distribute these to the masses now!

Home | Archive | Store | Facebook


Have fun filling out your own crackpot scorecard. You never know when it might come in handy!

If you enjoy this comic please share it on Facebook or Twitter

28 Oct 16:06

October 24, 2013


POW!
07 Oct 14:10

EOS M, 2 Lenses & Flash Kit Deal via BuyDig $399

by Canon Rumors
Canon EOS M Top

BuyDig via eBay
Did you miss out on the previous EOS M offers? Here’s what’s probably one of the last deals we’re going to see on this camera.

Kit Includes

  • EOS M Camera
  • EF-M 18-55 IS
  • EF-M 22 f/2 STM
  • Speedlite EX90

All of that for $399 including shipping within the USA.

Canon EOS M Kit Package $399

cr

11 Sep 16:05

September 08, 2013


Only about a month till BAHFest returns! If you are in Boston or the Boston area, please check it out!
23 Aug 13:18

Ghosts

by Jack Vance
An image of Zhong Kui, the vanquisher of ghost...
An image of Zhong Kui, the vanquisher of ghosts and evil beings, painted sometime before 1304 A.D. by Gong Kai. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Some atheists believe in ghosts. There is nothing in the definition of atheism that precludes belief in the existence of ghosts, spirits, demons, monsters, or any other entities besides gods. Atheism (i.e., the lack of belief in gods) does not say anything about the existence of ghosts, and so an atheist can indeed believe in them. How do I know that some atheists believe in ghosts? Several atheists have told me that they do indeed believe in ghosts. You can see a few examples in the comments on this post.

I do not believe in ghosts (or spirits, demons, angels, or any other supernatural entities). My reason for not believing in them is the same as my reason for not believing in gods: lack of evidence. My lack of belief in ghosts does not come from atheism; both come from skepticism. Having said that, I am not quite ready to conclude that belief in ghosts has nothing whatsoever to do with atheism. Besides skepticism, I think there might be a bit more of a connection.

What is a Ghost?

I suppose someone could say that they are using the "ghost" label to refer to a natural phenomenon (not supernatural in any way) like an energy field or something else we all know is real but just tough to detect without sophisticated equipment. But this is not what most people mean when they talk of ghosts, is it? For most of us, a ghost is a spirit, supernatural entity that rests on a critically important assumption: some aspect of what we call personality, mind, or soul survives death.

I do not believe in ghosts because I see no evidence that anything along these lines survives death. When the brain dies, whatever made the person unique appears to die with it. This is the direction in which neuroscience leads. There does not appear to be any mind, spirit, or soul that survives. With this in mind, there does not seem to be any mechanism through which ghosts could exist as disembodied entities retaining something of their former selves.

But I Have Experienced a Ghost!

I do not doubt that people, including some atheists, think they have experienced ghosts. I have had my share of strange experiences too. But I am not going to accept the existence of ghosts based on personal experience any more than I am going to accept the existence of gods based on personal experience. To the atheist who argues that his or her personal encounter with a ghost is sufficient to support his or her belief in ghosts, I must ask why the same courtesy is not extended to the religious believer. If we are going to dismiss their reliance on personal experience, why would ours be any different?

Is the atheist's experience of a ghost any more vivid, more real, or more meaningful than the religious believer's experience of his or her preferred god(s)? I doubt it. Through personal revelation, we may see a religious believer change his or her life. How many atheists do that in response to what they perceive as a ghostly encounter?

But Science Cannot Explain It!

Science has managed to explain quite well why people believe in ghosts, and it has managed to do so without postulating the existence of ghosts. The same is true for supernatural magic, psychic powers, alien abduction, and many other phenomena. We are pattern-seeking beings with imperfect pattern-detection systems. We make a number of predictable errors.

I would also remind the atheist who believes in ghosts that "science cannot explain x" does not mean "x is due to ghosts" anymore than it means "x is due to gods." That is, someone who wants to convince us of ghosts (or gods) needs to provide positive evidence of their existence rather than relying solely on negative evidence (i.e., science cannot explain x and therefore x must be supernatural).

But I Really Want to Believe in Ghosts!

You know what? I get that. It would be damn cool if ghosts existed. Who wouldn't want to communicate with one's deceased relatives? I love the idea of people who harmed someone and never faced punishment being haunted. And because ghosts imply some sort of afterlife, their existence would be fantastic news for all of us who wished our lives weren't so incredibly short.

Unfortunately, wanting something to be true does not make it true. Much of religious belief seems to be little more than wish fulfillment combined with fear of death. We do not let the religious get away with arguing that their preferred god(s) must exist because they really want it to. There is not much difference when it comes to ghosts.

Why Can't There Be Ghosts, You Close Minded Son of a Bitch?

In order for there to be ghosts, we would need for some unique part of one's identity (i.e., mind, spirit, soul) to survive bodily death. Based on the scientific data available to us, this seems highly unlikely. Perhaps we will discover some mechanism through which this could happen in the future, but we have little reason to view it as likely today. This strikes me as the primary reason that there cannot be ghosts, but I suspect there are others (e.g., the lack of reproducible encounters with ghosts).

And while I appreciate being attacked as close minded as much as any skeptic, especially because this is exactly what the religious do when confronted with their own irrationality, I must disagree. I am not closed to the possibility that there could someday be sufficient evidence to support belief in ghosts (or gods). I am operating as a skeptic and attempting to be rational. I see little reason to conclude that either ghosts or gods exist today.

This post originally appeared on Atheist Revolution. If you are not reading this via email or RSS feed from Atheist Revolution, it may have been stolen.

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