a tabby cat
searches the bedroom
glass of water
Magnificent Maps

Image by courtesy of The Guardian.
Thanks to IanVisits I’ve just spotted what looks to be a fascinating exhibition at the British Library, from April 2010.
Maps can be works of art, propaganda pieces, expressions of local pride, tools of indoctrination … Opening in April 2010, Magnificent Maps showcases the British Library’s unique collection of large-scale display maps, many of which have never been exhibited before, and demonstrates why maps are about far more than geography.
And it’s free! Has to be worth a visit.
Lewis Carroll and Photography
Just spotted this interesting looking lecture at the British Library in London on Saturday 6 March … Lewis Carroll and photography: Exposing the truth will be given by Carroll scholar Edward Wakeling.
Thing-a-Day
I’ve just signed up for this year’s Thing-a-Day which means I also now have a Posterous account. Aarrrgggghhhhh!!!! Yes this is another blogging tool I really didn’t need. But hey, ho!
This is really by way of a test message to see how posting by email to Posterous actually works – and where the results end up!
Keith
My Friends Meme
My Friends Meme, originally uploaded by kcm76.
This week’s Flickr meme is to use the first names of 12 friends and see what we get.
So I chose: Gabriella, Sue, Stephen, Rob, Tom, Christine, Malin, Ziggy, Prue, Les, John and Katy.
1. Don’t Go Yet, 2. Sue W., 3. tempest three, 4. Very sticky flip-flops that don’t flop!, 5. Naked Bill But Still Beautiful, 6. In A Dream With You, 7. encadrée, 8. Angelic Fruitcake, 9. Parisian Stories 5 – The Brawl 15, 10. NYC – MoMA: Pablo Picasso’s Head of a Sleeping Woman (Study for Nude with Drapery), 11. INTO THE SUN. PAINTING BY JOHN P. BUTLER, 12. Katy Kitchen
As always the photographs are not mine so please click on individual links below to see each artist/photostream. This mosaic is for a group called My Meme, where each week there is a different theme and normally 12 questions to send you out on a hunt to discover photos to fit your meme. It gives you a chance to see and admire other great photographers’ work out there on Flickr.
Created with fd’s Flickr Toys
Quote: Dreams
Be careful what you wear to bed at night,
you never know who you’ll meet in your dreams.
Today's Haiku
filigree birch
green parrot chattering
black crow
Today's Haiku
two brothers
new baby sister
Victoria plum
Today's Haiku
alfresco lunch
bread, cheese, mint ice cream
toothache
The Dawkins Delusion
As regular readers will know I don’t do God or gods (of any gender). In fact I don’t do dogmatic belief systems at all, preferring to find my own way and my own ethics, intellectually. Which of course does not mean that I can’t appreciate many of the great things which have been done in the name of religion; that I don’t abhor the many bad things; that I am amoral; or that I would ever deny anyone’s right to believe whatever they wish as a crutch to get them through this life.
I am not a theist; neither am I an atheist. I prefer to say that, while I find the notion of some all-supreme being inherently unlikely – literally fantastic – I simply do not know; and further I doubt that we can ever know. Which should not stop us seeking and pushing back the intellectual envelope.
I am as suspicious of atheists as I am of theists. For atheists are just as bigoted – sometimes more so – than theists. Richard Dawkins is a case in point. His aggressive “new atheism” is just as dogmatic, inflexible and demanding as the belief system of any theist fundamentalist. Indeed I would go so far as to label Dawkins himself a fundamentalist – albeit one who doesn’t fly plane-loads of innocents into office blocks.
I was pleased therefore to see in next week’s Radio Times (23-29 January) the most measured and comprehensive demolition of Dawkins and his ilk under the title The Dawkins Delusion. It was written by novelist Howard Jacobson who presents the first programme in Channel 4’s series The Bible: a History. And it isn’t that Jabobson is a believer: he describes himself as an atheist “who fears all fanaticism bred by faith” which includes Dawkins et.al.
Sadly the Radio Times article isn’t on their website, but I feel sufficiently enraged by Dawkins’s bigoted anti-bigot stance that I’ve broken the rules and put a scanned copy online here (although it will be removed forthwith if I am requested to do so by Radio Times, or if I spot that the article is available elsewhere online).
Jacobson’s opinion, although not new, is important and deserves a wider airing.