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Thursday, September 25, 2014

Ebola Teaches Us The Surpassing Importance Of Education

"Rural Guineans Kill 8 Ebola Aid Workers, Stuff Bodies In Village Latrine"


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What the Ebola fiasco really tells us. "Our shortsightedness afflicts so many areas of public policy....We spend billions of dollars fighting extremists today, but don’t invest tiny sums educating children or empowering women....At home, we don’t invest adequately in family-planning programs even though pregnancy prevention initiatives for at-risk teenagers pay for themselves many times over....Yet the worst consequence of our myopia isn’t financial waste. It’s that people are dying unnecessarily of Ebola. It’s that some children in the United States grow up semiliterate. And it’s the risk that the cost of leaders’ mismanagement of Ebola will be borne by children going without vaccines." Nicholas Kristof in The New York Times


Arguing against those who said that natural philosophy was contrary to the Christian faith, (Aquinas) writes in his treatise "Faith, Reason and Theology that "even though the natural light of the human mind is inadequate to make known what is revealed by faith, nevertheless what is divinely taught to us by faith cannot be contrary to what we are endowed with by nature. One or the other would have to be false, and since we have both of them from God, he would be the cause of our error, which is impossible." 
"Aladdin's Lamp: How Greek Science Came to Europe Through the Islamic World" by John Freely

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