I'm showing my bias, I hope not to offend: how does someone understanding/expert in enough math and science to become an astronaut still believe that the magic sky man cares what direction he bows in during prayer or when he eats? If it's cultural significance I can understand that, but otherwise I just can't comprehend how you can have such a dissonance between empiric study/career and fundamentalist religious belief
To be a true "trick or treat," it should be a 50-50 mix of habaneros and mini orange bell peppers. Which is the trick vs treat depends on if you're a spicy liker or not
According to the article, the theorem was named for him out of respect for starting a school-society thing whose members in turn developed & popularized the theorem. So you should perhaps have at least some doubt
You are all making great points, but I think could be applying them better. They're small, can't be trusted with complexity, and can be replenished faster than adults. Therefore would be best suited to running aimlessly towards enemy front lines to draw fire, draining enemy resources and morale
I'm showing my bias, I hope not to offend: how does someone understanding/expert in enough math and science to become an astronaut still believe that the magic sky man cares what direction he bows in during prayer or when he eats? If it's cultural significance I can understand that, but otherwise I just can't comprehend how you can have such a dissonance between empiric study/career and fundamentalist religious belief