Eternal Sunshine?

My friends at MercatorNet have a thoughtful piece on a new drug that may dull bad memories.

We are only at the threshold of understanding how memory is integrated into our personal identity. Blunting the memory of trauma might bring short-term benefits but long-term anxiety. And what about legitimate feelings of guilt and shame?

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The Pursuit of Paradoxical Projects

Books & Culture has an interview with the always excellent Jean Bethke Elshtain where she discusses, among other things, her assertion:

In our own liberal society at the moment, and in most of the Western democracies in general, we are pursuing a paradoxical project: We are most aware of those with physical and mental disabilities; we want to provide them access. Yet at the same time, our most enthused-about and ideologically fraught projects aim at creating a world with no such persons in it.

Highly recommended reading.

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I’m Only A Little Surprised

. . . this hasn’t gotten more blowback. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has been funding plotline placement in a handful of primetime shows.

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Excellent article by Zinsser

William Zinsser writes on drafting and revising his On Writing Well over the past 35 years.

HT: Justin Taylor

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A Day Late

But too great to miss:

HT: Joe Carter

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Coraline Review

Not by me, but so well done I can’t help but link to it.  Coraline: Visually Stunning, Morally Complex, Spooky Tale

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It is a disaster when only one kind of truth prevails at the expense of another

Walker Percy received the Laetare Medal at Notre Dame in 1989, and in his acceptance speech he said:

The motto of the Laetare Medal is, I understand, ‘Magna est veritas et prevalebit,’ ‘Truth is mighty and shall prevail.’ I like to think that it applies even to the humble vocation of a novelist.

In my last novel, The Thanatos Syndrome, I tried to show how, while truth should prevail, it is a disaster when only one kind of truth prevails at the expense of another. If only one kind of truth prevails, the abstract and technical truth of science, then nothing stands in the way of a demeaning of and a destruction of human life for what would appear to be reasonable short-term goals.

It’s no accident that I think that German science, as great as it was, ended in the destruction of the Holocaust.

The novelist likes to irritate people by pointing this out. It’s his pleasure and vocation to reveal, with his own elusive and indirect way, man’s need of and openings to other than scientific propositions.

The novelist, I think, has a special calling to truth these days. The world into which you are graduating is a deranged world. It is his task to show the derangement.

This is a much needed perspective in current conversations regarding ethics and (or vs.) science.

Percy’s entire speech is available on YouTube.

HT: First Things

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Assisted Suicide, Euthanasia, and the Slippery Slope

From The Gazette (Montreal), “The push for euthanasia could be the death of us all:”

Imagine carrying around with you at all times a sort of get-out-of-hospital-alive card, sometimes called a sanctuary card. Its message: I do not want to be killed even though my quality of life seems to you to be unbearable.

Hard to imagine? In Holland and Belgium right now such cards are in demand. They may become essential in the not too distant future for seniors in Quebec and other parts of Canada and the U.S. who do not want to die before their time because other people believe that killing you is in your best interest, or that you should be assisted to kill yourself.

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Stem Cell Coverage

I know the decision is a couple of weeks old at this point, but a ton of articles have recently come to my attention.

John Kass in the Chicago Tribune, Stem cell policy shift brings a sinking feeling

Christianity Today, In Over His Pay Grade: When science is made ‘apolitical’ and ‘unencumbered by religion,’ it’s usually to hyper-politicize and hyper-sacralize it.

Rep. Mike Pence in Christianity Today, The Empty Promise of Embryonic Stem Cell Research

Ross Douthat, Stem Cells and Moral Seriousness

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Front Page of the Chicago Tribune

Right to die: Final Exit Network targeted by authorities, west suburban man’s plan to kill himself with right-to-die group’s help is on hold

Kurt Perry is a 26-year-old man suffering from a neurological condition (Charcot-Marie-Tooth, or CMT) that leads to weakness in the extremities.

For three years, Perry had come to rely on these Final Exit “guides” for emotional support. He also counted on them being present, but not participating, on the Thursday he planned to “hasten his death”—a phrase the group prefers to euthanasia.

“In a way, Final Exit Network is another family,” Perry explained. “They listen to me and give me advice about how to go through my life . . . until my decision is made and I’ve suffered enough.”

Later in the article one of the Final Exit volunteers asserts, “It’s compassionate. It’s one human being with another human being as they pass from living to dying.”

No, that’s what hospice is.  This is the intentional killing (the suicide) of a person who needs true compassion.

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