My Second Eclipse

My Second Eclipse

As I noted in a recent blog entry, I witnessed a total solar eclipse in 1970 when I was thirteen years old. After that eclipse ended, I recall looking up the date of the next total eclipse in the eastern US. Monday, August 21, 2017. Wow, that seemed impossibly far in the future. I would never be here for that. But 2017 finally came around. Dad Sweats the Plans My excitement level began to rise over the summer. I originally planned to play it by ear on eclipse day. As the media began to forecast potentially millions of people traveling to see the eclipse, I realized the safest bet would be to book two hotel rooms in the middle of the path of totality in South Carolina. That would get us into position the night before the eclipse and enable us to drive either northwest or southeast to seek better weather if need be. I booked two rooms at the Hampton Inn in...
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Review of “Dr. Sadler and The Urantia Book,” by Sioux Oliva

Dr. Sadler and the Urantia Book: A History of a Spiritual Revelation in the 20th Century by Sioux Oliva My rating: 4 of 5 stars Dr. William Sadler was a highly-respected physician, surgeon, psychiatrist, Seventh-day Adventist minister, lecturer, teacher, author, and investigator by day. By night, from 1911 through 1929, Sadler and his wife Dr. Lena Sadler (who died in 1939) claimed to be in contact with numerous celestial beings who communicated with them through a sleeping man in Chicago. The 196 “papers” that were dictated or delivered to the Sadlers formed the 2,097-page Urantia Book, a treatise on cosmology, God, the history of the local universe, and the life of Jesus and his disciples. William Sadler published the book in 1955. I had not heard of the Urantia Book until a mutual friend introduced me to Dr. Sioux Oliva last week. I had the good fortune to have coffee with her the next day, after I had an evening to do some...
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Review of “The New Libertarianism: Anarcho-Capitalism”

The New Libertarianism: Anarcho-Capitalism by J. Michael Oliver My rating: 4 of 5 stars [Disclaimer: I am a friend of Mr. Oliver and his family. I am not normally predisposed to reading books on economics, politics, or objectivism—indeed, I have never read any of Ayn Rand's books, and I did not know what objectivism was until I read this book. I do not self-identify as a Libertarian. I read the book because I wanted to understand more about the underpinnings of Mr. Oliver's economic and political views than we have been able to discuss in our conversations during social gatherings. All this is to say that I do not feel as qualified to judge the merits or shortfalls of Mr. Oliver's arguments as would someone who is more knowledgeable in these subjects.] Oliver's book is divided into three broad sections, covering Objectivism, the State, and Capitalism/ Voluntarism. I'll start my discussion with the second section, which launches into the evils inflicted on mankind...
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Review of Stephen Baxter’s “Voyage”

Voyage by Stephen Baxter My rating: 5 of 5 stars In contrast to my experience with Homer Hickam's "Back to the Moon," I quite enjoyed Stephen Baxter's "Voyage." As the subtitle mentions, this is a compelling alternate history of what might have been had a few key events gone differently. To sum up the main divergences in history without spoiling anything, John F. Kennedy survives the assassination attempt but is rendered an invalid, who publicly twists Richard Nixon's arm during the televised Apollo 11 moonwalk to redirect space exploration toward a manned landing on Mars. All moon landings after Apollo 14 (with the Apollo 15 crew and a rover!) are cancelled; the Saturn hardware repurposed to supporting a Mars initiative; and NASA never builds the Space Shuttle or the Viking Mars landers. We have then a plausible scenario for how NASA could have afforded a push toward a manned Mars landing in the mid-1980s without a massive funding increase. Baxter gets all the details...
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Book Review: “Back to the Moon”

Back to the Moon by Homer Hickam My rating: 2 of 5 stars I'm not much of a fiction reader, and this book unfortunately reinforced my tastes rather than making me eager to read more fiction. I have to imagine that Mr. Hickam, as a former NASA engineer, had his tongue very firmly planted in his cheek as he wrote the book. It's so full of incredulous events and technical impossibilities that if you were not aware of Mr. Hickam's background, you'd think it was written by someone who knew nothing about how spacecraft actually work and just set out to pen a thriller set aboard the space shuttle. I'll give him the benefit of the doubt and assume that he was doing this entirely for fun. Think Roger Moore in "Moonraker" in terms of level of accuracy. I felt guilty reading it, but I also had a hard time putting it down because I couldn't resist seeing what wildly improbable event was...
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