Safety wrote:I ran track one year when I was in High School and it was the only sport that I participated in, unfortunately. I would say that I was decent for a freshman. However, the other athletes on my team were terrific. Several of my teammates went to state, and I think that discouraged me from joining again next year, because I knew that I would have a difficult time achieving their level of skill. I shouldn't have been ashamed at being one of the slowest on the team, as I was only a freshman. I regret not running for a second, third, and fourth year, but it was still an enjoyable experience nonetheless.
Oh! How fortunate for you!
Now, if you had been going to school back in the 1960s as I had, and if you had a crippled up knee as I had, and you were unable to run and was totally lousy at sports as I was, then, you probably would not have been allowed to finish school, as I was not. More likely would have been thrown out with the trash, as I was, even though I was passing all my other subjects.
No, that didn't matter at all. I got rejected because they couldn't make a jock out of me to score touchdowns for Home Town High!
All my schools ever cared about was sports, and to Hell with academics!
Anyway . . . . . . .
I guess you all have noticed, that lately, I haven't been posting very much in these forums.
That's because I have been very busy, staying up all night, every night for the past week, adding more Playlists to my YouTube channel.
Well, tonight, I hit the jackpot!!! Yeah, I discovered the mother-load!!!
I found a YouTube channel by Stanford University.
The channel presently has 1383 Uploads, only 21 Favorites, but it has 53 Playlists.
Apparently, most of the 1383 Uploads have been favored to the 50 Playlists making them much easier to access.
There are Playlists on Astrophysics, Cosmology, Paleontology, Quantum Physics, Evolution, Computer Technology, etc. etc.
Each Playlist consists of several videos in a series, and each video is about 2 hours long.
Watching the videos is almost like attending science lectures at Stanford University.
I am going to devote an entire Playlist to all of these university lecture videos, and lock it in place at the top 12 Playlists on my page. One of the original Playlists that was formerly up in my top 12 will drop down to a lower place somewhere on my page.
It will probably take me at least a week to favor all the videos in the new Playlist that I will be working on starting tonight. So, I won't be watching the videos in their entirety yet since each one is approximately 2 hours long. I'll just click on each video, favor it to my Playlist, then click on the next right away to favor it, and so on.
Then, when I have finished favoring the videos, I will sit back and watch each one in their entirety from start to finish.
Since each videos is about about 2 hours long, and if I watch a couple of them each day, it will probably take me about a year to watch them all.
So, I'm about to get schooled!!! BIG TIME!!!
You know, I just got to say . . . . . it's too fucking bad that when I was in my teens or 20s we didn't have home computers, and there was no Internet and no YouTube, or anything of the sort.
Only the government, the military, NASA, and big corporations, etc. etc. had computers, and they weren't desktop neither. They were great big mainframe computers that filled a large room with several cabinets of electronics with reel to reel tapes for memory storage, and data was fed into the computers with a stack of punch cards. Of course, computers were connected across the country by a telephone network, which was the closest thing they had to an Internet of sorts.
If desktop computers had been available back when in the 1960s when I was a kid, and if there were an Internet like we have to day, and YouTube, then I would have been sitting in front of my computer searching for educational videos on science, such as astronomy, physics, paleontology, biology, and evolution. I would have said to Hell with the schools!!!
When I was living in Las Cruces New Mexico, the public library was not very big, and the latest books weren't always available. It was mostly older out-dated books. Then there was the University library, but since I wasn't a student there at the time, there was a limit to how many books I could check out on each topic.
Yeah, I was born about 40 years too early!
You kids today, don't know just how damn lucky you are!
But now, thanks to the Internet, and YouTube, I can now sit through science lectures from Stanford University.
So, tonight, I'm in 7th heaven!!!
UPDATE:
After about 5 hours of working on my latest Playlist, it now has 60 videos. This is the largest Playlist on my channel.
Here is a direct link to my newest Playlist on my YouTube Channel, Big Fat Heretic.
Stanford University Lectures
http://www.youtube.com/user/BigFatHeret ... 6E0A3EE090
Well, I'm going to take a break for now, and add some more videos tomorrow afternoon.
But in the meantime, I'm going to kick back and relax, have some coffee, smoke my pipe, start watching a couple of 2 hour videos, and get schooled!!!
ANOTHER UPDATE:
I just finished watching a 2 hour video, titled "Darwin's Legacy" the first in a series of 10 videos.
Here are two beautiful poems based on the theme of Evolution. I couldn't resist copying these poems. Who says science can't inspire art and poetry? Eh?
I mean, like, seriously! Scientists are people too, not just "human computers" given only to cold hard logic. Like the rest of us, they also experience emotions.
Creation of Earth and Life
Ere time began, from flaming Chaos hurl'd
Rose the bright spheres, which form the circling world;
Earths from each sun with quick explosions burst,
And second planets issued from the first.
Then, whilst the sea at their coeval birth,
Surge over surge, involv'd the shoreless earth;
Nurs'd by warmth sun-beams in primaeval caves
Organic life began beneath the waves.
Production of Life
First HEAT from chemic dissolution springs,
And gives to matter its eccentric wings
With strong REPULSION parts the exploding mass
Melts into lymph, or kindles into gas.
ATTRACTION next, as earth or air subsides,
Approaching parts with quick embrace combines,
Swells into spheres, and lengthens into lines
And quick CONTRACTION with ethereal flame
Lights into life the fibre woven frame
Hence without parent by spontaneous birth
Rise the first specks of animated earth;
From Nature's womb the plant or insect swims,
And buds or breaths with microscopic limbs.
ORGANIC LIFE beneath the shoreless waves
Was born and nurs'd in Ocean's pearly caves;
First forms minute, unseen by spheric glass,
Move on the mud, or pierce the watery mass;
These, as successive generations bloom
New powers acquire, and larger limbs assume;
Whence countless groups of vegetation spring,
And breathing realms of fin, feet, and wings.
Erasmus Darwin (Grandfather of Charles Darwin)
These poems are from
Temple of Nature
> Poem published posthumously in 1803
> Full title: The Temple of Nature or The Origin of Society
> Discusses the origin of life from its beginning as a microscopic organism through its development into humans and society
Written by Erasmus Darwin, Grandfather of Charles Darwin
Erasmus Darwin presented in Zoonomia the first modern
statement of a complete system of evolution based upon
scientific knowledge
1.) Geologic evolution by natural processes
2.) Species are mutable
3.) Importance of fossils to trace species
Each day, I'm going to watch at least 2 videos.
This morning, I got schooled.
Oh! By the way
Safety . . . I don't wanna hear you saying that I'm going to Hell because I happen to embrace Darwin's Theory Evolution! OK???
Anyway . . . . .
Catch ya gators later!!!