I've written a piece on Nuclear Power - moderately pro, more to
challenge some of the falsehoods I hear on the subject, at :

http://arachnid.apana.org.au/johna/nuclear.html

So its more anti anti-nuclear propoganda than pro- nuclear as such ...

Er ...  OK, it is pushing it to make a connection with philosophy.
However, I do talk about the validity of criticising people for their
vested interests, and mention the ethics of selling uranium but refusing
to worry about the nuclear waste.

I'll be putting on a radio program on the evening of the 14th of
December (Friday) between midnight and 2am EST on 2SER, 107.3 FM (also
web at www.2ser.com - particularly for people outside of Sydney).  It
covers philosophy, politics, history and science.

Details are available at http://www.sydneyshove.org/radio-prog-14th.html ,
but I've attached an outline below.

There's also some of my other radio material listed at
www.sydneyshove.org/radio.html

Regards,


-- 
Just do what the voices tell you to do. You'll be fine.

John August, convenor The Sydney Shove - www.sydneyshove.org
--

DECEMBER 14TH DOGWATCH - JOHN AUGUST, STEVE MAXWELL & GUESTS

I (John August), convener of the Sydney Shove and President of the NSW
Humanists, will be joined by Steve Maxwell former President of the NSW
Rationalists and a speaker in the Sydney Domain, between midnight and 2am on
the evening of Friday the 14th of December (well, technically that's Saturday
morning, but let's not go there ...) for an early morning sampling of politics,
philosophy, history, and science.

We're broadcasting on radio 2SER, 107.3 FM, but outside of Sydney (and inside
too, if you want to) you can hear the program via a webstream on www.2ser.com

We'll start with Adrian Tan, convener of the Russoc Philosophy Discussion
group, and with a long time interest in philosophy. Adrian will outline moral
intuitions and sentiments - how we feel about what people do - and the words we
use in description and judgement - awe, delight, appreciation, puzzlement,
discomfort, shame, indignation, disgust, horror and so on.

We'll hear from our sponsor - the Softwell Plan for enhancing life performance
with a range of tools to provide for maintenance and development of personal
wealth over the whole living cycle.

Rev. Dr. Ian Ellis-Jones, Senior Minister of the Sydney Unitarian Church and
Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Law at the University of Technology is our
second guest.

Ian will look at the Greco-Roman historical corruption of the teachings of
Jesus - to what we have today. Ian has debated Anglican bishops on the reality
of God and whether Jesus rose from the dead - being against both !

Yaeli Ohana, a visual artist who teaches at the Art Gallery of NSW and the
University of Technology, will give us a recital of "Thunder : Perfect Mind", a
gospel from the suppressed Gnostic tradition, with Ian's thoughts on
Gnosticism.

We'll hear an historical letter from an appreciative employee to Albert Wright,
manager of a vehicle assembly business in Alexandria, Sydney. Albert was
struggling to keep the business open as the Great Depression started to bite.

Changing tack, we'll review Nixon's speech in response to the tragic Lunar
landing attempt of 1969, and hear the words from Cosmonaut Alexi Leonov during
his successful 1977 landing.

We've a dramatic reading parts of the CSS Descramble source code - from someone
who is passionate about their computer programming !

We'll visit the Newgrange passage tomb in Ireland - built 5,000 years ago,
older than Stonehenge and the Egyptian Pyramids - and aligned so light reaches
down the passage for 17 minutes on just one day of the year - the Winter
Solstice. It shows an understanding of the sun's motion through the sky that we
harness in sundials.

We'll be opening up the telephone lines for comment from listeners.

Music includes Jigzag, the Australian Folk Band; My Friend the Chocolate Cake;
the Sydney band Tramtracks; the Canadian band Darkest of the Hillside Thickets;
Canberra artist Loom and also : Tangerine Dream. City Rail announcements by
dTrog.

The world around us is full of fascinating and amazing stuff - you just have to
know where to look ! Join us late Friday night as we pick up a few stones and
see what's underneath.
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