Thanks for posting this! My one year old son finds Fr. Barron extremely compelling– Maybe he’ll grow up to be a heresy buster! (or at least not a heretic! =) )
I love Fr. Barron – I saw this a couple days ago because I’ve subscribed to his channel, something I encourage anyone else here with a YouTube account to do. 🙂
For those of us in deepest darkest Africa with Sound cars that don’t work, and not so high internet caps, please maybe give transcriptions, I do enjoy your site, but often don’t know what you are talking about, because I can’t watch the videos!
In any case, considering all of the great written catholic commentary out on the web these days, it would be a bit much to expect anyone to transcribe the contents of youtube videos, especially blog owners who do not get paid.
This is good. I teach freshman rhetoric and I’ve explained the various rhetorical modes to my students this way: These are patterns of human thought. Cause-and-effect is one of many. The limitation of science lies there: it can *only* think in that one mode. But there are many modes. Causal analysis yields facts, but fact is not truth. Facts change with knowledge; truth never changes. Science deals with [contemporary/temporary] fact; art and philosophy deal with [eternal] truth. Science does not contradict it; it is simply irrelevant to it.
November 20, 2008 at 12:08 am
Does anyone know when the “Catholicism” series is supposed to be finished?
November 20, 2008 at 2:30 am
Thanks for posting this! My one year old son finds Fr. Barron extremely compelling– Maybe he’ll grow up to be a heresy buster! (or at least not a heretic! =) )
November 20, 2008 at 3:12 am
Thanks for posting this… this is my introduction to Father Barron’s youtube videos… great stuff!
November 20, 2008 at 4:36 am
I love Fr. Barron – I saw this a couple days ago because I’ve subscribed to his channel, something I encourage anyone else here with a YouTube account to do. 🙂
November 20, 2008 at 4:44 am
Thanks for bringing this little gem to light!
November 20, 2008 at 8:03 am
For those of us in deepest darkest Africa with Sound cars that don’t work, and not so high internet caps, please maybe give transcriptions, I do enjoy your site, but often don’t know what you are talking about, because I can’t watch the videos!
Marc Aupiais
Editor
South African Catholic
http://southafricancatholic.blogspot.com
November 20, 2008 at 8:04 am
cards, not cars, cars work where I live!
November 20, 2008 at 7:04 pm
sound cards can be purchased for less than $10 ( see: http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2000360057&bop=And&Order=PRICE). I am not sure how you would have an internet enabled computer without one… very much a standard option on most computers.
In any case, considering all of the great written catholic commentary out on the web these days, it would be a bit much to expect anyone to transcribe the contents of youtube videos, especially blog owners who do not get paid.
November 21, 2008 at 2:20 pm
This is good. I teach freshman rhetoric and I’ve explained the various rhetorical modes to my students this way: These are patterns of human thought. Cause-and-effect is one of many. The limitation of science lies there: it can *only* think in that one mode. But there are many modes. Causal analysis yields facts, but fact is not truth. Facts change with knowledge; truth never changes. Science deals with [contemporary/temporary] fact; art and philosophy deal with [eternal] truth. Science does not contradict it; it is simply irrelevant to it.