- Pondering how to live in a era without religious assumptions;
- A related theme in Arthur C. Clarke’s The Songs of Distant Earth;
- Timothy Snyder on superpower suicide; distrust of the current administration; confused thoughts about racism from the right;
- And Philip Glass’ opera Kepler.
I understand, mostly from secondary sources, that folks in small towns across America typically greet newcomers by asking, which church do you belong to? That being more important and fundamental than, say, what job you have (“what do you do?”) or even, where do you come from. But is this still true? I don’t know. I do know it’s certainly not true in big cities. Except perhaps at certain political rallies. Well, probably not even there. Everyone at such rallies assumes they’re all the same side.

OnlySky, Bruce Ledewitz, today: Living in a future ‘After God’, subtitled “We live in an era without religious assumptions, but do we know how to live without them?”












