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(page 40 of 180)
"A few discrepancies with some of the anthro, but other than that, very fascinating. It talks about how non-heteronormative lifestyles existed in land-based people and how Christian society destroyed the "magic" that once flourished in these various pagan cultures. I never knew too much about Joan of Arc (who was a trans witch, burned for wearing men's clothing) or her right-hand man Gilles de Rais, a gay sorceror." — Nov 26, 2013 11:46AM
"A few discrepancies with some of the anthro, but other than that, very fascinating. It talks about how non-heteronormative lifestyles existed in land-based people and how Christian society destroyed the "magic" that once flourished in these various pagan cultures. I never knew too much about Joan of Arc (who was a trans witch, burned for wearing men's clothing) or her right-hand man Gilles de Rais, a gay sorceror." — Nov 26, 2013 11:46AM

“Science is not simply a matter of observing the world, experimenting with its elements and drawing reasonable conclusions. Otherwise, we would have to recognize children, so-called primitives and a good many animals as excellent scientists. But the practical experiments carried out by all of us every day lack a few necessary factors, the first and most important of which is the concept of the universe as a single entity operating under universal, rational, knowable laws. Without this foundation, science cannot operate as such.”
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