jueves, 31 de diciembre de 2009

Roasting chestnuts in the fireplace.

All these years, and we never lived in a house with a fireplace... until now, that is. So, since we all like to buy roasted chestnuts when we walk around in downtown Seville, I imagine that there must be a way to roast them at home. The answer, of course, was just a quick search away. WikiHow has an article on How to Roast Chestnuts that seemed easy enough to follow. The same piece also includes a short video by Chef Jason Hills with a quick step-by-step. Using foil and throwing them in there works just as well.

miércoles, 23 de diciembre de 2009

Religiosity & social inequality.

BBC 4 has a great discussion program called Thinking Allowed that focuses on the latest social research and where plenty of interesting topics usually pop up. I subscribed to their podcast, and recently listened to a discussion on the relation between religiosity and social inequality (MP3 format) that could be, I thought, valuable to the kids. While I suppose it's not a very politically correct issue to bring up, the fact is that social research clearly proves that those countries where social inequaity is higher tend to be more religious, while societies that have managed to somehow bridge the social gap tend to be more secular. Again, one could like or dislike the findings, but that still doesn't change the facts.

Said that, the problem is, of course, how to interpret those results. Does this vindicate Marx, who famously stated that religion is "the opium of the people"? Why does this relationship even exist? Is it because poor people, especially those who live in a society where other people clearly enjoy a large amount of wealth, need some sort of belief to alleviate their pain? Or, on the other hand, is it something promoted by the wealthy elite, to subjugate and control the less fortunate in their societies? And how do we explain, then, that the wealthy also clearly believe in these supernatural explanations? They obviously have no need to be controlled and subjugated. Even better, is it that higher social inequality leads to more religiosity, or that more religiosity leads to higher social inequality? Which is the cause and which the effect? Or perhaps they are both dependent on a third factor that could cause them both?

These are some of the issues we discussed after listening to the short (about 15-20 minutes) conversation from Thinking Allowed. Basically, my intention wasn't so much to find an answer to the above questions as to teach the kids that social issues are always far more complex than one may think at first glance. The problem is not so much identifying the facts and measuring them as isolating their probable causes.

viernes, 4 de diciembre de 2009

Virtual visit to Stonehenge & Pompeii.

One of the advantages of modern technology is to allow virtual visits to remote sites, which can be used to reinforce certain concepts. In our case, we "visited" the ruins of Pompeii and Stonehenge, which we couldn't visit last time we traveled to the UK. First of all, here is a short video about the grandeur and decline of Pompeii:



Parts 2, 3, 4 and 5 of the video are also available on YouTube.

But, even cooler, you can use Google Street Map to walk around the ruins of Pompeii:


View Larger Map


As for Stonehenge, here is also your port to the place:


View Larger Map


Enjoy!