Tomorrow's Science Heroes?
An anonymous reader writes "As a kid I was (and still am) heavily influenced by Carl Sagan, and a little later by Stephen Hawking. Now as I have started a family with two kids, currently age 5 and 2, I am wondering who out there is popularizing science. Currently, my wife and I can get the kids excited about the world around them, but I'd like to find someone inspiring from outside the family as they get older. Sure, we'll always have 'Cosmos,' but are there any contemporaries who are trying to bring science into the public view in such a fun and intriguing way? Someone the kids can look up to and be inspired by? Where is the next Science Hero?"
King James Version of Romans 5:12-13: - 12: Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned: 13: (For until the law sin was in the world: but sin is not imputed when there is no law. - So sure Verse 12 sounds like it was all Adams fault, but reading on, we see that without the law, there is no sin. If there is no knowledge of good and evil, there is no law, and there is no sin. So if it weren't for Adam, we wouldn't have our ability to understand right from wrong, so in that sense, Adam aloud us the ability to choose to sin our not.
Indoctrinate : to instruct especially in fundamentals or rudiments Educate : to develop mentally, morally, or aestheti
I've met Bill Nye (well, a Bill Nye) and he was a religious nutjob..
Seriously, though, this guy was just like Michael Bolton in Office Space. Wouldn't go by Will or William because he's been Bill all his life and why should he change "just because some idiot became famous with the same name."
End of line..