fbpx
50.7 F
Spokane
Monday, April 15, 2024
HomeCommentaryOur oxygen grows thin surprisingly quickly

Our oxygen grows thin surprisingly quickly

Date:

Related stories

Teaching Religious Literacy in the Face of Intolerance

The aim of the Religion Reporting Project is to talk with students about religion in the media, introduce them to experts in the field and — the best part — take them on visits to houses of worship throughout the region.

The Ease of AI Making Decisions for Us Risks Losing the Skills to Do that Ourselves

In a world where what and how people think is already under siege thanks to the algorithms of social media, we risk putting ourselves in an even more perilous position if we allow AI to reach a level of sophistication where it can make all kinds of decisions on our behalf.

Contradictions and Consistency in the Bible: Part One

I do not believe there are any significant contradictions in the Bible. I believe the entire text is “God-breathed.” (2 Timothy 3:16) God is perfectly powerful to have guided the evolution of his holy book.

Indifference Makes a Difference

Columnist Paul Graves encourages us to care in this column. To. Give. A. Damn. Or GAD. Because every person has value as a human being.

What Would a Country Run by White Christian Nationalists Look Like?

A few years ago, many of us might not have considered white Christian nationalism as a viable existential threat to American democracy. Not so now. And for all intents and purposes it is going to be on the ballot this November.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img

Many casually think of the earth’s atmosphere as virtually going forever upwards, but our oxygen grows thin surprisingly quickly. There just isn’t nearly as much as we might think. In fact, the air grows so thin that climbers must carry an extra supply just to survive at the summits of many mountains. Compared with the magnitude of the earth, these mountains are barely road bumps. If you’ve ever felt a topical globe, they are just tiny blips on the surface of the earth. From another standpoint, think of a summer project of painting a house. The earth’s usable atmosphere is about as thick as the paint on that house. 

Now consider everything we pump into this atmosphere every minute of every day: all the automobiles, all the factories, all the electricity we use and all the power plants this usage requires. Evidence or not, it’s impossible to think we’re not changing something.

Bruce Meyer
Bruce Meyerhttp://www.dominsions.com
Bruce Meyer writes about the relationship between the physical universe and the pursuit of spirituality.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img

3 COMMENTS

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
3 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Dennis
Dennis
11 years ago

Hi Bruce,
I don’t claim to know all the facts involved but I have read enough to know that there are some powerful individuals who have made a lot of money by scaring people with extremely exaggerated and unsubstantiated claims of impending disaster. Their agenda is more about cash than concern.

To make a better comparison of available atmosphere perhaps a calculation of how many cubic miles of actual atmosphere versus an estimate of volume of pollutants would lend itself to a scale of comparison closer to reality.

Bruce
Bruce
11 years ago

I can’t readily think how the scientist’s involved are making money off of their “scare,” but I would welcome a calculation of the cubic miles of atmosphere and the volume of pollutants. I can’t think of any situation where that kind of analysis wouldn’t be alarming.

instagrami postituste allalaadija

instagrami postituste allalaadija

3
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x