@rightscholar@Theo_Madness This relates to the evaluation of a moral act by considering: object, intension, circumstance. An intrinsically evil action is one where the object is evil, regardless of intention/circumstance. A non-intrinsic evil is one where the intention or circumstance corrupt a good object
@rightscholar@Theo_Madness Aquinas as says an act can be intrinsically evil because (1) either the object of the action is incapable of being ordered to the good (i.e. murder), or (2) the act distorts the intended purpose of the action (lying/deception through speech).
@rightscholar@kalezelden@SteveSkojec CGS has a beautiful way of enabling children to embrace and internalize the faith with a profound simplicity. I’m grateful our children have access to it.
@CrescentPHX Tough to pick one, but I’d have to go with the first time I saw Buckethead, with Colonel Claypool’s Bucket of Bernie Brains at the House of Blues in Vegas @primus
@MakeWeirdMusic@BestPracticer In terms of his best, I’d go with: Monsters and Robots, Colma, Inbred Mountain, The Elephant Man’s Alarm Clock, Inbred Mountain, Crime Slunk Scene, and, while not a Buckethead album specifically, it’s essential to hear Praxis - Transmutation
@MakeWeirdMusic@BestPracticer I think Giant Robot, Monsters and Robots, Colma, Somewhere Over the Slaughterhouse, Bermuda Triangle, Decoding the Tomb of Bansheebot, and Bucketheadland 2 will give you a pretty good overview of the many faces of Buckethead.
@bbcbubblegutz That’s tough… I’d keep In A Silent Way and Kind of Blue, but replace the others with:
Miles Smiles
Miles in the Sky
A Tribute to Jack Johnson