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Notes by Stephen Hayes | export

 Found Family: how narrow is your literary definition of this term? I ask because most of my MC/al... 
 @7ccb675f What does it mean? Plot involves searching for lost family and having a happy ending, or something else? Like adoptees searching for birth mothers? 
 nostr:npub1lvsm4pe5ctfu09qx05wjk39xlqvszmr2mujh89kzquj60w55ktwsgfppkk 

Yeah, I see that -- and i... 
 @59034767 
I think the rot set in when people started advertising for "content-creators". That was getting it backwards.

You don't, or shouldn't, start a web site and then look for something to say on it. You first have something to say and decide whether a web site is a good medium for saying it. You may hire writers and graphic designers etc to help you say it better, but they are not "content-creators". 
 @59034767 

Back in the 90s when the web was young people started saying that in order to get people to look at web pages, and then come back and look at them again, they must have content. They must have something to say that people would want to read. By "content" they meant that -- something to say -- at a time when many people were putting up websites with no content but lots of jiggling graphics and other stuff to demonstrate their self-defined cleverness, but it was quite clear that they had nothing to say. You're n ot going back to look as yet another "animated" (ie jiggling") graphic thingy. So content was used to mean, well, content, as opposed not no content. It's got rather debased since then, but  it did originally mean something. 
 I went to a book launch the other day. The book "Coming to Faith Through Dawkins" has twelve people telling stories of how they came to Christian faith mainly through reading Richard Dawkins's book "The God Delusion"

https://methodius.blogspot.com/2023/09/coming-to-faith-through-dawkins.html

#atheism #Christianity #theology #apologetics #Dawkins #science #religion