Thursday, April 2, 2026

My YouTube channel...come over and visit!

 

I have a YouTube channel called "MiKeri Country" at https://www.youtube.com/@MiKeriCountry. Go ahead and visit my vlog page. If you like it be sure to subscribe, like, comment and share my YouTube channel.

Thank You!


Saturday, March 28, 2026

How The Door International help Deaf People get to know Jesus Christ

The DOOR Interntional...no, not the song The Doors sung my 1965 Jim Morrison. The DOOR International all capitalized: for DOOR.

https://doorinternational.org/
Millions of Deaf people don't know God.

They are the most marginalized people group in the world. And find the various video interviews of Deaf People (sign language with captioning) talk about how they have come to Jesus Christ. 

See these Deaf people talk about how they came to Christ:

https://doorinternational.org/news-updates or visit their stories on YouTube:

Africa (Kenya) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZFj3b2bRzFY

Costa Rica - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nWJUiyhprN4

Malaysia - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nWJUiyhprN4




Sunday, January 25, 2026

The Eye Reboot: New Research Shows How to Reset Neural Connections for Better Sight in Adults

Coverage on the MIT "reboot" study for amblyopia (lazy eye) in adult mice, using temporary retinal inactivation:


What did Aristotle Believed In? Gods, God, or not?

 
When Deaf/HH and/or late-deafened people do not get the credit they deserve for their work in Science (which means "Knowledge" or "to know"). The word "science" comes directly from the Latin scientia, meaning "knowledge" (from scire, "to know").

The closest Ancient Greek equivalent is ἐπιστήμη (epistēmē), which also means "knowledge" (especially systematic or scientific knowledge in philosophy, like Aristotle's usage). epistēmē = reliable, reasoned knowledge or science (as organized understanding).


Aristotle (from around 355 BCE) once said:


"Those who are born deaf all become senseless and incapable of reason."


Oh yeah? Says who?

  • Guillaume Amontons (1663–1705): Deaf from early childhood. French physicist and inventor who pioneered early thermodynamics (discovering the constant volume-temperature relationship in gases, foundational to gas laws) and improved instruments like barometers, thermometers, and hygrometers. In 17th-century France, no formal sign language existed yet; he relied on self-study, reading, writing, and visual methods.
  • John Goodricke (1764–1786): Deaf from early childhood. British astronomer who discovered the periodicity of the variable star Algol and identified other variable stars, earning the Royal Society's Copley Medal. He learned an early manual/sign system at Thomas Braidwood's Academy for the Deaf in Edinburgh.
  • Konstantin Tsiolkovsky (1857–1935): Deaf from age 9/10 after scarlet fever. Russian rocket scientist known as the "Father of Astronautics" for formulating the rocket equation, multi-stage rocket concepts, and principles of space travel. He was largely self-taught through books and used writing/lip-reading; no sign language involvement.
  • Annie Jump Cannon (1863–1941): Progressively deaf (mainly later in life). American astronomer who created the Harvard spectral classification system (OBAFGKM, the standard stellar classes still used) and classified over 350,000 stars. She adapted with lip-reading and written communication in a hearing academic environment.
  • Thomas Edison (1847–1931): Progressively deaf from childhood/teens onward (fully deaf later). Prolific American inventor and applied scientist with over 1,000 patents, including the practical incandescent light bulb, phonograph, and motion pictures. He viewed his deafness as an aid for concentration, communicating via lip-reading, writing, and innovative methods like Morse code tapping; no use of formal sign language.
  • Sir John Cornforth (1917–2013): Profoundly deaf from his teens due to otosclerosis. Australian-British chemist who won the 1975 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for stereochemistry of enzyme-catalyzed reactions, advancing biochemical understanding. He primarily used lip-reading (with assistance from his wife) and written notes.

    Aristotle lived roughly 380 years before Jesus' birth. Aristotle died in 322 BC, so his entire life (384–322 BC) was well before the start of the Common Era (AD/CE).

    Others have debated on what he believed in:

My YouTube channel...come over and visit!

  I have a YouTube channel called "MiKeri Country" at  https://www.youtube.com/@MiKeriCountr y. Go ahead and visit my vlog page. I...