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Endnotes: The STACKING Gene
1. As quoted by David A. Kaplan, "The Force is Still With Him," Newsweek, 13 May 1996, 64.
2. For a summarial statement of the old position, see chapter 3,"One Thing at a Time," in Eknath Easwaran, Take Your Time: Finding Balance in a Hurried World (Tomales, Calif.: Nilgiri Press, 1994), 63-88. For a further discussion of the stacking phenomenon, see Leonard I. Sweet, Quantum Spirituality: A Postmodern Apologetic (Dayton, Ohio: Whaleprints, 1991), 268-71.
3. Lawrence M. Krauss, The Physics of Star Trek (New York: Basic Books, 1995), 151.
4. John P. Robinson, "Radio Songs," American Demographics, September 1996, 63.
5. R. Laurence Moore, Selling God: American Religion in the Marketplace of Culture (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994).
6. See Josh Hunt, Let It Grow: Changing to Multi-Congregation Churches (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker House Book, 1993).
7. Francis Asbury to the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, May 1916, as found in JLFA, III, 532.
8. Francis Asbury to William McKendree, 5 August 1813, as found in Journal and Letters of FA, III, 475-92.
9. These ways include linguistic, musical, logical-mathematical, spacial, bodily kinesthetic, and personal. See Howard Gardner, Frames of Mind: The Theory of Multiple Intelligences (New York: Basic Books, 1983), 73-276. An excellent resource for Christian educators in telling the stories of the Bible utilizing these seven learning styles is Barbara Bruce, Seven Ways of Teaching the Bible to Children (Nashville: Abingdon, 1996).
10. Microtechnology already has produced the Data Link watch, created by Timex and Microsoft working together--it holds phone numbers, alarms, appointments, a to-do list, and two time zones; the Message Watch from Japan's Seiko (800-848-3545) receives radio signals from its own paging service--you also get phone messages, weather forecasts, sports scores, and other information.
11. In the words of MIT Professors Nicholas Negroponte and Neil Gershenfeld, "Jewelry that is blind, deaf, and dumb just isn't earning its keep. Let's give cuff links a job that justifies their name." See their "Wearable Computing," Wired, December 1995, 256.
12. Sherry Turkle, Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995).
13. Leon Wieseltier, "Against Identity," New Republic, 28 November 1994, 30.
14. For Alfred Schultz see his "On Multiple Realities," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 5:533-76. For Martin E. Marty, see his The Divinity School in the University: A Distinctive Institution, Pittsburgh: Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada, 1995), 10-11.
15. Marty, The Divinity School, 11.
16. Gerard Loughlin, Telling God's Story: Bible, Church and Narrative Theology (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 194.
17. Sherry Turkle, Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1995, .
18. As quoted in Jeremy Begbie, Voicing Creation's Praise: Toward a Theology of the Arts (Edinburgh, Scotland: T & T Clark, 1991), 211.
19. Tennessee Dixon, ScruTiny in the Great Round: Interactive Art (CD-ROM) Santa Monica, Calif.: Calliope Media, 1995).

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